Mallorca Travel Planning & Itineraries
The largest Balearic island and the most varied Mediterranean destination in Spain. A UNESCO-listed mountain range on one side, 262 beaches and coves on the other, and inland villages that haven't changed in 200 years. Not just the German package-holiday clichés — Mallorca has world-class hotels, one of Europe's best cycling scenes, and quietly excellent food. Best visited by car.
Our AI planner helps you pace your Mallorca days, pick the right neighbourhoods, and build a route that makes sense.

Planning Your Mallorca Trip
Best Time to Visit
May-June and September-October are the sweet spots — warm, dry, blue water, manageable crowds, and hotels at reasonable rates. July-August are hot, crowded, and overpriced (and many restaurants require reservations weeks ahead). Winter (November-March) is mild (12-17°C) and the cheapest time to visit, with hiking and cycling thriving but the beach clubs closed.
Budget Overview
Budget: $80-130 USD/day (budget hotel in Palma, tapas + pa amb oli meals EUR10-14, public bus). Mid-range: $220-400 USD/day (4-star in Palma or Deia, rental car, Serra de Tramuntana drives, beach club lunches). Luxury: $800+ USD/day (Belmond La Residencia, Son Bunyola, Cap Rocat, private boat, fine dining).
Getting There
Fly into Palma de Mallorca (PMI). From YYZ, most flights connect via Madrid, Barcelona, Frankfurt, or London. Summer charter options from UK/Germany.
Getting Around
Rental car is essential — the best parts (Deia, Soller, Cap de Formentor, Es Trenc) are not on transit. Palma itself is walkable. The scenic Soller vintage train from Palma to Soller is a day-trip highlight.
Common Mallorca planning mistakes
Only staying in Magaluf or Palma
Magaluf is British stag-party Mallorca and nothing else. Stay in Deia, Soller, Pollenca, or boutique Palma for actual Mallorca.
Not renting a car
The best parts — Deia, Soller, Cap de Formentor, Es Trenc — require a car. Rent from Palma airport directly.
Visiting in August without booking
August is peak European holiday season. Every good restaurant and beach is crowded and double-priced. May, June, or September are ideal.
Missing the Soller vintage train
The 1912 wooden train from Palma to Soller is a scenic 1-hour ride through orange groves and mountains. EUR25 round trip.
Mallorca Neighbourhoods
Palma de Mallorca
The capital — cathedral, historic old town, marina, and the best restaurant scene on the island. The perfect arrival base. Best for: first-timers, cultural travelers, city-lovers.
Sóller & the Tramuntana
The mountain valley town with orange groves, the famous historic tram to Port de Sóller, and world-class hiking/cycling. Best for: hikers, cyclists, slow travelers.
Deià
The most beautiful village on the island — cliff-perched, bohemian, home to Belmond La Residencia. Tiny and expensive. Best for: honeymoons, luxury travelers, writers.
Port d'Andratx
Upscale marina on the southwest coast — yachts, restaurants, and sunsets over Sa Dragonera island. Best for: luxury travelers, couples, sailing trips.
Alcúdia / North Coast
The family-friendly northern bay with long sandy beaches, Roman ruins, and nature reserves. Best for: families, beach-focused trips.
Cala d'Or / East Coast
Turquoise coves and pretty beaches on the east side. More developed and touristy but beautiful water. Best for: beach days, repeat visitors.
Mallorca Food & Drink
Marc Fosh
Palma. Marc Fosh is the first British chef to earn a Michelin star in Spain. Lunch set EUR45.
Es Raco des Teix (Deia)
Mountain village of Deia. Josef Sauerscnigs classic Mallorcan cooking with the best valley views. Lunch set EUR60.
Ca Na Toneta (Caimari)
Two sisters cook whatever came from their garden that morning. 7-course tasting EUR75, all local products.
Forn de Sant Joan
Palma. Converted bakery near the cathedral. Modern tapas and Mallorcan classics. Gorgeous dining room.
El Camino
Palma. Organic Mallorcan wines, small plates, relaxed vibe. The spot for an aperitivo before dinner.
Bar Bosch
Plaza del Rey Juan Carlos. Classic Mallorcan cafe since 1936. Tumbet, ensaimadas, cafe con leche, newspapers, old men arguing politics.
Can Juanito (Campos)
South of island. The best suckling pig and roasted lamb on Mallorca. Cash only, no reservations, no website. A village institution.
Day Trips from Mallorca
Serra de Tramuntana drive
Full dayUNESCO mountain range along the west coast. Valldemossa, Deia, Soller, Fornalutx. Full day scenic drive.
Cap de Formentor
90 min by carThe dramatic northern tip. Cliffs, lighthouse, turquoise coves. 90 min drive from Palma. Go early or at sunset.
Palma Cathedral + old town
In PalmaIf staying outside Palma, a day in the capital — cathedral, Arab baths, boutiques, tapas bars, beach promenade.
Es Trenc beach
45 min by carThe 5-km Caribbean-style beach in southern Mallorca. White sand, turquoise water. Arrive before 10am for parking.
Ready to build your Mallorca days?
Tell us your dates, pace, and interests — we’ll draft a day-by-day Mallorca itinerary in under a minute.
A Sample Mallorca Itinerary
Here’s a flavour of what our AI planner builds. Generate your own personalized Mallorca itinerary in 60 seconds.
Arrive + Palma
- •PMI arrival + rental car
- •Palma Cathedral + La Llotja
- •Tapas at Bar Bosch
- •Dinner at Marc Fosh
Serra de Tramuntana drive
- •Valldemossa village (Chopin + George Sand)
- •Lunch in Deia at Es Raco des Teix
- •Soller + Port de Soller by vintage train
- •Sunset drive back via Fornalutx
Beach day
- •Es Trenc beach morning
- •Lunch at beachside chiringuito
- •Afternoon wine tasting at a Binissalem bodega
- •Dinner at El Camino
Cap de Formentor + Pollenca
- •Drive to Cap de Formentor
- •Lighthouse + Mirador viewpoints
- •Lunch in Pollenca old town
- •Back for Palma old-town wander + dinner
Mallorca Travel Guides
Everything you need to plan Mallorca like a local — curated hotels, restaurant picks, neighbourhood maps, and hidden gems. Instant PDF download.
Mallorca Travel FAQ
How many days do I need in Mallorca?
Seven to ten days to do the island properly. A week lets you base 3-4 nights in Palma and 3-4 in the Tramuntana or east coast. Ten days adds boat trips to Cabrera or Dragonera and proper beach time. Five days minimum if it's a standalone trip — shorter and you're just rushing between beaches.
Do I need a rental car?
Yes — unless you're staying only in Palma. Public buses reach most towns but are slow and infrequent, and the most beautiful parts of the island (hidden coves, mountain roads, inland villages) are impossible without wheels. Book in advance in summer; rental rates triple in July-August.
Is Mallorca just for Germans and Brits?
No, that's the north shore (Magaluf, Palmanova) stereotype. The rest of the island — Tramuntana, Deià, Sóller, the inland villages — is sophisticated, upscale, and about as far from package tourism as the Amalfi Coast. Avoid Magaluf unless that's specifically what you want.
Which coast is best?
Southwest for luxury and scenery (Deià, Port d'Andratx, Valldemossa). North for families and big beaches (Alcúdia, Pollença). East for turquoise coves (Cala d'Or, Portocolom). Southeast for quiet villages and wild beaches (Santanyí, Ses Salines). Mix two if you can.
Is Mallorca expensive?
Mid-range by Spanish standards in shoulder season; high in peak summer. Hotels are the main cost — €250+ for anything decent in July. Food is reasonable (€20-35 for a great lunch). Rental cars are the sleeper cost in summer. Shoulder season cuts 30-50% across the board.
Explore More Destinations
Want Mallorca planned for you?
Your Savvy Jetsetter advisor personally plans Mallorca trips with handpicked hotels, Fora Reserve perks, restaurant bookings, and end-to-end support. Hotel bookings are complimentary; the hotel pays the commission.