Many people consider Palma as a stopover. They land, spend a night somewhere near the old town, visit the cathedral, and head off to where they actually booked the trip around the island. After seeing this happen several times, Confidentialitywhich reserves private villas for guests of Majorcaand has been for years, gently suggests that this is not the right approach. The city itself is worth your time, and the best way to experience it is from an outside base, coming for the day rather than sleeping in the noise.
The culinary scene is really serious. The architecture is stranger and more complex than the photographs suggest. The old town has corners that most visitors never find because they walk too quickly. A day well spent covers most of what matters.
The Cathedral: Go there first, but not like everyone else Walk down to the waterfront, beneath the cathedral walls, before entering. Don’t skip this part. The building sits on a promontory above the bay and has been deliberately positioned to be viewed from the sea. Until you stand underneath it and look up properly, the photos of the esplanade will not have you prepared.
Inside, you have to look for the work of Gaudí. He was hired at the turn of the 20th century to restore parts of the building and quickly moved the still-controversial choir stalls from the center of the nave to the sides, then hung a wrought-iron crown of thorns above the altar. It’s huge. From a distance it looks like something made of paper. It’s worth a good hour of your time.
The old town: stroll without a map This part of the city was the Jewish quarter until the 15th century. The courtyard architecture from this period has survived as you will find patios with exterior stone stairs and orange trees growing on the stone floor, some of which are accessible if you push the door open and it is unlocked. Most visitors pass by without noticing it.
On Serra Street, in the garden of a private house, there are Arab baths from the 10th century. The original hammam, not a reconstruction. The exterior sign is easy to miss. That’s why most people miss it.
Passeig des Born is a 10-minute walk to the west. Built above a river in the 19th century, flanked by buildings that were palaces before becoming banks and stores. Walk through it once each way, then sit down somewhere. On a weekday morning, the locals are having coffee and no one is rushing anywhere. Probably the nicest version of Palma, and it costs nothing.
Lunch in Santa Catalina The food market here offers fish caught overnight, cold meats from local producers and vegetables picked this morning. Go there even if you don’t buy anything. The neighborhood around it has spent the last decade becoming the part of Palma where the people who live there actually eat, as opposed to where the tourist trail ends.
Marc Fosh; in the Hotel Convent de la Missió, which was an 18th-century convent and still looks like one from the inside, holds a Michelin star and has done so consistently for long enough for the consistency to be real. Modern Mediterranean cuisine, quiet room, service that doesn’t give the impression of being treated. You must book.
DINS Santi Taura at the El Llorenç Hotel does something different and more personal: Mallorcan culinary history is integrated into a tasting menu by a chef who seems genuinely interested in what the island actually tastes like rather than what it’s supposed to taste like. A reservation is also required.
If neither works for the day: Sa Llotja near the old stock exchange building. Seafood. Everything that came off the boats was prepared simply. No service. The fish is the point.
Everything you need to plan your trip in 2026 Bellver Castle in the afternoon Most people avoid it because the Old Town took longer than expected and by mid-afternoon the momentum had faded. Pass it on. It’s 15 minutes west of the center by taxi and the views from the roof over the bay are some of the best on the island. The building itself dates from the 14th century, built on a circular plan unusual for the time and still is today, and the museum inside is small enough to not require much of you. The roof is what you are there for.
A practical note: the cathedral esplanade is crowded at midday. Bellver almost never does this.
Back near the center, the stretch from Passeig des Born to the marina offers the shopping you would expect in a town with so much money flowing through it. The Mallorcan shoe industry is worth mentioning, Camper started here, and there are still manufacturers on the island whose products appear nowhere else. Carrer Jaume II is the right area.
The marina itself is worth a slow late afternoon stroll. Then Portixol; A 20-minute walk east of the seafront of the old town, it is a residential area, quieter than the center, frequented by an international clientele living more or less permanently in Palma. Good for an aimless half hour before dinner.
Dinner: a realistic timeline La Lonja fills properly from around nine o’clock. He earned his reputation. The bars on Carrer Apuntadors are small, noisy and decent.
For something more structured: Hotel Es Princep’s Zaranda has a Michelin star, and chef Fernando Arellano prepares creative cuisine using local ingredients with the kind of quiet confidence that needs no explanation. The terrace in summer is very good. Adrián Quetglas, on Passeig Mallorca, offers inventive tasting menus in a stylish room and is the kind of place that culinary-educated people have strong opinions about.
None of these open before 8:30 p.m. Palma operates on Spanish times and arriving somewhere serious at 7pm to avoid a queue that doesn’t yet exist is a reliable way to start the evening badly. Book in advance. In July and August, the reservations that really matter at the best restaurants are often not on the public reservation system. This is where having a concierge who can make the call is more important than people expect.
Where to stay: Outside the city The city has decent hotels. Can Bordoy and Hotel Sant Francesc are really good. For a solo or couples trip, either works great. For anyone traveling in a group or anyone who has stayed in a private pool villa and knows what that comparison is like, the hotel option no longer makes as much sense.
Son Vida, Bendinat and Portals Nous are to the southwest of the town, most of the island’s serious private estates are concentrated in this area and the drive to Palma’s old town takes less than 20 minutes. Far enough to feel separate. Close enough that a morning in the city and an evening at the villa are just a normal day.
Privadia has a curated portfolio of inspected luxury villas in this part of Mallorca and all around the island. Concierge services are included, and restaurant reservations at places like Marc Fosh and Zaranda can be handled by the team for guests who don’t want to rely on the public reservation window. Private chef arrangements at the villa are standard, not exceptional.
The village of Valldemossa is an hour’s drive from Palma through the Tramuntana Mountains. Deià is nearby. The train to Sóller crosses the mountains on vintage rolling stock and arrives, when everything is on time, at a station with original modernist ironwork. It’s the kind of excursion that people remember for the entire trip. None of this requires planning two weeks in advance if you have a concierge; all this happens if you don’t do it.
When to go July and August are busy. Restaurant tables in places worth visiting are hard to find, the old town is under pressure, prices are rising. June and September have almost identical weather conditions, with significantly less weather. May is even quieter, and the city in May, before the summer crowds arrive, is probably its best version.
October deserves a separate mention. The summer crowds are gone, the light is different; gentler, lower and traveling the coast of Tramuntana on a clear October morning is an experience that most visitors to Mallorca have never had. If the dates are flexible, it’s worth giving it serious thought. For villa options near Palma and in Mallorca, Privadia’s portfolio is searchable online and you can easily contact their sales team for availability and pricing, and they will put together a shortlist rather than leaving you to scroll.
Stuart Glen Stuart Glen is founder of Confidentiality. Privadia is a leading provider of luxury villas, operating for over a decade with direct owner relationships and innovative holiday rentals in Ibiza, Mallorca, Mykonos and Kalkan. If you would like to become a guest blogger on A Luxury Travel Blog to raise your profile, please Contact us.
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