The best beaches in Mallorca for couples aren't the ones in the brochures — they're the ones you have to earn a little.
Best Beaches in Mallorca for Couples: 10 Picks Beyond the Crowds (2026)
Mallorca has over 200 beaches. About 20 of them appear on every listicle online, complete with the same stock photographs. Most of those 20 are perfectly fine — and absolutely rammed from June to September. The nicest beaches in Mallorca for couples are the ones that require slightly more effort: a longer drive, a walk through pine forest, or a boat trip to reach them. They are, without exception, worth it.
This guide covers the best beaches in Mallorca across all four coastlines — with honest notes on crowds, access, what kind of couple each one suits, and the best time to visit each one.
The 10 Best Beaches in Mallorca for Couples
Cala Mesquida on the northeast coast — wide, wild, and far fewer crowds than the famous east coast coves.
Cala Varques
🏆 Our Top PickNo road access. No sun loungers for hire. No beach bar. Just a crescent of white sand, a pine forest walk to reach it, and water that genuinely looks like a screensaver. Cala Varques is the one beach in Mallorca that manages to feel untouched even in summer, simply because getting there requires a little effort.
The walk from the nearest car park (off the Ma-4014) takes around 20 minutes through pine trees. Take water, bring a picnic, and aim to arrive early if you're going in July or August. You can also arrive by kayak from Porto Cristo — which is a wonderful morning out in itself.
Es Trenc
Best Long BeachThe south coast of Mallorca is mostly resort territory — but Es Trenc is the glorious exception. Protected as a natural area, it's a 3km stretch of powder-white sand backed by dunes and pine trees with no hotels, no development, and shockingly clear water for the south coast.
The comparison most people reach for is Caribbean, and it's not entirely hyperbolic. The sea is shallow, the sand is fine, and on a calm day the colours are extraordinary. There are a couple of beach bars serving drinks and food, so you don't need to bring everything. Parking costs a few euros in season.
Formentor Beach
Most PhotogenicFormentor sits at the end of a dramatic 20km peninsula drive, where the mountains meet the sea in a long curve of white sand backed by pines. The water is deep blue, the backdrop is jaw-dropping, and the drive alone — narrow cliff road, views across to Menorca on a clear day — is worth the trip.
In peak season (July–August), private cars are restricted and you'll need to take a shuttle bus from Port de Pollença. In shoulder season you can drive directly. Either way, go early.
Cala Llombards
Easiest Hidden CoveIf Cala Varques feels like too much effort, Cala Llombards delivers a similar reward with considerably less work. The cove is sheltered by limestone cliffs on three sides, the water is calm and clear, and there's a small beach bar at the top of the steps serving cold drinks and basic food. Not tiny enough to feel claustrophobic, not big enough to feel like a resort beach.
The nearby village of Santanyí has an excellent Saturday market and some good restaurants — combining the two makes for a very good day.
Cala Deià
Most AtmosphericTechnically not a beach at all — there's barely any sand. But what Cala Deià lacks in soft landing it makes up for in setting. The cove sits at the foot of the Serra de Tramuntana mountains, reachable by a steep path from Deià village. Swimming is off rocks and wooden platforms into water that's deep, clear and improbably blue.
There's a small restaurant at the top of the steps serving very good fish, cold wine, and the kind of views that make you wish you'd booked a longer holiday. The walk down and back up is 10 minutes each way — entirely manageable.
Cala Mondragó sits within a protected natural park — calm, clear water and no resort development.
Cala Mondragó
Best Natural Park BeachCala Mondragó is actually two connected coves within a protected natural park — S'Amarador and Cala Mondragó proper. The water is calm and shallow, the sand is fine, and there are proper facilities (showers, toilets, a beach bar) without any resort development. It's the most family-friendly beach on this list, which also makes it one of the more convenient.
The surrounding natural park has easy walking trails through pine forests and scrubland. A morning on the trails followed by lunch at the beach bar and an afternoon swim is a near-perfect Mallorcan day.
Cala Mesquida
Best Dune BeachMallorca's northeast corner is one of the least visited parts of the island, and Cala Mesquida is one of its best-kept secrets. A wide bay of golden sand backed by dunes, with consistent waves that make it popular with bodyboarders — but also perfectly swimmable for everyone else. The dunes are protected and lend the whole place a wilder, less manicured feel than most Mallorcan beaches.
Cala Sant Vicenç
Best North Coast CovesFour small coves clustered together just south of Cap de Formentor, each with crystal-clear water, fine white sand and a relaxed, local feel. The area around Pollença — one of Mallorca's most pleasant market towns — makes this a good base for a couple of days if you want to explore the north without committing to the Formentor peninsula daily.
Playa de Muro
Best Long Sandy StretchIf you want a classic long sandy beach — sunbeds available, facilities good, sea shallow and calm — Playa de Muro delivers without the resort-strip development of the south. It sits in Alcúdia Bay, backed by dunes and pine trees rather than hotels, and the water stays shallow for a long way out making it very comfortable for a long afternoon swim.
Cala Pi
Best South Coast CoveA narrow, dramatic cove cut into the southern limestone cliffs, with a small beach at the bottom reached via a long flight of steps. The inlet is so narrow that the cliffs shade it in the afternoon — but the upside is water that's completely sheltered, glassy calm, and extraordinarily clear. A medieval watchtower on the clifftop adds to the atmosphere.
Quick Reference: Which Beach for Which Couple?
| You want… | Go to… |
|---|---|
| The most secluded, wild beach | Cala Varques |
| Long white sand without resort development | Es Trenc |
| The classic Mallorca postcard shot | Formentor Beach |
| A hidden cove without a long hike | Cala Llombards |
| The most atmospheric swimming spot | Cala Deià |
| Natural park setting + facilities | Cala Mondragó |
| Dunes, waves, wilder feel | Cala Mesquida |
| A full beach day near a good town | Playa de Muro + Pollença |
| Dramatic cliff cove, south coast | Cala Pi |
Beaches Near Palma de Mallorca
A common question for couples staying in the capital: where are the best Palma de Mallorca beaches within easy reach?
Palma itself doesn't have a great beach. The Playa de Palma to the east is a long stretch of sand — pleasant enough, but heavily developed with resort hotels and not especially romantic. It's fine for a quick swim but shouldn't be your main beach destination.
Best Beaches from Palma — By Drive Time
- 30 minutes: Es Trenc (southeast) — the best option from Palma, hire a car
- 35 minutes: Cala Pi (south) — dramatic cliff cove, quiet
- 40 minutes: Cala Llombards (southeast) — easy access hidden cove
- 50 minutes: Cala Mondragó (southeast) — natural park setting
- 60 minutes: Formentor (north) — the most spectacular, worth the drive
The honest answer is that the best beaches in Mallorca are a 30–60 minute drive from Palma in most directions. Budget a hire car for at least part of your trip — it opens up everything on this list.
Best Time to Visit Mallorca Beaches as a Couple
May in Mallorca — the beaches, the prices, and the peace are all vastly better than August.
July and August are the months everyone chooses and the months everyone regrets. The hidden coves fill up, parking becomes a battle, and the heat (regularly 35°C+) can make a long beach day more exhausting than enjoyable.
September: Crowds thin from the first week, sea at its warmest all year (26°C), light is extraordinary in the evenings. The best month for beach photography.
October: Some beach bars close mid-month, but swimming is still good and the island is beautifully quiet.
For the wild, accessible-only-on-foot beaches like Cala Varques, shoulder season isn't just better — it's essential. In peak season these coves can reach capacity by 10am. In May or September you can arrive at noon and still find space.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the nicest beach in Mallorca for couples?
Cala Varques on the east coast is our top pick — wild, unspoilt, and only accessible on foot or by kayak, which keeps crowds low. Cala Deià in the northwest is the most atmospheric. Formentor is the most photogenic. Es Trenc is the best for a long sandy stretch without resort development.
What are the best beaches in Mallorca to avoid crowds?
Cala Varques, Cala Mesquida, and Cala Sant Vicenç in the north all see fewer crowds than the south coast resorts. Visiting in May, June, or September rather than July–August makes a significant difference on any beach.
Are the beaches in Mallorca sandy or rocky?
Both. The south coast (Es Trenc, Playa de Muro) has long sandy beaches. The east coast coves (Cala Varques, Cala Llombards) are a mix of fine sand and pebbles. The northwest coast (Cala Deià) is rocky with swimming off platforms — but the setting more than compensates.
Is Palma de Mallorca near good beaches?
Palma itself doesn't have a great beach — Playa de Palma to the east is long but backed by resort hotels. From Palma, the best beaches are 30–60 minutes by car: Es Trenc to the southeast, Cala Llombards, or Formentor to the north. A hire car is essential.
When is the best time to visit Mallorca beaches as a couple?
May, early June, and September are ideal — the sea is warm enough to swim, the beaches are quiet, and temperatures are comfortable rather than sweltering. July and August are peak season: beautiful but busy. September has the warmest sea of the year.
The Best Mallorca Beach Day Isn't the One You Find on TripAdvisor
The couples who have the best beach days in Mallorca are almost always the ones who got up a bit earlier, drove a bit further, and walked a bit longer to reach somewhere most people didn't bother with. Cala Varques at 9am in September. Cala Deià after lunch in Deià village. Es Trenc before the crowds arrive.
Mallorca rewards a little effort. The beaches that do are the ones you'll actually remember.
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