Luxury holidays in Mallorca

Sun, sand and supreme scenery – Mallorca is a perennial summer-hols superstar with good reason, but there’s plenty left to explore beyond the bustling beach resorts. Head for the hidden crowd-free coves that stud the coast for the famous Mallorcan white-sand experience. Feeling cultured? Stroll Palma’s winding streets, crowned by the Renaissance-meets-Gaudí cathedral, or discover the pure poetry of literary-figure-loved Deià, once home to Robert Graves. Burn off all the salt cod and suckling pig with a hike or bike through the craggy Tramuntana mountains, then venture inland for rural respite in the form of hilltop monasteries and honey-hued villages.

Recommended offers

See our boutique hotel deals

When to go

Sun-worshippers will love the summer, when temperatures rarely dip below 30ºC, but expect the island to be busy; go in autumn for warm waters without the crowds. In winter and spring, Mallorca is mild, sunny and much quieter.

Follow us on Instagram

See the world through @mrandmrssmith

Getting there

  • Planes

    Touch down at Palma Airport from most major European cities, then hop in a taxi or hire a car. It’s a 10-kilometre drive to the centre of Palma, 60 kilometres to Alcúdia, 30 kilometres to Sóller and just under 40 kilometres to Deià.
  • Boats

    Hop on a ferry to Palma from Barcelona, Valencia or Ibiza, or to Alcúdia from Toulon in France.
  • Trains

    From Palma Intermodal Station, one railway line heads north-east to Inca and one north to Sóller. Take the vintage electric train from Palma to Sóller, then enjoy the scenic route from there to Port de Sóller by tram.
  • Automobiles

    Driving is a breeze on this island, and routes are well signposted. Hire a car and explore the winding mountain roads for coastal views at heart-thumping heights.
  • Taxis

    Cabs are cheap and easy to find in Palma itself, but you’re better off hiring a car if you plan to do any longer journeys around the island.

Cap Rocat, Mallorca

Cap Rocat, Mallorca

If you have new-season swimwear to show off that is best accessorised by a 19th-century Mallorcan fort (every good bikini needs battlements for a backdrop), Cap Rocat is the place to do it. High in drama, blessed with sweeping sea views and radiating exclusivity from drawbridge to turret, it’s a secluded, adults-only hideaway, where supermodels and super yachters go for superlative service and one of the sexiest poolsides on the Med.

Read more
Andreu Genestra

Andreu Genestra

The man behind the kitchens of 17th-century rural estate Predi San Jaumell in Mallorca may have been born in the Balearics, but his culinary travels have taken him all over the world (via a three-season stint at El Bulli). Here in the Mallorcan countryside, he has precision-crafted a small but explosively flavoursome menu that takes island ingredients (home-grown olive oil, fish fresh from the coast, bread from the hotel’s own wheat fields) and turns them into contemporary culinary masterpieces. At an astonishingly good-value €38, his tasting menu is unmissable.

Explore Predi San Jaumell