Casa Jondal Ibiza Dress Code: What to Wear
Published
Casa Jondal has no strict dress code. Rafa Zafra's beachfront lunch on Cala Jondal, in the 2026 Michelin Guide Espana, runs on relaxed beach chic rather than an enforced door policy: resort wear, a summer dress, good sandals. The room asks only that you avoid overly revealing clothing. So the question is less what the door requires than what the yacht-lunch scene rewards, which is dressing up a little more than the sand suggests.
The Policy That Isn't
Casa Jondal has no strict dress code. It is Rafa Zafra's beachfront lunch on Cala Jondal, in the 2026 Michelin Guide Espana, and the door does not check clothing: the code is relaxed beach chic, resort wear, a summer dress, good sandals. The one ask is to avoid overly revealing clothing. Our Casa Jondal review scores the setting a 9 and keeps it on the Ibiza dining shortlist.
Reading the Scene Instead
What the room rewards is resort chic, because this is Ibiza's yacht-lunch set anchored off the beach: linen shirts and trousers, kaftans, summer dresses, espadrilles, a hat for a front-row table above the sand. Swimwear works on the sunbeds but wants a cover-up at the table. Nobody is turned away for dressing down, but almost everyone dresses up. For the front-row mechanics and the caviar bill, see our guide on how to book Casa Jondal.
Lunch, Not a Night Out
Casa Jondal is a long lunch that runs into the evening light, not a dinner scene, so the dress register never climbs to a jacket. Smart resort wear carries the whole service, from the half-past-one arrival to the last of the sun. It earns its place on our seafood index and the anniversary list, and dresses much like the island's other stylish beach tables, Es Torrent and Blue Marlin.
Related Reading
- Our full profile: Casa Jondal review.
- Booking and the front row: how to book Casa Jondal.
- The city: Ibiza dining guide.
- Same beach-chic register: Es Torrent and Blue Marlin.
- For the occasion: the anniversary list and the seafood index.
View Casa Jondal on Restaurants for Kings →
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Casa Jondal have a dress code?
Not a strict one. Casa Jondal is a beachfront lunch on Cala Jondal, so the code is relaxed beach chic rather than an enforced door policy: resort wear, a good shirt, a summer dress, sandals. The one thing the restaurant does ask is that you avoid overly revealing or provocative clothing. There is no jacket requirement and no evening formality, because this is a long daytime lunch by the sand, not a dinner room. See our Casa Jondal review for the scene you are dressing for.
Can you wear swimwear to Casa Jondal?
On the front-row sunbeds, yes, but not at the table. Casa Jondal blends a beach-club sunbed scene with a restaurant, so a swimsuit under a cover-up is normal on the beds; for lunch at a table, add a shirt, a kaftan or a summer dress over it. The room is stylish and the yacht crowd dresses accordingly, so most guests lean into resort chic rather than bare beachwear. Confirm any sunbed minimum spend when you book.
What should you wear to Casa Jondal for lunch?
Resort chic that photographs well: linen shirts and trousers, summer dresses, kaftans, good sandals or espadrilles. The scene is Ibiza's yacht-lunch set, so people dress up more than the beach setting requires, without anything as formal as a jacket. A hat and sunglasses earn their place at a front-row table above the sand. For how the front row works and the caviar-heavy bill, read our guide on how to book Casa Jondal.
Is Casa Jondal dressy in the evening?
It stays a lunch, not a dinner scene. Service builds through the afternoon and runs into the evening light rather than turning into a night-out room, so the dress register does not shift into black-tie territory. Smart resort wear carries the whole service. If you want a dressier second act after the beach, our Ibiza dining guide and anniversary picks map the island's evening tables.
How does Casa Jondal compare to other Ibiza beach restaurants?
It sits at the smart end of the beach-lunch spectrum with Es Torrent and Blue Marlin, where a swim-and-eat spot is far more casual. Rafa Zafra's room draws the yacht crowd, so guests dress resort-chic even though nothing is enforced at the door. If you are hopping between beach clubs, the same smart-casual wardrobe carries across. See our Ibiza dining guide for the island's wider table.