The Mallorca Dining Guide 2026: Best Restaurants, Neighbourhoods & Food Culture
Full dining guide · Mallorca · 2026 edition
Marc Fosh moved to Mallorca in 1989, opened a restaurant in Santa Maria in 2001, earned a Michelin star in 2002 — becoming the only British chef in Spain to hold one — and has cooked the island's most-defended kitchen ever since. That biography is the start of the Mallorcan dining story most visitors miss. The island has eight Michelin stars, four Repsol Soles, a Bib Gourmand list longer than most equivalent regions, and a farm-to-table tradition that predates the term. This is the dining guide.
How Mallorca Eats
Reservation culture on Mallorca runs late and slow. Standard dinner service is 20:30–22:30 in Palma proper; the rural finca restaurants (Bens d'Avall, Andreu Genestra, Zaranda) open from 19:30 and run through to 23:30. The Michelin-starred kitchens (Marc Fosh, Adrián Quetglas, DINS Santi Taura, Voro, Zaranda, Andreu Genestra) require six to ten weeks lead time for a peak-season Saturday booking. The mid-tier independent rooms (Naan, Quina Creu, Maca de Castro's relocation, Forn de Sant Joan) need two to three weeks. The locals' standards (Celler Sa Premsa, Bar España, Ca'n Joan de s'Aigo) are walk-in or one-day-ahead.
Tipping convention is the Spanish standard: 7–10% for a sit-down dinner where service has been correct; 10–15% for genuinely excellent service at a starred kitchen. Service is included in the bill in many of the higher-tier rooms, in which case the additional tip is a discretionary gesture rather than an obligation. Round-up tipping is welcomed at the bars and casual rooms. The American 20% level is unusual and the staff will return change for it.
Peak-season pressure. June through September is when the island's population roughly triples and the booking calendar tightens. By contrast, the shoulder season (April, May, October) is the editorial recommendation for serious dining — the kitchens are at full menu, the bookings are easier, and the weather is reliably warm enough for the cliffside and finca terraces. November through March most of the rural starred kitchens close for an annual break; Palma proper stays open year-round.
Sobremesa — the long post-meal lingering hour with coffee, herbal liqueur and conversation — is integral to Mallorcan dining and the kitchens respect it. A two-and-a-half hour dinner at any of the starred rooms is the norm, three hours is welcomed, and asking for the bill thirty minutes after the last plate lands reads as impolite. Plan the evening accordingly.
Four practical notes. One: car-hire is essential outside Palma. The Sóller pass, the eastern coast and the Tramuntana mountains are not realistically served by public transport. Two: the Mallorcan dish names you should learn are tumbet (vegetable terrine), porcella (suckling pig), frit (offal stew), arroz brut (turbid rice), coca de patata (Mallorcan potato bread). Three: sobrasada — the soft cured pork sausage — is the island's defining ingredient and worth seeking on every menu. Four: the local wine programs at Marc Fosh, Adrián Quetglas and Zaranda are seriously good; the Anima Negra label from the south of the island is the producer to ask the sommelier about.
Best Neighbourhoods for Dinner
Palma Old Town (Centre / Casco Antiguo)
The dining capital. La Lonja, Santa Catalina, the cathedral district and the streets around Plaça Major contain the highest density of independent kitchens on the island. Marc Fosh, Adrián Quetglas, DINS Santi Taura and Forn de Sant Joan are all within a ten-minute walk of the cathedral. This is where the visitor should base their dining week.
Santa Catalina (Palma)
Palma's reconverted fisherman's quarter, west of the Old Town. The food market (Mercat de Santa Catalina) anchors the area; around it sit the most interesting mid-tier independent rooms — Naan, Patrón Lunares, Quadrat. This is the neighbourhood for the second or third night of a stay, when the visitor wants something less formal than the Michelin map.
Deià & Sóller (Tramuntana coast)
The mountain-and-sea stretch north of Palma. Bens d'Avall sits between Deià and the Sóller coast on a cliff with the most photographed dining-room view on the island. The drive over the Sóller pass is part of the experience. Deià itself has the El Olivo at La Residencia hotel and a clutch of independent rooms around the village square.
Capdepera & the East Coast
An hour east of Palma. Voro at Park Hyatt Mallorca (two Michelin stars) and Andreu Genestra at Predi Son Jaumell (one star plus Green Star) anchor the region. Best treated as a two-night destination rather than a day trip — both restaurants are attached to hotels worth staying at for the full evening.
Calvià & the South-West
Twenty-five minutes south-west of Palma. Zaranda at Castell Son Claret (two stars) is the anchor. The neighbourhood otherwise is a mix of golf-and-resort dining and a handful of farmhouse rooms. Worth the drive specifically for Zaranda.
The 2026 Top Picks
Marc Fosh anchors the Mallorcan dining map — twenty-four years of starred cooking on this island.
Marc Fosh's restaurant inside the seventeenth-century Convent de la Missió is the island's most-defended dining room. Three tasting menus (€99 lunch, €145 five-course, €175 eight-course), all built on Mallorcan ingredients with a precision that is the result of two and a half decades of refinement on this island. Thirty seats, white tablecloths, single 20:30 seating. The signature is the roasted Mallorcan suckling pig with charred fennel and aged sherry vinegar.
Álvaro Salazar's two-star kitchen on the east coast is the highest technical ceiling on Mallorca.
Voro is the island's highest-rated kitchen by Michelin's metric — two stars retained since 2022 — and the dining room sits inside the Park Hyatt resort on the east coast at Canyamel, an hour from Palma. Álvaro Salazar runs the kitchen with a Spanish-Mallorcan vocabulary; the lobster course (Sóller red prawn, sea-water consommé, finger-lime) is the most-discussed plate in Spanish gastronomy press. Best paired with a same-night stay at the resort.
Fernando Pérez Arellano's two-star kitchen — twenty-five minutes south-west of Palma — is the island's most cerebral dining room.
Zaranda moved from Madrid to Mallorca in 2011, settled at the Castell Son Claret hotel in Calvià, and earned its second Michelin star in 2017. The cooking is technical Mediterranean: prawn carpaccio with finger-lime and dashi, suckling pig confit with sobrasada and aged sherry. Spain's National Gastronomy Prize followed in 2019. Two tasting menus, six and nine courses; the nine-course is the editorial pick. Stay at the hotel itself to extend the evening.
Argentine-born, Mugaritz-trained, Palma-based — the best-value Michelin star on the island.
Adrián Quetglas opened his restaurant in 2015, earned his star in 2016, and has retained it every year since. The cooking is Mediterranean with Argentine references — South American technique applied to Spanish and Mallorcan ingredients. The €95 six-course tasting is the best-value starred meal in Spain. Thirty-six seats, single seating, riverside location ten minutes west of La Lonja. The sobrasada-glazed beef cheek is the kitchen's most-cited dish.
Santi Taura cooks the historical Mallorcan recipe book — DINS is the cultural-depth pick of the Palma starred rooms.
Santi Taura built his career cooking exclusively from Mallorca's historical recipe canon. He moved his starred restaurant from Lloseta to the El Llorenç hotel in central Palma in 2022, where the star was immediately re-awarded. The eight-course tasting is the cultural-depth experience — porcella, tumbet, frit mallorquí, the heritage dishes that have not appeared on Michelin tasting menus elsewhere in Spain. Twenty-eight seats; book five weeks ahead.
The cliffside Sóller-coast room run by the Vicens family for fifty-five years — Mallorca's sentimental favourite.
Bens d'Avall is the island's longest-running serious restaurant. Benet Vicens opened the dining room in 1971 on a cliff between Sóller and Deià; his son Jaume now runs the pass alongside him. The Mediterranean-Mallorcan cooking uses the family's own herb garden and Sóller olive oil. The salt-crust fish broken tableside is the signature. The terrace looks down 200 metres to the sea — Mallorca's single most photographed dining-room view. €135 for six courses is the editorial-recommended format.
The farm-to-table starred kitchen on Mallorca's east coast — Andreu Genestra holds the Green Star for sustainability.
Andreu Genestra cooks at the Predi Son Jaumell, a nineteenth-century finca on the east coast. His Michelin star (held since 2014) and Green Star for sustainability (2022) make this the most place-rooted starred kitchen on the island. The hotel's own farm supplies most of the produce; the prawn is from Sóller, the lamb from Cabaneta. Best paired with a same-night stay at the hotel; the eleven-course tasting at €185 is the milestone format.
By Occasion
Best for First Date
Adrián Quetglas in central Palma is the editorial first pick — thirty-six seats, conversation-easy acoustics, the €95 set menu lets the evening land at €280 for two with wine. Backup: Quadrat in Santa Catalina or Forn de Sant Joan in the Old Town for a casual second date.
Best for Birthday
Marc Fosh in central Palma for the standard milestone; Voro at Park Hyatt or Zaranda for the two-star 40th or 50th; Bens d'Avall for the cliffside sunset celebration. See the full Mallorca birthday guide for picks ranked by age and budget.
Best for Anniversary
Voro is the editorial first pick — the two Michelin stars, the eleven-course tasting, the long evening at the Park Hyatt all align for an anniversary that justifies the hour drive. Bens d'Avall is the more romantic alternative for couples drawn to the Sóller-coast aspect.
Best for Closing Deals
Marc Fosh's convent dining room is Palma's business-dinner standard. Quiet acoustics, single seating, no second turn to rush the table. For a larger group (eight or more), DINS Santi Taura at El Llorenç will privatise a section. The east-coast rooms (Voro, Andreu Genestra) require an overnight stay and work better for relationship-building dinners than dealmaking.
Best for Solo Dining
Naan at Santa Catalina, with its open-kitchen counter, is the best solo-dining experience in Palma. Forn de Sant Joan in the Old Town runs a small-plates format that works for the lone diner. Avoid the starred kitchens for solo dining — the tasting-menu format is built for a party, not one seat.
Best for Family-Friendly
Bens d'Avall is the family-tradition standard — children have eaten in that dining room since 1971. Forn de Sant Joan in Palma is the casual-family pick for a Saturday lunch with children. Most Mallorcan rooms are family-tolerant; the starred Palma kitchens are the exception.
Best for Vegetarian and Plant-Led
Andreu Genestra (Green Star, farm-driven sourcing) runs the strongest plant-led tasting on the island. Marc Fosh and Adrián Quetglas both run a full parallel vegetarian menu by default. For a casual plant-led lunch in Palma, the Mercat de Santa Catalina and the Mercado de l'Olivar both house multiple vegetable-forward stalls.
Practical Dining FAQ
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Editorial only. Visit dates noted on each detail page. Affiliate disclosure: reservation links may earn RFK a referral fee at no cost to the diner. Read our methodology.