Our Mallorca holidays & tours
Our Mallorca holidays are about finding the quiet, peaceful and beautiful parts of the largest Balearic Island and letting the sunshine and landscape work its magic. Perhaps you'll be walking in the Tramuntana Mountains with olive groves and sweeping sea views for company, or perhaps you'll retreat to the centre of the island for wellness holidays where food grown by your neighbours fuels a relaxing escape. However you want to travel, our Mallorca holidays put nature and communities first, using locally-run hotels and Mallorcan guides, bringing you closer to the people and landscapes who make this island so very special.
Mallorca cycling tour, Spain
Discover rural life & foothills of the Tramuntana
From
£1340 to £1695
8 days
ex flights
Walking in Mallorca holiday
Explore Mallorca's spectacular coast and mountain range
From
£1295 to £1395
8 days
ex flights
Mallorca 8 day walking holiday
Adventure awaits in the beautiful Southwest Majorca
From
£1499
8 days
inc UK flights
Mallorca wellness retreat holiday
Find 'Inner Gold' & harness your natural energy for change
From
£1279 to £1479
6 days
ex flights
Barcelona, Mallorca & Ibiza vacation
An island-hopping experience tailored just for you
From
US $3000
10 days
ex flights
Luxury villa in Mallorca, sleeps 8
Peaceful & private finca house with pool & garden
From
£4032 to £12894
per week (sleeps 8)
Contact Us
Call us for a chat about our holidays. We are happy to discuss your holiday and help in any way we can. No bots, queues or awful hold music.
01273 823 700
Call us until 6pm
Calling from outside the UK
Mallorca map & highlights
Mallorca is the largest Balearic island, with the archipelago’s only real city – Palma de Mallorca. Palma has a beautiful historic centre surrounded by the mass development of the Bay of Palma on the south-west coast. Away from here, there’s a serious mountain chain following the north-west coast – Tramuntana and then the landscape flattens as you go east to the central plain. There are over 260 beaches around the 560km coastline, ranging from sandy to rocky. Despite some dramatic hills, getting across the island only takes a couple of hours at the very most. Drivers will find some of the mountain roads intimidatingly steep, but it’s even more thrilling for cyclists and walkers.
Calvia
1. Calvia
Second only to Palma in population, Calvia – the region and the town itself – is one of the most touristy areas of the island, found in the beachy south-west. Among the resorts – which include the notorious Magaluf – there are still lovely fincas (old farmhouses), often converted into places to stay, and towns with long-running local markets.
Deia
2. Deia
It's where Robert Graves kept a house, but these days the town of Deia is more commonly frequented by millionaires than it is by English poets, and has fancy restaurants on the streets, and swanky villas and hotels hiding in the hills. Day trippers visit by car, but you can walk up to the town from the coast, or walk to Soller, following walking route GR211.
Lluc
3. Lluc
The monastery at Lluc is found at one end of a pilgrimage route, and at the start of many mountain trails, so it’s a great place to base yourself on one of our hiking holidays. The walks may be your path to enlightenment: in the 13th century a statue of the Virgin Mary reappeared on the spot where this monastery was built, and it’s considered the holiest place on the island.
Palma de Mallorca
4. Palma de Mallorca
A busy and touristy port city in summer, with a massive marina, Palma has also been well-loved as a winter resort through the centuries. This sunny city’s light has not dimmed and it wears the increasing crowds well for the most part. Cultural highlights on your visit include the massive waterfront cathedral which dwarfs its surrounding palm trees, and the rest of the Old Town.
Soller
5. Soller
Even getting to Soller is exciting: a wooden train from the 1910s rattles all the way there along a line from Palma. Or you could hop on at Port Soller, the town’s modern iteration, which is on the coast. This busy, pretty town is surrounded by mountains. You can hike straight out from here into the Serra de Tramuntana valley.
Tramuntana
6. Tramuntana
Mallorca is big enough to have a serious mountain range – the Tramuntana Mountains lie diagonally across the north-west. It’s the largest natural area of the Balearics – 625sq km in area, and the best place for hiking on the island. The mountains are heavily protected, with UNESCO World Heritage Status. The limestone slopes are steep and sparsely populated, allowing flora and fauna to thrive.







