You can plan your whole day in Palma around coffee. Start with a quiet flat white, pause for a lazy brunch, then chase sunset with an espresso in a historic square. The trick is knowing where to go.
Here are the coolest cafes in Palma de Mallorca right now, with what they do best and when to catch them at their peak.
Santina Café: Easygoing Brunch in Santa Catalina
Santa Catalina wakes up slowly, but Santina Café is usually buzzing early. It sits right by the market, so you get a steady flow of locals, chefs, and late-rising visitors.
Plates are colorful and generous: avocado toast, smoothie bowls, eggs, and homemade cakes that don’t feel heavy. Vegan and gluten‑free options don’t feel like an afterthought; they’re front and center. Coffee is solid, but the real win is pairing it with a long brunch while the neighborhood hums around you.
Why it’s cool
- Relaxed, social vibe near Santa Catalina Market
- Healthy brunch with vegan and gluten‑free choices
- Good mix of locals and visitors, never too formal
Best time to visit
Mid‑morning to early afternoon. Late enough to dodge the pre‑work rush, early enough to grab a table without hovering.
La Molienda: Specialty Coffee and Local Produce
If you care more about the beans than the backdrop, head to La Molienda just off La Rambla. It feels like a neighborhood spot first, Instagram backdrop second.
Baristas here take coffee seriously: properly extracted espresso, smooth flat whites, and mochas that don’t taste like dessert in a cup. Food leans toward simple and seasonal. Think toast with good toppings, eggs, and small breakfast plates built around organic, local ingredients.
The space is compact and relaxed, which suits solo laptop sessions and quiet conversations.
Why it’s cool
- Specialty coffee with attention to detail
- Organic, seasonal food sourced from local producers
- Calm, slightly tucked‑away location off La Rambla
Best time to visit
Early morning for breakfast, or just before lunch for a quieter break when the city center starts to heat up.
Rosevelvet Bakery: Coffee and Cakes With New York Flair
You smell Rosevelvet Bakery before you see it. Butter, sugar, and coffee drift out the door and pull you in.
The influence is clear: New York–style baked goods in Palma’s old streets. Think dense New York cheesecake, banana bread, muffins, and slices that actually feel homemade. Coffee is dialed in to complement the sweets rather than drown them out.
Locals know to come early. Popular cakes sell out fast, and the later you arrive, the slimmer the choice.
Why it’s cool
- New York–inspired cakes and pastries
- Coffee that pairs perfectly with sweets
- Trendy, cozy space that still feels approachable
Best time to visit
Early morning or mid‑afternoon. Mornings for the full pastry selection; afternoons for a slower cake‑and‑coffee pause between sightseeing stops.
Cappuccino Grand Café: Classic Palma People‑Watching
You’ll spot Cappuccino Grand Café before you plan to visit it. Its prime locations, including Plaza Cort in front of Palma’s town hall, are impossible to miss.
Inside, it’s all polished finishes and soft lighting. Outside, you get one of the best seats in the city for people‑watching. Prices sit above the average, but you’re paying for the setting: historic buildings, stone plazas, and the feeling that you can linger as long as you like with a cappuccino or flat white.
It works for everything from a quick coffee to a long, chatty brunch.
Why it’s cool
- Iconic locations like Plaza Cort in the historic center
- Stylish interiors and relaxed, upscale feel
- Perfect for lingering over coffee and soaking up the city
Best time to visit
Late morning for coffee in the sun, or early evening when the light turns golden and the squares fill up.
Other Cool Cafe Pockets Worth Your Time
You’ll find great coffee in more than just one or two neighborhoods. A few areas are especially rich in options:
- Santa Catalina: Trendy, lively, packed with brunch spots and small specialty cafes.
- Old Town (Casco Antiguo): Narrow streets hide tiny espresso bars, bakeries, and stylish little corners with two or three tables.
- La Lonja: Close to the marina, with characterful buildings and relaxed cafes that work well after a stroll along the waterfront.
- Around La Rambla: Slightly less touristy side streets with spots like La Molienda for a quieter break.
Wander without a fixed plan once or twice. Some of Palma’s best finds are down side streets that don’t look promising until you peek in the window.
Quick Tips for Enjoying Palma’s Cafe Scene
A few small tricks make a big difference to your cafe days:
- Go early for the good stuff. Bakeries and brunch spots often sell out of their signature cakes and pastries before mid‑afternoon.
- Check opening hours. Many cafes open early but close mid‑afternoon or on certain weekdays, especially outside peak season.
- Ask about the beans. Plenty of places now use Mallorcan or Spanish specialty roasters. If they have a house blend, try it.
- Use cafes as breaks between sights. Old Town squares, the cathedral area, and Santa Catalina all have options within a few minutes’ walk of major sights.
- Take your time. Palma’s cafe culture rewards lingering with a second coffee, not rushing off after the first sip.
Where to Start if You Only Have a Day
Short trip? Focus your coffee stops so you taste a few different sides of Palma’s cafe culture:
| Time of day | Area | Cafe style | Suggested stop |
|---|---|---|---|
| Morning | Santa Catalina | Brunch + healthy | Santina Café |
| Late morning | Near La Rambla | Specialty coffee | La Molienda |
| Afternoon | Old Town | Bakery + coffee | Rosevelvet Bakery |
| Early eve | Plaza Cort area | Iconic plaza cafe | Cappuccino Grand Café (Plaza Cort) |
Use that as a loose framework, then swap in any spots you stumble across and like the look of.
Ready to try Palma’s coolest cafes for yourself? Start with a lazy brunch at Santina, plan a mid‑morning espresso at La Molienda, then wander into the Old Town for cake at Rosevelvet before winding down at Cappuccino in Plaza Cort.

Alison is a travel writer with a passion for solo adventures, photography, and Mediterranean escapes. She enjoys exploring Mallorca’s scenic coastline, charming villages, boutique hotels, and hidden gems, sharing stories that inspire curious travelers to discover the island beyond the obvious. Her work has been featured in outlets including Forbes, CNN, Travel + Leisure, and Yahoo.









