You don’t fly to Mallorca to stand behind a barrier and squint at a red carpet. You come for something better: watching an A‑lister slip into a harbourside restaurant next to your table, or realising the “family on the next sunbed” are actually global megastars hiding in plain sight.
Mallorca has quietly become the celebrity choice for 2026. Less chaotic than Ibiza, more private than the Côte d’Azur, but with the same yachts, chefs, and five‑star everything.
Here’s where they actually go — and how you can be there too, without being that fan.
Quick overview: where you’re most likely to spot celebrities in Mallorca
| Area | Vibe | Who you might see* | Best time for sightings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Port d’Andratx | Discreet harbour luxury | Royals, Hollywood actors, TV names | Evenings, late dinners |
| Puerto Portals | High-gloss yacht scene | Musicians, fashion stars, ex-athletes | Sunset to late night |
| Palma | City chic & culture | Global pop stars, film casts, designers | Lunch, dinner, weekend nights |
| Deià & Valldemossa | Bohemian mountain hideaways | Writers, artists, legacy rock bands | Late afternoons, long lunches |
| Manacor | Tennis and sports hub | Tennis players, coaches, sports execs | Daytime training hours |
| Formentor / Pollença | Quiet bays & top resorts | Cyclists, models, A‑listers with kids | Mornings, sunset on the beach |
| 2026 Hotspots | New luxury openings | Early‑adopter celebs & influencers | Launch events, opening season |
*Celebrities named here are examples of known Mallorca visitors; exact dates and appearances always change.
Ground rules: how to spot celebrities in Mallorca without being a nuisance
Before diving into specific celebrity hangouts in Mallorca, a quick reset on etiquette:
- Treat them like any other guest. No staring, zoom lenses, or filming kids.
- Skip the selfie request if they’re eating, with family, or clearly hiding in a cap and sunglasses.
- Staff won’t spill details. Don’t push them to break discretion; you’ll just mark yourself as the problem.
Behave like you belong, and you’re far more likely to enjoy the same spaces they do.
Port d’Andratx: the discreet celebrity escape
Port d’Andratx looks like any pretty fishing harbour from a distance. Up close, it’s designer boutiques, low‑key villas in the hills, and superyachts that don’t shout about themselves.
Celebrities like it here because it feels lived‑in, not staged.
Where celebrities actually hang out in Port d’Andratx
You’re not chasing velvet ropes here. You’re looking for terraces with harbour views and strong reservation books:
- Waterfront fish restaurants around the main quay
Expect late dinners, long wine lists, and bodyguards mixing with regular holidaymakers. Tables closest to the edge give privacy and a clear escape route to the yacht tender.
- Chic wine and cocktail bars set one street back from the harbour
These spots pull in TV faces and European royals who prefer not to be on full display. Think dim lighting, deep chairs, and playlists that never get too loud.
- Boutique hotels in the surrounding hills
Small luxury properties above the port attract actors and producers who prefer room service with sea views to busy hotel lobbies.
Best time to visit Port d’Andratx for celebrity spotting
- 19:30–21:00: Sunset aperitivo along the harbour. Look for quiet tables with good sight lines, not the noisiest corner.
- 21:30–23:30: Prime dinner hour. Many stars slip in via side entrances or marina access, so keep an eye on back doors as much as the front.
If you want a table anywhere on the front line in high season, book days in advance or go for a late dinner after 22:00.
Puerto Portals: yachts, glitz and glamour
If you only have time for one celebrity spotting hangout in Mallorca, make it Puerto Portals.
Rows of glossy yachts, luxury car deliveries at the marina gate, and restaurant terraces packed with people who work in fashion, sport, and music.
Celebrity hangout rhythm in Puerto Portals
Think of the day here in three acts:
- Afternoon shopping and café scene
Upscale boutiques and watch stores draw partners and entourages while the main star stays on the yacht. Sidewalk cafés become informal meeting rooms.
- Golden-hour drinks overlooking the marina
From around 18:30, bars and lounges with direct views of the moored yachts start to fill. This is when you’ll see polished looks: linen shirts, summer dresses, discreet jewellery that isn’t actually discreet.
- Dinner, then yacht or club
Reservations at the most in‑demand restaurants run back-to-back. After midnight, the action shifts to boats or private villa parties, with just a few guests lingering in late‑opening bars.
Celebrities such as political figures, global rock stars and retired athletes have all been spotted here over recent summers, often arriving by tender straight to the quay before sliding into corner tables.
How to maximise your chances in Puerto Portals
- Pick a marina‑front bar from 18:30–20:30
Ask for a table facing the yacht berths. You’re here to watch arrivals as much as any seated guest.
- Book dinner for around 21:00
That’s when the restaurant mix is strongest. Choose somewhere with views over the whole port rather than tucked-away backstreets.
- Walk the promenade slowly after dinner
You’ll often pass security teams waiting outside certain gangplanks. Where there’s a blacked‑out tender, there’s usually someone interesting aboard.
Keep your phone in your pocket; staff respect guests who treat the port as a place to enjoy, not to hunt.
Palma: city chic meets celebrities
Palma isn’t just a cruise stop. It’s a compact capital with the kind of restaurants, galleries, and boutique hotels that pull in touring artists, film casts, and designers.
You’re less likely to see a yacht party here and more likely to spot someone leaving a Michelin‑starred dinner or browsing a contemporary art gallery.
Where celebrities stay and eat in Palma
You’ll find the heaviest celebrity footprint in three areas:
- La Lonja & Santa Catalina
These neighbourhoods behind the marina are packed with tapas bars, gastro‑bistros, and cocktail lounges. Long lunches evolve into late nights without anyone moving far.
- Old Town boutique hotels
Restored townhouses with courtyards and rooftop pools attract fashion and film people. Private check‑in, minimal signage, and tight guest lists keep them loyal.
- Waterfront fine dining along the Paseo Marítimo
Panoramic views of the cathedral and the bay make these restaurants favourites for special occasion dinners and tour wrap‑ups.
Pop icons and Oscar‑winning actors have been spotted on low‑key city breaks here, often dressed down enough that most passers-by don’t recognise them.
When Palma feels the most star‑filled
- Weekday lunches (13:30–15:30)
Less crowded than weekends and popular with guests who fly in for short breaks or press stops.
- Friday and Saturday nights
Bars and small clubs in Santa Catalina are especially strong for low‑key celebrity sightings, with a mix of international DJs, models, and local creatives.
- Festival and concert weekends
Palma’s calendar shifts each year, but when a major act plays the island, expect spillover at high‑end hotels and late‑opening bars the night before and after.
Deià & Valldemossa: artistic mountain villages with serious privacy
Deià and Valldemossa look like postcards: stone houses, mountain terraces, cypress trees. For famous guests, that beauty is only half the appeal. The other half is how easy it is to disappear here.
Deià: bohemian with black Amex cards
For decades, Deià has attracted writers, painters, musicians and the odd global superstar looking for solitude rather than scene.
What you’ll notice:
- Luxury villas perched above the village
Many are hidden behind stone walls, with private pools and sea views. Guests often stay put all day and emerge only for dinner.
- Fine‑dining restaurants and hotel terraces
Expect one or two standout spots where booking is essential weeks ahead in high season. Terraces facing the sunset are magnets for long, slow meals and quiet celebrity sightings.
- Tiny bars that feel like someone’s living room
You might share the bar with a bestselling author or a well‑known musician. Nobody fusses; that’s the unspoken rule in Deià.
Celebrities with a long‑running love affair with the village often return without fanfare, slipping in between filming or touring commitments.
Valldemossa: heritage, pianos, and quietly wealthy neighbours
Valldemossa has a more traditional, historic feel, with cobbled streets and the famous charterhouse where Chopin once stayed.
Modern visitors include:
- Classical musicians and conductors in town for recitals.
- Actors and directors attracted by the village’s cinematic views.
- High‑net‑worth families who split time between Palma and their mountain retreat.
Your best bets here are elegant cafés near the main square and restaurants with terraces that look across the valley, especially at weekend lunchtimes and summer evenings.
Manacor: home of tennis royalty
Manacor isn’t a classic “paparazzi” location. It’s a working town with one huge draw: tennis.
The area is associated globally with one of the sport’s greatest players, and that link has turned Manacor into a quiet magnet for the tennis world.
Where the tennis crowd hangs out
- Elite tennis centres and academies
Training schedules, junior tournaments, and coaching clinics bring in current and former pros, rising stars, and their teams.
- Local cafés near sports facilities
Don’t expect white tablecloths. Instead, think simple coffee, toasted sandwiches, and players in training gear discussing their morning session.
- Family‑friendly restaurants on the outskirts of town
Perfect for athletes and their entourage to unwind after a workout day without drawing attention.
If you’re a fan, booking a court or attending public sessions at local academies gives you a realistic chance of sharing space with players who usually only appear on TV.
Formentor & Port de Pollença: tranquil luxury retreats
Head north and the noise drops. Turquoise bays, pine‑framed beaches, and hotels that specialise in “we’ll handle everything, just relax.”
Celebrities who come here often look for exactly that: a place where they can swim, cycle, or eat with their family without anyone caring.
Formentor: serious seclusion
The Formentor peninsula feels separate from the rest of Mallorca. That’s deliberate.
High‑end resorts and villas in this area have:
- Private or semi‑private beach access.
- Long‑standing reputations for welcoming heads of state, writers, and Hollywood couples.
- Staff who treat discretion as part of their job description.
You’re most likely to spot someone interesting:
- On quiet morning walks along the beach.
- Ordering room‑service style lunches at loungers.
- Arriving by boat for a day visit then disappearing again before dark.
Port de Pollença: cyclists, families, and low‑key glamour
Port de Pollença is softer than Puerto Portals. It’s beautiful, relaxed, and full of regular families on holiday — with a sprinkling of sports stars and media faces who blend right in.
Common sightings:
- Professional cyclists and triathletes training on the mountain roads, then refuelling at waterfront cafés.
- Actors and presenters enjoying low‑key family time, often under sunhats and behind sunglasses.
- Writers and photographers working quietly in front of a laptop on a terrace.
For your best chance:
- Grab breakfast or coffee around 09:00–11:00 on the promenade.
- Stroll the Pine Walk at sunset; it’s when many guests shift from beach to aperitivo.
Hidden gems: the new celebrity hotspots of 2026
The classic celebrity hangouts in Mallorca are still busy, but a new crop of venues is stealing attention in 2026. They’re less crowded, more design‑driven, and perfect for stars who are tired of being recognised in the same old places.
Design‑forward beach clubs away from the old centres
Look for new openings along quieter stretches of coast, especially:
- Small coves with valet parking but limited public access.
- Clubs that cap guest numbers and sell daybeds rather than crowded rows of loungers.
- Menus built around sustainable seafood and low‑key DJ sets rather than full‑scale parties.
Celebrities favour these spots for daytime privacy, then head back to villas or yachts by early evening.
Contemporary art spaces and galleries
Mallorca’s art scene keeps growing, and high‑profile collectors have started to pay attention.
Emerging celebrity‑friendly spaces often have:
- Evening openings or invitation‑only previews with live music.
- Collaborations with international artists or fashion houses.
- Small enough guest lists that everyone feels safe from phones and flashbulbs.
If you’re in Palma or the southwest, check gallery calendars for Vernissage or opening night events.
Destination spas and wellness retreats
Wellness trips are big in 2026, and Mallorca has leaned in:
- Countryside retreats offering detox, yoga, and personalised fitness programmes attract actors between shoots and musicians post‑tour.
- High‑end hotel spas bring in visiting therapists and facialists with celebrity followings.
- Most maintain strict privacy; you’ll share relaxation rooms and treatment corridors, but photos are heavily discouraged.
Book a day pass or treatment and you might find yourself swapping herbal tea with someone you normally only see on magazine covers.
How to experience Mallorca like a star (without overstepping)
You don’t need a private jet to tap into the same Mallorca celebrity hangouts. You just need to move like someone who knows the island.
Practical tips to match the celebrity rhythm
- Travel slightly off‑peak
Late May, June, September and early October often bring good weather with fewer crowds, which is exactly when many high‑profile guests arrive.
- Prioritise reservations
For Puerto Portals, Port d’Andratx, and top Palma restaurants, book tables before you even land on the island.
- Choose your base carefully
Want nightlife and yacht‑watching? Stay near Palma or Puerto Portals. Prefer quiet luxury and villa energy? Book around Deià, Valldemossa, or Pollença.
- Dress the part, comfortably
Mallorca style in 2026 leans towards relaxed luxury: linen, neutral tones, simple jewellery, good sandals. Flashy logos scream tourist.
Celebrity spotting etiquette, summarised
- Watch, don’t chase.
- Skip photos unless the situation is clearly public (concert arrivals, open events) and everyone else is already filming.
- Never share precise villa locations or minor children’s photos on social media.
- Tip staff well and respect privacy; it’s the fastest way to be welcomed back.
Make your own Mallorca celebrity spotting plan
Use this guide as your starting grid:
- Pick one harbour (Port d’Andratx or Puerto Portals) for a full evening of yacht‑watching and dinner.
- Add one Palma night for city energy and restaurant hopping.
- Spend a day in the mountains around Deià or Valldemossa to understand why so many stars buy homes there.
- Finish with a slow day in the north — Formentor or Port de Pollença — for that barefoot, on‑holiday feeling.
Turn it into a simple 3–5 day itinerary and you’ll naturally cross paths with the same restaurants, bars, and bays that keep celebrities coming back to Mallorca in 2026.
If you’ve already had a surprise encounter on the island, share it and compare notes with others planning their own star‑spotting route.

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.









