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Puerto Portals: A Complete Guide to Mallorca's Most Glamorous Marina
Puerto Portals marina Mallorca sits ten kilometres west of Palma in the coastal town of Portals Nous, and there is simply nothing else quite like it on the island. Superyachts gleam in the harbour, Michelin-starred chefs run restaurants steps from the water, designer boutiques line the promenade, and the atmosphere on a summer evening carries that particular charge that only the best marinas in the Mediterranean manage to generate. Yet for all its glamour, Puerto Portals has a genuinely pleasant, year-round character that sets it apart from ports that close in October and feel hollow the rest of the time. The restaurants stay busy in January, the boutiques stay open, and the residential community that has grown up around the port gives it a warmth and continuity that pure tourist destinations rarely achieve.
The marina was built in the 1980s and established itself quickly as the social and gastronomic centre of southwest Mallorca. An ongoing development programme has since added underground parking, new restaurant spaces and a beach club area, while preserving the intimate scale that makes the port work. There are 672 berths accommodating vessels from sailing yachts to superyachts of over 50 metres. The combination of full marina services, protected waters and the quality of everything surrounding the harbour has made Puerto Portals a consistent first choice for owners cruising the western Mediterranean.
The Restaurants of Puerto Portals
The restaurant offering at Puerto Portals is the finest of any marina on the island and covers a range that runs from casual daytime dining to formal evening meals under a Michelin-starred kitchen.
Flanigan is the institution of the port. Open for over 30 years and sitting in the first line of the harbour at Puerto Portals 16, it has built a reputation for sophisticated Mediterranean cuisine that draws a loyal following of residents, yacht owners and international visitors. The tapas, gambas, steak tartare, fresh fish and the Flanigan hamburger are among the most consistently ordered dishes. The kitchen has received patronage from the Spanish royal family on multiple occasions. Open daily from 8am. Contact: +34 971 679 191.
Ritzi is the port's benchmark for Italian-Mediterranean elegance, run by brothers Antonio and Salvatore Langobardi. The kitchen centres on exceptional seafood — lobster specialities including the celebrated Risotto al Bogavante, grilled prawns, pasta and fresh meat — served with a refined wine list. In summer the terrace opens directly onto the harbour; in winter it converts to a heated pavilion. The Ritzi Lounge Bar is a natural extension of the evening. Contact: +34 971 677 172.
Baiben occupies the former site of the legendary Tristan restaurant and is operated by Fernando Perez Arellano, one of the most decorated chefs on the island. The menu is Mediterranean in foundation with Latin American and Asian elements throughout, and a wine cellar of 700 labels supports one of the most serious programmes in the southwest. The Baiben Cocktail Bar continues the evening alongside. Contact: +34 971 675 547.
Spoon is consistently popular with yacht owners and the area's international community, with a menu that combines Mediterranean and Asian influences in a harbour-side setting. Its relaxed atmosphere and reliable quality have made it a year-round fixture. Contact: +34 971 677 225.
Lobster Club opened for the 2026 season in mid-May and brings a fine dining focus on seafood together with a beach club area of Balinese beds, hammocks and an infinity pool. The fusion menu draws on Miami, Marrakech and Melbourne influences. The setting within the Edificio Panorama looks directly over the marina.
Lucy Wang and Tahini Japanese are the port's two sushi specialists, both consistently rated among the finest Japanese and Asian dining on the island. For casual dining, Diablito and Lollo Rosso offer Italian pizza, pasta and international dishes in a more relaxed setting. Chameli's Cafe on the main street is the most popular local meeting point, with a broad all-day menu and a friendly atmosphere. Cappuccino, the island-wide cafe brand with a distinctive identity at each location, operates at the marina waterfront and is particularly good for breakfast and mid-morning coffee. Salt Bistro takes an eco-conscious approach with a focus on local sustainable produce. Wellies, a long-established British-run pub and restaurant, is a reliable choice for a familiar menu in a welcoming environment. For a special occasion with the finest sea views in the immediate area, Lila Portals offers clifftop dining above the bay.
Beach Clubs Around Puerto Portals
Three beach clubs serve the immediate Puerto Portals area. UM Beach House sits just outside the marina on the bay, a Mediterranean-style beach club with a large pool, white Balinese beds and a menu that runs from daytime snacking to full evening dining under candlelight. It is capable of hosting private events for up to 500 guests. Lobster Club operates its own beach club section with an infinity pool and adult swim area within the marina itself. La Cabana Pool Bar and Lounge at the adjacent Portals Hills Hotel offers a stunning infinity pool setting with views over the bay, popular with both hotel guests and day visitors.
Shopping at Puerto Portals
The boutiques along the marina promenade reflect the port's positioning at the top end of the southwest Mallorca market. Designer fashion, jewellery, homewares and luxury goods are well represented, alongside the kind of independent stores that give the port character beyond pure luxury retail. Cidon food shop is something of a local institution — residents from across the southwest make the trip specifically for its stock of international products, a wide wine selection and champagne at competitive prices. The marina's retail offering functions year-round rather than shutting in autumn, which makes it a genuinely useful resource for full-time residents.
Events at Puerto Portals
Puerto Portals runs a busy events calendar through the year. The Puerto Portals Sailing Week is the headline event, a regatta that draws sailors from across Europe and beyond to compete in the protected waters off the southwest coast. The Sunset Market takes place through the summer months, transforming the harbour promenade into an evening market of handmade goods from small independent labels, food trucks and live music — a more relaxed, community-oriented counterpoint to the marina's usual luxury tone. The Christmas Market at Puerto Portals is one of the best on the island, converting the harbour into a winter setting that draws residents from across the southwest through December.
Getting There and Parking
Puerto Portals is located at Portals Nous, Calvia, 10 kilometres west of Palma city centre and approximately 20 minutes from Palma airport via the Ma-1 coastal motorway. Bus line 104 from Palma's Estacio Intermodal serves Portals Nous regularly, with stops on the main road above the marina. Paid parking is available in several areas around the harbour — in peak summer season, arriving before 10am or after 7pm avoids the busiest periods. A short taxi from Palma takes around 15 minutes and is the most direct option for an evening out.
Why Puerto Portals Matters to the Southwest
Puerto Portals is more than a marina — it functions as the social, gastronomic and commercial anchor of a residential area that extends from Bendinat through Portals Nous to Costa d'en Blanes. The quality of what is on the doorstep is a direct driver of property values in the surrounding communities, and it is consistently cited by residents as one of the primary reasons they chose this part of the island over others. Year-round operation, a genuine mix of residential and visitor traffic, and a consistent investment in quality across its restaurants, retail and events all combine to give Puerto Portals a stability and appeal that has only grown since the 1980s.
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