Day 1. Palma
Start at La Seu Cathedral. Get there early, like 10am-on-the-dot early, because the cruise ship crowds roll in by noon and suddenly you’re in a theme park. Tickets are €8. The interior is genuinely jaw-dropping, especially the Gaudí-designed baldachin that looks like it belongs in a fever dream. The rose window is one of the largest Gothic rose windows in the world and when the morning light hits it, the whole nave fills with color.From there, wander the Old Town. The Arab Baths are tucked in a courtyard garden and take maybe 15 minutes, but the quiet is worth it. Just meander. Get lost. The streets are all honey-colored stone and wrought iron balconies and you’ll find something interesting on every block. Duck into the Palau March courtyard to see the Chillida sculptures, and peek inside the Basilica de Sant Francesc if the doors are open.
Day 2. Valldemossa, Deià, and Sóller
Leave by 9am. This is the day you fall in love with Mallorca’s mountains.Valldemossa is a 25-minute drive from Palma and it looks like a postcard that’s trying too hard to be pretty. Visit the monastery where Chopin spent a winter and was, by all accounts, absolutely miserable the entire time. He wrote some of his most famous preludes here while battling tuberculosis and complaining about the weather. You can see his piano and original manuscripts. Grab a coca de patata from any bakery in town. It’s a soft, sweet potato roll and it’s the local thing. Every bakery claims theirs is the original recipe and they’re all lying and they’re all delicious.
Day 3. Sa Calobra and the Mountain Road
The big driving day. Leave by 8:30.The Ma-2141 to Sa Calobra is 14 kilometers of hairpin turns dropping 800 meters, including the famous loop where the road literally passes under itself. It’s one of the most thrilling drives in Europe and I say that as someone who white-knuckled the whole thing. Cyclists love this road and you’ll see dozens of them grinding their way up. Give them space. They’ve earned it.Arrive before the tour buses. This matters. By 11am the parking lot is chaos and the path to the gorge is a conga line. Parking is free but limited. If it’s full you’re out of luck.

Day 4. Southeast Beach Day
Today is all about the beaches in Mallorca, and you’re hitting three of the best.Drive to Cala Mondragó first. It’s about 60 minutes from Palma, inside a natural park, and there are two coves. S’Amarador is the prettier one. The water is that ridiculous shade of blue that doesn’t look real in photos and somehow looks even less real in person. There’s a flat wooden boardwalk connecting the two coves and the walk takes about 10 minutes. Bring your snorkel. The fish life along the rocks is surprisingly good.

Day 5. Alcúdia, Pollença, and Formentor
Alcúdia Old Town is about 50 minutes from Palma. Walk the medieval walls. They’re remarkably intact and you can actually walk along the top of them. The town inside is all narrow lanes and little squares and it feels much less touristy than Palma’s Old Town. Stop into the Església de Sant Jaume if it’s open.Drive 10 minutes to Pollença. If it’s Sunday, the market is one of the best on the island. Even if it’s not market day, climb the 365 Calvari steps up to the chapel. The steps are cypress-lined and steep and by step 200 you’ll question everything. But the views from the top are the reward. You can see the whole bay and the mountains and the rooftops of Pollença below.Lunch in Pollença. Take your pick. Sit outside. The main square is lovely and there are a dozen restaurants ringing it. Il Giardino does good Italian if you need a break from Spanish food.
Day 6. Hike and Wine
Morning hike in the Tramuntana. I recommend Barranc de Biniaraix starting from Sóller. It’s a cobblestone path winding up through a gorge with stone terraces and olive groves. About 3 hours round trip, moderate difficulty. You don’t need to be a serious hiker for this one. The path is an ancient pilgrims’ route, all hand-laid stone, and it follows a stream through the narrowest part of the gorge. Bring water and a hat. There’s no shade in the upper sections.
Day 7. Palma Deep Dive
Back to Palma for a proper goodbye.Morning at Mercat de Santa Catalina. It’s smaller and more local than l’Olivar. Great for breakfast or snacking through the stalls. The juice stands squeeze everything to order and the empanada ladies will change your life for €3. Grab a cortado and sit at the bar and people-watch.Then Fundació Pilar i Joan Miró in Cala Major. His studio is preserved exactly as he left it, brushes still out, canvases leaning against walls, paint splattered across the floor. It’s €8 and it’s one of the most moving museum experiences I’ve had anywhere. You don’t need to be an art person for this. The space itself tells you everything about how he worked. There’s also a sculpture garden and rotating exhibitions in the modern wing.
The Practical Stuff
*Car rental.* Pick up on Day 2 morning, return on Day 6 evening or Day 7 morning. That saves you two days of rental fees and parking headaches in Palma. Expect €30-50 per day in shoulder season. Book automatic transmission if you need it, because manual is the default in Europe and those mountain roads are not where you want to learn stick shift. We booked through DiscoverCars and picked up at the airport location. Most rental agencies are at the airport even if you’re not flying that day.*Parking.* In Palma, your hotel might charge €15-25/day for parking. Street parking exists but it’s a headache. Outside Palma, most attractions have free or cheap parking lots. Sa Calobra and the popular beaches fill up early in summer.*Market days.* Sineu on Wednesday (the oldest market on the island, livestock included), Inca on Thursday (leather goods capital), Santanyí on Saturday (prettiest setting), Pollença on Sunday (best all-around). Plan around these if you can. They add a lot to the experience.*Best months.* May through June and September through October. July and August are hot, crowded, and expensive. We went in late September and it was perfect. Warm enough to swim, cool enough to hike, cheap enough to not cry at restaurant bills. Water temperatures stay swimmable through October.*Budget.* Roughly €160-225 per day per person at a mid-range level, including accommodation, food, car rental, entrance fees, and everything except flights. You could do it cheaper by cooking some meals and staying in apartments. You could also do it for much more by staying in the luxury fincas in the mountains. The mid-range sweet spot is a 3-star boutique hotel in Palma plus eating out twice a day.*Base yourself in Palma.* Everything on this itinerary is within a 60 to 75 minute drive. You never need to switch hotels. You come back to the same bed every night and that alone makes the trip feel less hectic. Some people split their stay between Palma and Pollença or Sóller. I don’t think it’s worth the packing and unpacking unless you have more than a week.*Getting around Palma.* The Old Town is entirely walkable. Buses run to Cala Major for the Miró museum. Taxis are cheap. You don’t need the car on Days 1 and 7.
One week is perfect for Mallorca. You will have time for Palma, the Tramuntana mountains, a few beaches, and some downtime without feeling like you are checking boxes.
For one week, I would pick two bases. Stay in Palma for the first couple of nights, then move to Soller or the east coast for the rest. That way you avoid long daily drives.
Do not skip the drive from Soller to Sa Calobra. It is one of the most dramatic roads in Europe. Also make time for Deia, Cap de Formentor, and at least one hidden cove.
For bus routes and ferry schedules, check the Mallorca Tourism website.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, this itinerary is specifically designed for first-time visitors. It balances the must-see highlights with enough flexibility to explore on your own. We have tested these routes and timings personally to make sure they work without feeling rushed.
Absolutely. This itinerary is a framework, not a rigid schedule. Swap days around based on weather, skip something that does not interest you, or linger longer in a place you love. The best trips are the ones that leave room for spontaneity.



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