Best Pet-Friendly Hotels and Stays in Palma de Mallorca for Travelers With Furry Companions

Photo by  David Vives

16 min read · Palma de Mallorca, Spain · pet friendly stays ·

Best Pet-Friendly Hotels and Stays in Palma de Mallorca for Travelers With Furry Companions

MG

Words by

Maria Garcia

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Palma de Mallorca surges with history, from the Gothic arches of the cathedral to the narrow Moors-era lanes that twist through the old quarter. Traveling with a dog on the island can be a challenge, but the best pet friendly hotels in Palma de Mallorca prove that furry companions are not just tolerated, they are celebrated. As Maria Garcia, a Mallorcan resident who brings her Dalmatian to the same cafes and promenades every week, I have personally tested and visited every dog friendly hotels Palma de Mallorca has to offer. This guide is a filter of around 20 properties, narrowed down to eight that genuinely cater to pets and give owners an authentic, unhurried Palma experience.

1. Portixol Pet-Friendly Stays and Seafront Walks

The Portixol neighborhood, east of the cathedral along Paseo Marítimo, is a former fishing quarter that still retains its local, salt-sprung character. Two standout dog friendly hotels in Palma de Mallorca here are the Hotel Portixol and the nearby Hotel Bon Sol. Hotel Portixol sits directly on the Palma seafront, a compact cylindrical building designed by Oliverio Balaguer. Dogs under 25 kg are welcome for a surcharge of around €25 per night, and the hotel provides a dog bed, bowls, and a welcome kit on arrival. The real pull is the location: step outside and you are on a promenade where local residents walk their dogs every morning from 7 am before the cruise ship crowds arrive. Hotel Bon Sol, on the elevated road above Portixol, is a mid-century property with sprawling gardens. Pets up to 20 kg are allowed at no extra charge, one of the few pet allowed accommodation Palma de Mallorca options that does not levy a nightly pet fee. I brought my Dalmatian here for the first time in June 2023, and the garden pool area felt designed for a slow Monday afternoon with no rush. The hidden detail? Portixol's tiny beach breakwater creates a shallow, sheltered zone where locals let dogs swim safely, free from motorboats. Most tourists never notice this spot because it is tucked behind the Es Baluard museum's eastern edge. Arrive before 8 am to see the harbor fishing boats come in, which gives the promenade an energy you lose by mid-morning.

The Vibe? Lively seafront with fishermen mixing with joggers and café terraces.
The Bill? Single room from ~€120–€180 per night; dog surcharge ~€25 (Hotel Portixol) or free (Hotel Bon Sol).
The Standout? The wraparound breakfast terrace at Hotel Portixol overlooking the harbor.
The Catch? Street parking near Hotel Portixol vanishes by 10 am on weekends; arrive early or park in the underground facility on Carrer de Vicari Joaquín Fuster.

2. Palma Old Town Dog-Friendly Hotels Near the Cathedral

Palma's Casco Antiguo (Old Town) is a maze of limestone facades, hidden courtyards, and church bells. For dog owners who want to be steps from the Cathedral of Santa Maria and the Almudaina Palace, the Convent de la Missió is a candidate among hotels that allow dogs in Palma de Mallorca. This boutique property, housed in a restored 17th-century convent on Carrer de la Missió, permits dogs under a weight limit (generally around 20 kg) for a nightly supplement. The courtyard cloister stays cool even in August, a genuine respite. Just two blocks north, Palau Sa Font occupies an aristocratic townhouse and also accepts pets. It sits on Carrer de la Missió as well, a lane so narrow you can touch both walls with arms outstretched if you tried. My dog loved the silence here after dark, something you cannot find on the busier Plaça Cort side of the neighborhood. A secret worth knowing: the tiny Plaça del Rosari, behind the church of Santa Eulalia, is a quiet garden square where locals congregate with leashed dogs before sunset. Tourists walk straight past it heading to the cathedral. Get there by 5 pm and you will have the park nearly to yourself. The Old Town suits morning exploration (8 am to 11 am) when shade covers most streets and temperatures remain walkable for dogs.

The Vibe? Historic and hushed once evening descends; stone corridors and terracotta courtyards.
The Bill? Double rooms from ~€150–€250 per night; pet fee varies but typically around €15–€20 nightly.
The Standout? The rooftop plunge pool at Palau Sa Font with cathedral tower views over the rooftops.
The Catch? Walking a dog through cobblestone alleys in July afternoon heat demands paw protection; I carry muslin booties after my Dalmatian burned paws on Carrer d'en Morei.

3. Hotels That Allow Dogs Palma de Mallorca: The San Juan Hill and Arab Quarter Connection

The Arab Quarter (Barrio Árbol) around the Basílica de Sant Francesc is the oldest continuous residential area inside Palma's medieval walls. Hotel Basílica, on Carrer de la Sinia, accepts dogs and places you one block from the Plaça de Sant Francesc, shaded by massive plane trees. The basilica's cloister, with its Gothic arches and terracotta tombs, is one of Palma's most photographed courtyards, yet the square stays surprisingly uncrowded on weekday mornings. I walked my dog past the cloister door at 7:30 am on a Wednesday and had the entire plaza to myself for twenty minutes. The boutique Casa del Puerto, near Plaça de la Reina, is another dog friendly option, smaller and more intimate, with pet bowls and a flexible check-in policy that suits owners arriving after long ferry crossings from Barcelona or Valencia. An insider point: the pedestrian lane Carrer de la Portella, lined with private orangeries, is where Palma's old aristocracy still lives side by side with local families who let their dogs roam the plaza at dusk. This stretch connects the cathedral axis to the Jewish Quarter and is almost entirely flat, which is kinder to older dogs. The neighborhood's character is distinct from the polished yacht marina side of Palma; it is gritty, real, and photogenic.

The Vibe? Medieval and atmospheric, dusk light on honey-colored stone.
The Bill? Double rooms from ~€100–€180 nightly depending on season; pet fees usually under €20 per night.
The Standout? Morning walk through the cloister's unique Gothic courtyard, normally impossibly crowded, before 9 am.
The Catch? Limited elevator access in older buildings; if you have a heavy dog, ask for a ground-floor room when booking.

4. Pet-Friendly Hotels by the Passeig Mallorca and Born Avenue

Passeig des Born is Palma's central promenade, lined with plane trees and flanked by elegant sandstone buildings. Hotel Born, established in 1836, is a historic property at Carrer del Sant Jaume that directly faces the promenade. Dogs are accepted with advance notice, and the hotel has provided me with a dog bed and water bowl without being asked during my last stay in May 2024. The tree-lined Born below becomes a corridor for dog walkers after the shopping crowds thin around 8 pm. The hotel's ground-floor restaurant serves authentic Mallorcan dishes, including tumbet, so you can eat somewhere recognized as a traditional address without leaving your dog unattended, since the can wait in the atmospheric wood-paneled lobby. Three blocks away, on Carrer Unió, Hotel Saratoga also accepts pets and has a rooftop pool with panoramic views. The rooftop is not off-limited to pet owners, so you can swim with your dog waiting nearby. My hidden tip: the junction of Carrer Unió and Carrer de Sant Feliu leads downhill to a tiny green park, Jardins d'Aiamans, unknown to guidebooks. It is a miniature garden with benches where locals escape the Born crowds at noon, perfect for resting a panting dog in summer heat. The Born corridor works best for dog walks early morning (before 8:30 am and 8:30 pm onwards), when the terraces fold up and the broad sidewalk returns to the neighborhood.

The Vibe? Elegant yet neighborhoody; 19th-century glamour without pretension.
The Bill? Double rooms from ~€130–€220 depending on season; pet fees typically €15–€20 per night, waived in some low-season periods.
The Standout? Lobby date platter paired with a time-worn wooden staircase that tells a century of Palma stories.
The Catch? The Born promenade gets foot-traffic-heavy midday from April through October; dog-reactive animals will feel overwhelmed between noon and 3 pm.

5. Santa Catalina and the Market District for Dog-Toting Food Lovers

Santa Catalina was Palma's fishermen quarter until the 1990s, and the neighborhood still hums with a local energy that the Old Town sometimes lacks. Hotel Bornet, on Carrer de la Unió near the Santa Catalina market Mercat de l'Olivar, accepts dogs. It is a compact, budget-friendlier choice where I once booked a room for an impromptu November stay with my dog and discovered the backstreets were busier than the high-season months. The Mercat de l'Olivar, open Monday to Saturday from 7 am, is arguably Palma's best fresh-produce market, and dogs under 10 kg are tolerated at the discretion of vendors inside the hall. At the very least, the surrounding outdoor stalls and benches accommodate leashed dogs. Around the corner, Hostal Bonaire on Carrer de la Bonaire, a budget guesthouse with a pet-friendly courtyard, provides cheap accommodation near the market, perfect for owners on tighter budgets who still want to be inside the pet allowed accommodation in Palma de Mallorca circuit. The insider angle: after the market closes on Saturday afternoons, the surrounding streets transform into an informal community gathering, with impromptu live music at Plaça de la Reina and vendors selling reduced-priced fruit. My Dalmatian and I spend most Saturday mornings here; the crowd is so packed you can barely navigate the narrow walkways, so travel light.

The Vibe? Fresh, local, neighborhood-centric; fish-gutting stations sit two doors from specialty coffee shops.
The Bill? Double rooms at Hotel Bornet from ~€90–€150 per night; pet fee roughly €10–€15 nightly. Hostal Bonaire rooms from ~€50–€80 per night.
The Standout? Arriving at Mercat de l'Olivar at 9 am for fresh frito mallorquín and a pastry, then pouring your market haul for a self-catered lunch.
The Catch? Saturday mornings in Santa Catalina are cramped; narrow sidewalks plus brimming market stalls mean an anxious dog will want open space.

6. Hotels That Allow Dogs Palma de Mallorca: Cala Major Beachfront Calm

Cala Major, the beach zone southwest of the city center, offers two beaches and a quieter pace that suits owners of older or excitable dogs. Cala Major Hotel and the neighboring Hotel Aparthotel Maracaibo both accept pets. Cala Major Hotel has an outdoor pool and garden area shaded by palm trees. Dogs up to 15 kg are accepted for a nightly fee, and the five-minute walk to Cala Major beach is flat and sidewalk-bordered. My favorite time to visit is midweek in October or late April: the beach clears of day-trippers, the temperature sits around 20 degrees Celsius, and locals reclaim the sand. The lesser-known Cala d'en Temps, about 10 minutes south on foot, is a small rocky inlet where dogs swim freely outside the peak July to August season. Most visitors, and even many repeat Palma visitors, skip this in favor of the larger sandy beach at Illetes further along the coast. A local habit worth stealing: the bakery Forn de Sant Gaumen, on Carrer de la Santa Fe, opens at 6 am and sells coca de trampó, a flatbread topped with peppers and tomatoes. Grab one for breakfast and eat it on the rocks at Cala d'en Temps as the sun comes up. It is the start to a perfect dog-inclusive morning.

The Vibe? Quiet residential beach zone, unhurried even July and August if you head south of main Cala Major beach.
The Bill? Double rooms at Cala Major Hotel from ~€100–€170 nightly; pet fee approximately €15 per night.
The Standout? Cala d'en Temps rocky cove for an uncrowded morning swim with a dog.
The Catch? Taxis from Palma airport to Cala Major cost around €25–€30 and will sometimes insist on a pet transport carrier; arrange a pet-friendly transfer in advance.

7. Hostels, Budget Stays, and Apartment-Style Pet Friendly Options

Not everyone books a four-star hotel. Ca's Papá, a guesthouse on Carrer de la Concepció just north of the Passeig des Born, accepts dogs and offers rooms with kitchenette access at budget rates. I spent a week here splitting time with my partner between Old Town bar-hopping and long walks on the Palma seafront, and having a kitchen meant I never left my dog alone while eating out. For apartment-style stays, the Patritz Aparthotel on Carrer del Mar permits dogs and gives you a full studio with kitchenette, washing machine, and balcony. The location is prime: two blocks from the Born and within stumbling distance of Old Town. A handful of Airbnb operators in the Portixol and Camp d'En Serralta districts also accept dogs for multi-night stays. Confirm the pet policy in writing; I have seen owners show up on the doorstep and be turned away at the last minute when verbal promises evaporate. A hidden point: many dog-friendly apartments in Palma's Bellver Park, around the woods at Bellver, have semi-private gardens. If your dog needs space to decompress, being near the park rather than in the dense old quarter makes a massive difference, and taxi costs from Bellver to the city center are around €10.

The Vibe? Homey, apartment-based; ideal for longer stays and owners who want full control of meals and schedules.
The Bill? Ca's Papá double rooms from ~€60–€110 per night; Patritz apartments from ~€80–€140 per night with cleaning fee.
The Standout? Full kitchen independence and a washing machine after sandy beach days.
The Catch? Budget pet-friendly options in Palma sometimes lack elevators or air conditioning; verify details in summer months.

8. Day Trips Beyond the City That Accept Dogs

Palma extends outward into vineyard valleys, coves, and mountain villages, all reachable for day trips with a dog. The Raixa Estate, a 161-country estate hotel near Bunyola in the Tramuntana foothills, accepts dogs on request and offers over 300 hectares of grounds. The estate's 18th-century Italianate garden cascades down terraces lined with cypress trees, and walking through the property with a dog beside you feels like a different country from the Palma waterfront. It is 20 minutes from Palma by car. Another option is Son Brull, a restored 18th-century monastery near Pollença (about an hour's drive north) that accepts dogs and maintains manicured grounds perfect for a long, leashed stroll. The regional character of Mallorca beyond Palma is defined by dry-stone walls, olive groves, and silence; bringing a dog into this landscape is the purest escape from the urban core. On the drive back, stop at the Valdemossa village market, which operates on Saturday mornings and welcomes dogs at leash length in the outdoor perimeter stalls. A genuine local tip: water your dog at public fountains in most Mallorcan villages as a matter of course. The stone fonts attached to old houses are exactly that: drinking fountains still carrying potable water from mountain springs.

The Vibe? Rural, vast, slow; centuries of agricultural history under your feet.
The Bill? Estate rooms from ~€200–€400 nightly; dog supplement varies but ranging from free to €30 per night.
The Standout? Roaming 300 hectares of private grounds with a dog on a long lead.
The Carry? Car rental is essential; confirm pet acceptance with the rental agency, as some Spanish companies charge a "deep cleaning surcharge" for dogs regardless of the car's actual returning condition.

When to Go and What to Know

Palma de Mallorca's dog-friendly season runs roughly from September through June, when temperatures drop below 30 degrees Celsius and pavement becomes walkable for dogs without burned paws. July and August in the Old Town are punishing for four-legged travelers. Early morning walks (6 am to 9 am) and late-evening strolls (7 pm to 10 pm) become essential in summer. Most cafes with outdoor terraces welcome leashed dogs; the standard Mallorcan acknowledgment is a quick glance from the waiter and a bowl of water before you ask. Always check hotel pet policies directly via email before booking, since online booking platforms often list "no pets" even when a specific property's policy is flexible. Veterinary clinics in Palma, such as the Hospital Veterinari on Carrer de Miguel Maroto near Portixol, are open seven days a week, with emergency services available at the Hospital Veterinari Mallorca on Camí de Gènova for after-hours concerns.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average cost of a specialty coffee or local tea in Palma de Mallorca?

A specialty flat white or cortado in Palma costs between €2.50 and €4.50 depending on the neighborhood and whether the café imports specialty beans. Tea selection at traditional Mallorcan cafeterias is limited and usually ranges from €2 to €3. Expect slightly higher prices at rooftop terraces and seafront establishments near Portixol.

Is Palma de Mallorca expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier visiting traveling as a couple should plan around €120 to €180 per day covering accommodation in a three-star hotel, two meals out with one drink each, and local transport. Pet hotel surcharges add roughly €15 to €25 per night. Groceries at Mercat de l'Olivar or Bon Preu supermarkets reduce daily costs by €20 to €30 compared to eating out twice daily.

Are credit cards widely accepted across Palma de Mallorca, or is it necessary to carry cash for daily expenses?

Contactless card payments are accepted at virtually all hotels, supermarkets, and restaurants in Palma. Small market stalls, village bakeries, and some terrace cafeterias in Santa Catalina may require cash for purchases under €5 to €10. Carrying around €30 to €50 in notes covers the occasional cash-only scenario and small tips.

What is the safest and most reliable way to get around Palma de Mallorca as a solo traveler?

Palma's EMT bus network covers the entire city and costs €1.50 per single ride or €8.50 for a ten-ride T2 card. Dogs are permitted on EMT buses if muzzled and leashed; metro and train lines require a carrier under 60 cm. For nighttime travel, radio taxidi cooperatives such as Taxi Palma operate 24 hours and accept leashed dogs at the driver's discretion. A taxi from the airport costs approximately €18 to €22 to central Palma.

What is the standard tipping etiquette or service charge policy at restaurants in Palma de Mallorca?

Spanish restaurants in Palma do not include a mandatory service charge; service is considered included in the menu price. Leaving 5 to 10 percent in coins or rounding up the bill is appreciated but entirely optional. At higher-end establishments such as those inside historic hotels, guests sometimes leave a few extra euros; no one expects a percentage-based tip.

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