
Hotel Bendinat
When you book Hotel Bendinat in Mallorca, Spain through our Fora Reserve partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and flexible check-in and check-out.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Bottle of Mallorcan wine
- Daily complimentary full breakfast at a hotel restaurant for up to two guests
- Priority for room upgrade upon availability
- Early check-in/late check-out, upon availability
Location
Bendinat sits where the Serra de Na Burguesa meets the Mediterranean, a quiet enclave west of Palma where low-rise villas cascade toward rocky coves and the sea shimmers turquoise against pale limestone. The village takes its name from a legend: after the 1229 conquest of Mallorca, a famished King James of Aragon stumbled upon a tent where his lieutenant, Oliver de Termes, was preparing a meal. History lingers in place names here, though modern Bendinat is resolutely residential, a pocket of calm just beyond the bustle of Portals Nous.
The capital, Palma, spreads along the coast seven kilometres east. Its Gothic cathedral rises above the harbour, and its old quarter unfolds in a tangle of sandstone courtyards and wrought-iron balconies. The Mercat de Santa Catalina, a cast-iron pavilion humming with fishmongers and cheese vendors, stands nearly seven kilometres from the property. Central Market Olivar, slightly farther, offers tumbling displays of sobrassada and ensaïmades dusted with sugar.
Palma de Mallorca Airport lies fourteen kilometres to the east, linked by the C-719 coastal road. The island's northern Serra de Tramuntana, a UNESCO World Heritage site since 2011, traces the skyline with terraced olive groves and dry-stone walls that have shaped this landscape for millennia.
Bendinat's rocky shoreline hides small beaches: Cala Oli lies three hundred metres from the property, a sliver of gravel and clear water wedged between cliffs. Platja de l'Oratori, a sandy stretch, sits six hundred metres along the coast. Punta Portals, just over a kilometre west, draws yachts and sun-seekers to its sheltered bay. Book a table at Es Fum, a one-star restaurant occupying the St. Regis Mardavall less than three kilometres away, where Miró prints hang above plates of Creative International cuisine. In Palma, DINS Santi Taura reinvents Mallorcan staples, arròs brut and frit mallorquí, in a dining room overlooking the cathedral, seven kilometres east. Zaranda, also one-starred, operates within the Es Princep hotel in the old quarter.
Golf courses dot the inland plains: Golf de Son Muntaner lies six kilometres north, while T Golf Calvia and Golf Santa Ponça I stretch across hillsides to the west. The Mercat de Santa Catalina, nearly seven kilometres from Bendinat, fills with locals on Saturday mornings, stalls piled with capers, salt-crusted camaiot cheese, and pa amb oli. Dive sites ring the coast: Palma Wracks, four and a half kilometres east, draws divers to sunken cargo vessels; Zoea, ten kilometres out, offers wall dives and grouper sightings.
High summer, July and August, brings heat that settles over Bendinat like a hand: temperatures push past 28°C, the sea warms to bathwater, and rain becomes a rumour. Streets empty at midday, cafés open late into the night.
Spring and early autumn offer kinder weather. May sees temperatures around 21°C, the island greening after winter rains. September holds warmth without the crush, though brief showers return as October's cooler air arrives.
Winter remains mild, temperatures rarely dipping below 10°C, though clouds gather and the tramuntana wind sweeps down from the mountains. January and February see occasional rain, the island quieter, olive presses running in the interior villages.
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