
Es Trenc
About Es Trenc
Es Trenc: Mallorca's Last Untouched Caribbean-Style Beach
Stretching for nearly three kilometers along Mallorca's southern coast, Es Trenc beach Spain is the closest thing the Mediterranean has to a Caribbean postcard. Powder-white sand, water that shifts through every shade of turquoise imaginable, and—remarkably for the Balearics—not a single high-rise in sight. Protected as part of a natural area since 1984, Es Trenc has resisted the wave of development that transformed so much of the island, and the result is a wild, dune-backed paradise that feels delightfully out of step with the busy resorts farther north.
You'll notice the difference the moment you arrive. The breeze carries the salty scent of nearby pine groves and the faint mineral tang of the Es Trenc salt flats just inland. Sandpipers dart along the shoreline, and beyond the low dunes covered in juniper and sea lavender, there's nothing but sky. This is the Mallorca that existed before mass tourism—and with a little planning, it can still be yours.
What Makes Es Trenc Special
Unlike most beaches in Mallorca, Es Trenc has no promenade, no concrete, and no hotel skyline. The sand is genuinely fine and pale, the kind that squeaks underfoot, and the seabed slopes so gently that you can wade out fifty meters and still touch the bottom. On calm days—which are most days in summer—the water is so clear you can count the ripples in the sand beneath your feet.
The beach is divided informally into three sections:
- The central stretch near the main access point at Ses Covetes is the busiest, with two small chiringuitos (beach bars) serving cold beers, grilled fish, and sangria.
- The eastern end toward Colònia de Sant Jordi is quieter and popular with families.
- The western and central-west dunes are the unofficial nudist area—a long-standing tradition that's respected without being obtrusive.
Things to Do at Es Trenc
Swim and Float
The water temperature hovers between a refreshing 18°C in May and a bath-like 26°C in August. Because the bay is shallow and protected, it's ideal for non-confident swimmers and children. Bring a snorkel mask: small schools of sand smelt and the occasional octopus reward patient swimmers near the rocky edges.
Explore the Es Trenc Salt Flats (Salines d'Es Trenc)
A short bike ride or 20-minute walk inland brings you to the working salt pans of Flor de Sal d'Es Trenc, producing some of Spain's most prized gourmet salt since Roman times. You can tour the flats, watch flamingos wading in the shallow ponds, and pick up beautifully packaged sea salt to take home. The flats are part of a protected ENP (Natural Area of Special Interest) and host hundreds of migratory birds.
Walk the Dune Path to Colònia de Sant Jordi
A flat, sandy trail runs the full length of the beach behind the dunes. Walking from Ses Covetes to Colònia de Sant Jordi takes about an hour each way and passes through fragrant pine and savina juniper. Pack water—there's no shade.
Boat Trip to Cabrera
From the nearby port of Colònia de Sant Jordi, daily boats depart for Cabrera National Park, a tiny archipelago that's one of the Mediterranean's best-preserved marine reserves. Combine a morning at Es Trenc with an afternoon boat trip for the ultimate south-coast day.
Sunset at the Chiringuito
The two beach bars—Es Tamarell and the simpler hut near Ses Covetes—stay open into the evening. Order a vermut, settle into a wooden chair, and watch the sky turn pink over the dunes. It's one of those moments that ruins other beaches for you.
Best Time to Visit
The sweet spot is late May to mid-June and mid-September to mid-October. The water is warm enough to swim, the crowds are manageable, and the light is golden. July and August are spectacular but busy—arrive before 10 a.m. or after 4 p.m. to avoid the worst of it. Winter visits are surprisingly rewarding too: the beach is yours alone, and the walk along the dunes is sublime on a sunny February day.
Avoid windy days from the south (locally called migjorn), which churn up seaweed and reduce visibility.
How to Get There
Es Trenc sits roughly 50 km southeast of Palma de Mallorca. Most visitors drive—the road from Campos to either Ses Covetes (western access) or Ses Salines (eastern access) is well signed.
- Parking: There are several official paid car parks (around €10-15 for the day in high season). Arrive early; by 11 a.m. in July and August they fill up fast.
- Bus: Line 519 from Palma serves Colònia de Sant Jordi, from where it's a 25-minute walk along the beach to the heart of Es Trenc.
- Bike: Mallorca's cycling infrastructure is excellent, and the flat terrain around Campos makes Es Trenc an easy ride from nearby villages.
Practical Tips from Experience
- Bring everything you need: there's no shop on the beach itself, and the chiringuitos are pricey. Pack water, snacks, and sun protection.
- Umbrella rentals are available at the main access points (around €18 for two loungers and a parasol).
- No shade naturally exists on the open sand—a beach tent or umbrella is essential between June and September.
- Cash is useful at the small bars, though most now accept cards.
- Respect the dunes: walking on them damages the fragile vegetation. Use the marked wooden walkways.
- Toilets and showers are basic and located only near the main car parks.
- Mosquitoes can appear at dusk near the salt flats—bring repellent if you're staying late.
Where to Stay Nearby
For a beach-focused trip, base yourself in Colònia de Sant Jordi, a low-key fishing town with seafood restaurants and small hotels. Ses Salines village inland is quieter and full of restored stone fincas. Many visitors prefer day-tripping from Palma or the Cap Rocat area, where the boutique scene is stronger.
Local Insights
The locals call the wider area Es Trenc-Salobrar, and there's genuine pride in keeping it wild. A long-running grassroots movement, Salvem Es Trenc ("Save Es Trenc"), has fought off multiple development proposals over the decades. When you visit, you're enjoying the fruits of that civic resistance—so leave no trace, support the small local businesses, and skip the over-packaged single-use anything.
For a perfect day, pair Es Trenc Mallorca with lunch at one of Ses Salines' farmhouse restaurants—Cassai is a standout—and finish with a swim at the rocky coves of Es Carbó just east of Colònia de Sant Jordi. Few stretches of the Mediterranean still offer this combination of wildness, beauty, and accessibility. Don't let it pass you by in 2026.