Skip to main content
Santa Catalina
Old market, design-led, late tables

Santa Catalina

Palma's old fishermen's quarter turned the city's densest run of chef-driven kitchens and wine bars.

Once Palma's fishermen's quarter, Santa Catalina now wears its working-class bones lightly under a layer of design studios, third-wave coffee and a covered market that still anchors the morning. The grid of low townhouses on streets like Carrer de Sant Magí and Anníbal fills after dark, when the neighbourhood turns into the city's most concentrated stretch of ambitious cooking. Dining here runs from a chef's tasting counter to a tiny natural-wine bar to a brasserie that keeps the lights on late, and the crowd is a mix of locals, expats and people who came for the food rather than the postcard. It feels urban and unhurried at once.

Highlights

Covered Mercat de Santa Catalina at its heart Tasting menus alongside natural-wine bars Townhouse grid that comes alive after dark Locals, expats and food travellers mixed Walkable from the harbour and old town
4 places
1 Categories

Restaurant

4 places