Sa Calobra
Sa Calobra delivers one of Mallorca's most dramatic encounters: a tiny pebble beach wedged between towering limestone cliffs where the Torrent de Pareis gorge meets the sea.
About Sa Calobra
Sa Calobra delivers one of Mallorca's most dramatic encounters: a tiny pebble beach wedged between towering limestone cliffs where the Torrent de Pareis gorge meets the sea. The real attraction isn't just the beach itself, but the complete experience of navigating the serpentine MA-2141 road that drops 800 meters through 14 hairpin bends, including the famous Nus de la Corbata where the road loops completely under itself. You'll park in a basic lot and walk through a short tunnel to reach the beach, surrounded by walls of rock that rise hundreds of meters on three sides.
The moment you emerge from the tunnel, you're hit by the scale of the place. The beach feels like nature's amphitheater, with smooth pebbles underfoot and impossibly blue water lapping against cliffs that seem to lean inward. Tour groups cluster near the tunnel entrance, but the beach spreads wide enough to find space. The water stays refreshingly cold even in summer, and there's something almost ceremonial about the way sound echoes off the rock walls when waves crash during rough weather.
Here's what most guides won't admit: Sa Calobra is more about the journey and the wow factor than actual beach time. The pebbles are uncomfortable for lounging, there's minimal shade, and the single beach bar charges tourist prices for basic drinks. If you're driving, fuel up beforehand because that winding descent will test your brakes, and the climb back up is even more demanding on your engine. The boat from Port de Soller costs around 25 EUR return and saves you the stress, plus you get coastal views that drivers miss entirely.
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