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May 13, 2026

The beaches of Ibiza

Ibiza has approximately 210 kilometres of coastline and just over fifty catalogued beaches and coves. The figure alone says little. What defines the Ibizan coast is not the quantity but the radical diversity of its forms: long sandy stretches with full amenities, rocky coves reachable only on foot or by boat, urban beaches with promenades, corners beside fishermen’s huts that time seems to have forgotten. Understanding how that coastline is distributed is the first step towards choosing well.

How are Ibiza’s beaches distributed by type, character and use?

The southwest and south coasts, which belong largely to the municipality of San José, hold the greatest density of sandy beaches on the island: more than 80 kilometres of coastline and 32 beaches, including the most internationally recognised. The westward orientation of this coast is also the reason it produces the best sunsets. The east coast, in the municipality of Santa Eulalia, has a high number of small sandy beaches, calm, family-friendly, well positioned to catch the morning sun. The north coast, in San Juan de Labritja, is the wildest and least accessible: continuous cliffs, few sandy beaches, hard-to-reach coves that are precisely the ones most prized by those who know them. The northwest has the lowest beach density of the entire island: a rugged, irregular coastline where the cliffs leave room only for a handful of small coves of exceptional character.

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What sets Cala Conta, Cala Jondal and Ses Salines apart in terms of size, atmosphere and crowd?

Cala Jondal, Ses Salines and Cala Conta are the three most recognised beaches in Ibiza, each with a radically different profile, crowd and experience.

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What is the difference between a chiringuito and a beach club in Ibiza?

In Ibiza, a chiringuito is a seasonal temporary structure with no fixed construction, regulated by coastal law; a beach club operates with a restaurant licence and a permanent structure. The difference is not just one of size or price; it is a legal and structural distinction that determines what to expect from each.

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Which beaches in Ibiza have the best sunset views?

The best sunsets in Ibiza are concentrated along the west coast, which faces the open Mediterranean: Cala Conta, Punta Galera, Cala d’Hort and Cala Benirrás are the four reference points, each with its own quality of light and atmosphere. It was Café del Mar in San Antonio, open since 1980, that put the Ibizan sunset ritual on the world map. From the nineties onwards, its chill-out sessions facing the sea turned that moment of the day into an experience with an identity of its own, copied and exported across the planet.

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What is Punta Galera and why do Ibizans go there at sunset?

Punta Galera, near Cala Salada, is where Ibizans go when they want a sunset without crowds. The site is a singular rock formation that creates horizontal natural platforms, almost like terraces shaped by the sea, where you can lie at water level with a privacy that Cala Conta cannot offer in July and August. The access is slightly more demanding, which acts as a natural filter.

Which other coves stand out on Ibiza’s southwest coast?

The municipality of San José holds more than thirty beaches and coves across its 80 kilometres of coast, each with a very different profile: from Cala Vadella, sheltered and familiar as a small Mediterranean village, to Cala Molí, where entering the water over the rocks puts off the less determined and keeps the cove strikingly quiet even in August.

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Which beaches in Ibiza are the hardest to reach, and why is the effort worth it?

Some coves in Ibiza are not publicised, have no clear signage and require more than parking and walking down. That difficulty is precisely what protects them. Portixol and Cala Llentrisca are two names that can be mentioned without betraying the spirit of discretion this part of the island deserves.

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Which beaches in Ibiza have a fishing village atmosphere and genuine local character?

Ibiza’s historic villages are not coastal, which means there are no fishing ports in the conventional sense. Ibizan fishermen have always worked from multiple points along the coast, where they built the boathouses that still define some of the most authentic corners of the island.

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Why is the sea in Ibiza so clear, and what is posidonia?

The seabed around Ibiza has a feature that sets it apart from the rest of the western Mediterranean: meadows of posidonia. This marine plant, whose scientific and heritage story is told in the Culture and History entry, has one direct and visible consequence for the swimmer: it filters the water with an efficiency that no artificial treatment could replicate, binding suspended particles and maintaining exceptional transparency.

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Which beach in Ibiza is best for snorkelling?

The best coves for snorkelling are those that combine rocky seabeds with posidonia meadows: Cala Tarida, Cala Gracioneta, Cala Saladeta, Cala Xarraca in the north, Cala Xuclar. The most practical advice is to always carry a mask and snorkel, because even a cove that looks unpromising from the surface can reveal remarkable underwater life. Arriving by boat at some of these coves also opens up the option of anchoring and exploring from the water.

Which beaches in Ibiza are best for water sports: paddleboarding, kayaking, windsurfing and surfing?

Ibiza offers kayaking, paddleboarding, windsurfing, kitesurfing and the hire of small recreational craft without a licence at several beaches, with the greatest concentration of services in San Antonio, Santa Eulalia and Playa d’en Bossa.

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Which are the best nudist beaches in Ibiza?

The beaches where naturism is practised most naturally are Es Cavallet and Aguas Blancas, with very different profiles. Es Cavallet, inside the Ses Salines Natural Park, has a cosmopolitan atmosphere and high visitor numbers in summer. The southern end of the beach is the stretch best known for naturism and has for decades drawn an LGBTQ crowd. Aguas Blancas, on the northeast coast, is far wilder and freer, with no infrastructure or services.

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Did you know that Ibiza Town has its own beaches, a few minutes’ walk from the old city?

Few Mediterranean capitals can claim a quiet, crystal-clear beach with a promenade ten minutes’ walk from the historic centre. Figueretas is that beach: unpretentious and family-friendly, its water clarity surprises anyone expecting a grey urban beach. The posidonia banks just offshore explain that transparency.

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Do Ibiza’s beaches have Blue Flag status, and what does that mean for visitors?

The Blue Flag distinction evaluates water quality, services and facilities, including accessibility for people with reduced mobility. Certified Ibizan beaches have lifeguards, amphibious beach wheelchair services and adapted access. The list is updated annually and can be checked on the official website of the Foundation for Environmental Education. For visitors with accessibility needs, this is the most reliable criterion for choosing a beach.

What is the north coast of Ibiza like, and which beaches are worth visiting?

The north coast of Ibiza, in the municipality of San Juan de Labritja, is the wildest and least developed part of the island: continuous cliffs, hard-to-reach coves and a dozen beaches with a character of their own that reward the effort of getting there.

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Which coves stand out on Ibiza’s east coast?

The east coast, in the municipality of Santa Eulalia, operates on different terms from the south and north. No rocky pine-fringed coves here, no cliff drama: what you find instead are wide, accessible sandy beaches that catch the morning sun, with pine trees throwing natural shade along the shore and a relaxed mix of local families and visitors who return to the same spot year after year.

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Which beaches in Ibiza are best reached by boat?

Several coves in Ibiza only make sense arriving by sea: Cala Pluma, near Ses Salines on the way to Formentera, is virtually inaccessible by land, and the boat journey along the west coast to Es Vedrá or across to Cala Saona in Formentera reveals a dimension of the island that no road can give. Many beach restaurants also receive guests arriving by tender or dinghy from boats anchored in the bay. This experience is covered in detail in the entry on boats and yachts in Ibiza.

How do you get to Ibiza’s most popular beaches in August, and is it worth taking the car?

In August, driving to the most popular beaches, Cala Conta, Cala Salada or Ses Salines, can mean finding the access road closed and parking far away: the authorities manage traffic in high season when the car parks fill up. Ses Salines has its own paid car park, required by its status as a natural park. Cala Jondal has good parking for restaurant guests. Cala Conta, Cala Salada and Cala Benirrás all have regulated access during high season.

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What is Playa d’en Bossa and what makes it different from every other beach in Ibiza?

At nearly 2,700 metres, Playa d’en Bossa is the longest beach in Ibiza. It is also the most transformed. Over decades, Grupo Empresas Matutes, the Ibizan family behind Palladium Hotel Group, built on this stretch of coast a complete leisure ecosystem with no equivalent on the island.

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Is a day trip to Formentera worth it from a villa in Ibiza?

Formentera is thirty minutes away by fast ferry from Ibiza harbour, or reachable aboard a private boat for those who prefer to arrive at their own pace. Its beaches at Illetes and Llevant, inside the shared Ses Salines Natural Park, have Caribbean-blue water little more than two hours from any European capital. The trip is unquestionably worth making. Details on how to organise it, which boat to take and what to see are in the boats and yachts entry.

Which beaches in Ibiza are quietest and most suitable for young children?

For young children, choosing a beach means different criteria: a gentle entry into the water, no current, a sandy bottom and a gradual increase in depth. This is covered in detail in the dedicated Ibiza for families entry, with specific recommendations by area and age.

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