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Green spring countryside and wildflowers below the Serra de Tramuntana mountains, Mallorca, in March
Travel Guide

Mallorca in March (2026): Spring Weather, Hiking, and Quiet Before Easter

Written by: Spain Travel Insider Team Content Last Updated June 2026 10 min read
Avg High
17°C
63°F · warming
Crowds
Low–Med
Rising to Easter
Hotels From
€90
Per night, 4-star
Best For
Hiking
& cycling, spring

What Mallorca is really like in March: warming 17°C days, green spring countryside, peak hiking and cycling, low early-month prices, the start of Holy Week, and an honest look at the still-cold sea.

What You Should Know

  • March is when Mallorca wakes up: the weather warms to around 17°C, the countryside turns green and fills with wildflowers, and the hiking and road cycling are at their absolute best on the quiet Tramuntana roads.
  • Early March is still low season, with mild weather, near-empty monuments, and low hotel prices, but the clocks go forward at the end of the month and Holy Week starts, so late March is busier and pricier.
  • It is not quite a beach month yet. The sea is still around 15°C, too cold for most swimmers, though the coast and its boat tours slowly begin to reopen toward Easter.
  • Most people don't realize how much the month splits: come in the first three weeks for quiet, cheap spring, or come for late March if you specifically want the Semana Santa processions, which begin on Palm Sunday, March 29 in 2026.

Mallorca in March

March days are noticeably longer and warmer than February's, and the island is green again. Here is how a typical spring day unfolds when you mix Palma's sights with the countryside at its best.

  1. 019:30 AM

    Cathedral of Mallorca at opening

    Start at La Seu the moment it opens. In early March the great Gothic cathedral is still quiet, and the spring light through the rose window is lovely.

  2. 0211:00 AM

    Old town and Passeig del Born

    Wander the medieval lanes, patios, and the grand Born boulevard, now warm enough for a café terrace in the late-morning sun.

  3. 031:00 PM

    Lunch and the market

    A relaxed lunch at the Mercat de l'Olivar or an old-town bar. By March the warmest days are pleasant enough to eat outside.

  4. 042:30 PM

    Tramuntana hike or drive

    Head into the mountains for a hike or a drive through Valldemossa and Sóller, with green hills, wildflowers, and the best walking conditions of the year.

  5. 056:30 PM

    Sunset on the seafront

    Sunset is around 7:00 PM, or an hour later once the clocks go forward on March 29, so there is plenty of evening light along the Parc de la Mar.

  6. 068:30 PM

    Tapas and wine in the old town

    Old-town bars and wine cellars are warm and lively, and by late March the longer evenings make for a leisurely dinner.

Best March window: the first three weeks, roughly March 1 to 22. The weather is warming, the countryside is green and full of wildflowers, the hiking and cycling are at their best, and prices are still low before the Easter spike. Note: Holy Week (Semana Santa) begins late in the month in 2026, on Palm Sunday March 29, bringing processions and higher prices to the final days.

FactorMarch Rating
Weather7/10 — warming and often sunny, longer evenings after the clocks change, still the odd wet, windy spell
Crowds8/10 — quiet early on, rising toward Easter at the end of the month
Prices7/10 — low early March, climbing toward an Easter spike at month's end
Beaches4/10 — pleasant for walks and the odd brave swimmer, but the sea is still around 15°C
Sea & Swimming2/10 — warming but still cold; the boat tours only begin to return late in the month
Hiking & Cycling9/10 — the peak of the season, with green hills, wildflowers, and ideal cool temperatures
Off-season Closures5/10 — the coast starts reopening toward Easter; Palma fully open throughout
Families6/10 — spring weather and Holy Week appeal, but the sea is still too cold for the beach
Couples8/10 — warm light, green countryside, longer evenings, and low early-month prices

💰 Average March hotel prices (Palma, 4-star mid-range):
Early March (Mar 1–22): ~€90/night · Holy Week (late Mar): ~€160/night
Rough mid-range estimates; the coast begins reopening around Easter, and rates vary by property and booking lead time.

March is the month to come to Mallorca if you want the island just as it springs back to life, green and warming, but still mostly quiet and affordable. The hiking and cycling are at their peak, the countryside is full of wildflowers, and Palma is a pleasure in the spring sun. Our take: for an active, outdoors-and-culture trip, early-to-mid March is one of the best-value windows of the entire year, before the Easter crowds and prices arrive.

It is a great fit for walkers and cyclists, for couples who want warm light and longer evenings without summer prices, and for culture-first travelers who still want calm monuments. We'd lean toward March over the depths of winter for the warmth and the green, and over the summer for the space and the value. The biggest difference from summer is still the sea: at around 15°C it is too cold for most swimmers, and the beach scene only starts to stir at the very end of the month. We'd only pick late March specifically if you want the Semana Santa processions, and we'd accept the higher prices and crowds that come with them.

Option 1 · Compare

Compare the Most Popular Things to Do in Mallorca in March

March's warming weather and green countryside make Palma's sights and the Tramuntana the best they have been all year. Compare three of Mallorca's most-booked spring experiences side by side, then check live dates below.

Option 2 · Book

Book the Most Popular Option Directly

Live availability for the Cathedral of Mallorca skip-the-line ticket (4.6 from 15,000+ reviews), still calm in early spring. Pick your March date below.

  • Free cancellation 24h
  • Reserve now & pay later
  • Skip-the-line entry
  • Warm indoor highlight
  • Still-quiet early-spring queues
  • Rooftop terraces in base ticket

We may earn a commission on bookings made through this widget — at no extra cost to you.

Mallorca Weather in March

Avg High
17°C 63°F
Avg Low
7°C 45°F
Water Temp
15°C 59°F
Still cold to swim
Rain Days
~6
Spring showers
Daylight
~12 hrs
Clocks forward Mar 29
Humidity
Moderate
Wind
Moderate
Breezy spring days

Temperature and Daylight

Mallorca March weather is a clear step up from the winter: warming, often sunny, and noticeably brighter. Mallorca March temperatures in Palma typically reach around 17°C in the afternoon, comfortable for walking in a light layer, while mornings and evenings still drop to about 7°C. The big change is daylight: you get around twelve hours, and when the clocks go forward on March 29 the evenings stretch to past 8:00 PM, transforming how much you can fit into a day.

Rain Pattern

March averages about six rainy days, typically as spring showers that pass through between bright, clear spells rather than settling in. The weather can be changeable and breezy, so a flexible plan with an indoor option like the cathedral, a cooking class, or the Caves of Drach in reserve handles a wet afternoon easily.

Sea and Outdoor Conditions

The Mallorca March sea temperature is around 15°C, warming but still cold for swimming, so the beach is for walking rather than bathing for most of the month. On land, though, the conditions are superb: the countryside is green and full of wildflowers, and the cool, clear air makes March the peak of the hiking and road-cycling season. Pack layers, a light waterproof, and good walking shoes. In our view the single most useful thing you can bring is a versatile mid-layer, since spring days swing from a cool morning to a mild, sunny afternoon.

Crowds and Prices in March

March is a month of two halves: three quiet, low-cost weeks of early spring, then a sharp lift at the end as Holy Week and the Easter holidays arrive. Timing your trip around that split is the key to the value.

Mar 1–15Quiet & cheap

Still firmly low season: warming weather, green hills, near-empty monuments, and Palma 4-star hotels around €90. The best value of the month, and one of the best active-travel windows of the year. We'd book this.

Mar 16–28Warming up

The weather and the wildflowers keep improving and a few more visitors appear, but it is still calm and reasonably priced right up until Holy Week begins. A lovely, uncrowded stretch.

Mar 29–31Holy Week begins

Semana Santa starts on Palm Sunday, March 29 in 2026, bringing processions, more visitors, and noticeably higher hotel prices into the long Easter weekend that follows in early April.

Across most of March, expect short lines at the Cathedral of Mallorca and Palma 4-star rooms around €85 to €100, rising sharply only in the final days as Easter approaches. The coast slowly starts to reopen toward the end of the month.

Mallorca Month by Month: Weather, Crowds, and Prices

To put March in context, here is how Mallorca's three big trip variables, temperature, crowds, and hotel prices, move across the year. March sits at the warming, still-quiet, still-affordable start of spring, highlighted in each chart below.

Avg High Temperature
°C by month · March highlighted
JFMAMJJASOND
Crowd Level
Relative by month · March highlighted
JFMAMJJASOND
Avg Hotel Price
€/night, Palma 4-star · March highlighted
JFMAMJJASOND

ℹ️ Charts are based on typical Mallorca climate normals and the Palma 4-star mid-range hotel pricing our team tracks. Actual rates vary year to year and by booking lead time. The late-March Easter window can run noticeably higher than the early-month figure.

How March Compares to Other Months

If you are weighing March against the months either side of it, this is the quick version. The table covers the two months before and after March so you can see how the early-spring window stacks up.

MonthCrowdsWeatherPrices
JanuaryVery LowMild (15°C)Lowest
FebruaryLowMild (15°C)Low
MarchLow-MediumWarming (17°C)Rising
AprilMediumWarm (19°C)Higher (Easter)
MayMedium-HighWarm (23°C)High

The short read: March is the turning point. It keeps much of winter's calm and value through the first three weeks while adding warmth, green hills, and the year's best hiking, then tips into the busier, pricier season as Easter arrives at the end of the month and into April. For the months just before, see our Mallorca in February guide with the almond blossom and our Mallorca in January guide, and for the full year-round picture, our guide to the best things to do in Mallorca.

Spring, Hiking, and Holy Week in Mallorca in March

March is less about set-piece festivals than about the island itself coming alive, though Holy Week arrives at the very end of the month.

Spring Countryside and Wildflowers

As the almond blossom fades in early March, the countryside turns lush and green, and wildflowers carpet the meadows and the Tramuntana foothills. In our view this is the prettiest the island looks all year, and it makes the hiking and the scenic drives genuinely special.

Peak Hiking and Cycling

March is the heart of the walking and road-cycling season. The cool, clear air and green hills are ideal for the Tramuntana trails, from Valldemossa to Deià or the Sóller valley, and the quiet mountain roads are full of training cyclists. If outdoors is your reason to come, this is one of the best months of the year.

Semana Santa (Holy Week)

In 2026, Holy Week begins late, on Palm Sunday, March 29, with the main processions running into early April. Palma and towns across the island hold solemn evening processions, the most striking being the Davallament near the cathedral on Good Friday. If you visit in the final days of March, expect the processions, more visitors, and higher prices.

All monthHiking & cycling peak

Green hills, wildflowers, and cool, clear air make March the best month of the year for the Tramuntana trails and the road-cycling routes.

Early MarchSpring bloom

The almond blossom fades and the countryside turns lush and green, carpeted with wildflowers. The prettiest the island looks all year.

From Mar 29Holy Week begins

Semana Santa starts on Palm Sunday in 2026, with solemn processions in Palma and the island's towns running into early April, plus higher prices.

The March Tradeoff: Cold Sea and the Easter Spike

March is a big improvement on the winter, but two things still shape the trip: the sea is not yet warm, and the calm, cheap window closes abruptly at Easter. Plan around both and March is one of the year's best-value months.

The Sea Is Still Cold

At around 15°C the water is warming but still too cold for most swimmers, so March is not a beach-and-bathing month. The boat tours and water sports only begin to return late in the month. If your trip is about the beach and the sea, you will be happier waiting until at least May; if it is about the countryside and the city, March is excellent.

The Coast Is Reopening, Slowly

Many resort hotels and seafront restaurants stay closed until around Easter, then start reopening for the new season. Most people don't realize the timing is tied to Easter rather than a fixed date, so in an early-Easter year more reopens in late March, and in a late-Easter year the coast stays quieter for longer. Palma, as always, is fully open throughout, so it remains the safest base.

The Easter Price Spike

The single biggest thing to plan around is Holy Week. Prices and crowds are low for most of March, then jump sharply for the Easter period at the end of the month and into April. We think the tradeoff is simple: come in the first three weeks for the value and the calm, or come for late March only if the Semana Santa processions are the point.

Best Things to Do in Mallorca in March

ActivityMarch RatingBest Time of DayNotes
Island tour / Tramuntana9/10Full dayGreen hills, wildflowers, Valldemossa, and Sóller are at their spring best; a top March pick.
Palma walking tour9/10MiddayWarm spring days and an old town still free of the summer crowds; ideal walking weather.
Cathedral of Mallorca9/10At openingStill calm in early spring; a warm interior and the rose window in fine spring light.
Cooking class8/10Morning or afternoonIndoor and hands-on; a perfect plan for a changeable spring day.
Wine tasting8/10AfternoonIndoor cellars year-round, with the vineyards greening up nicely by March.
Caves of Drach8/10MiddayThe show caves run year-round at around 20°C; a reliable wet-weather pick.
ATV tour6/10MiddayBetter than mid-winter as the ground dries and warms; good on a bright spring day.
Hop-on-hop-off bus6/10MiddayMilder now, though the open top deck is still cool early and late in the day.
Formula self-drive tour6/10MiddayMore comfortable than winter on a warm, dry spring afternoon.
Catamaran cruise4/10MiddayA few cruises start returning late in the month, though the sea is still cool and breezy.
Dolphin watching4/10MorningLimited early-season departures begin to return; still cool on the water.
Scuba diving4/10MiddayWater warming slowly; more operators reopen toward the end of the month.
Boat party1/10Not yet running; this is a peak-summer activity only.

What We'd Prioritize in March

March is the month for the outdoors. The hiking and cycling are at their yearly best, so build at least a day or two around the Tramuntana, with the green hills, the wildflowers, and villages like Valldemossa and Sóller. In Palma, a walking tour, the Cathedral of Mallorca, and the old town are a pleasure in the spring sun and still uncrowded. We'd give this the edge for any active traveler who wants the island at its greenest and most comfortable before the season ramps up.

For a changeable or wet day, the indoor staples still deliver: a cooking class, a wine tasting, the cathedral, or the Caves of Drach all work whatever the forecast. We'd point you here when spring decides to be showery. The water activities are only just stirring, so if a catamaran cruise or diving is a priority, treat it as a late-month possibility rather than a sure thing, and consider waiting for May. For the full menu across the year, see our guide to the best things to do in Mallorca.

More March Ideas Without a Dedicated Guide

Beyond the bookable tours, a handful of low-key, mostly free experiences suit a bright March day:

  • Tramuntana hiking: The Valldemossa-to-Deià path, the Barranc de Biniaraix above Sóller, and the Castell d'Alaró climb are all superb in the cool, green spring air.
  • Sóller vintage train and tram: The historic wooden train and seafront tram run year-round, a scenic ride through orange groves just coming into blossom.
  • Watch a Holy Week procession (late March): If you visit at the end of the month, the solemn evening processions in Palma are moving and free to watch.
  • Bellver Castle and the gardens: The hilltop castle and Palma's parks are lovely in spring, with wide views and far fewer people than summer.
  • Wildflower drive in the Pla: The central plain and the back roads turn green and flower-filled; a relaxed self-drive shows it off.
  • Mercat de l'Olivar: Palma's central food market is a lively browse, with spring produce and a place for lunch.
  • Es Baluard and Palma's museums: The contemporary art museum and the city's galleries are ideal for a showery afternoon.

ℹ️ Note: many beach-resort hotels and boat tours only start reopening around Easter, so for most of March, base yourself in Palma, which stays fully open.

Getting Around Mallorca in March

Mallorca is easy to get around in March, and a car is well worth it this month for the hiking trailheads and the spring countryside. Here is how the airport, transfers, and driving look.

Palma Airport in March

Palma de Mallorca Airport (PMI) is open and busier than mid-winter, with more routes returning as the season approaches, especially around Easter. The terminal is still far quieter than summer, so arrivals and security move quickly.

Airport Transfers

The A1 airport bus runs year-round and reaches central Palma in about 15 minutes for a few euros, the simplest option. A taxi to the city is roughly €25. Resort transfer shuttles begin returning around Easter as the coastal hotels reopen.

Car Rental and Driving

Car rental is still reasonably priced in early March, before the Easter demand lifts rates, and a car is the best way to reach the trailheads, the Tramuntana villages, and the wildflower back roads. Roads are clear and parking is easy outside the Easter window. Two things to watch: spring showers can make mountain roads greasy, and the routes are busy with training cyclists, so drive patiently and give riders room.

Public Transport

The island's TIB buses and the historic Sóller train run all year, with timetables starting to expand toward the season. For a city trip, Palma is walkable; for the hiking and the countryside that define March, a rental car is worth it.

Where to Stay in Mallorca in March

Where you stay still matters in March, since much of the coast only reopens around Easter. Palma remains the safest base, with the Tramuntana villages a strong choice for an active, scenery-first trip.

Best Bases

  • Palma: Open and lively all year, with hotels, restaurants, the market, museums, the cathedral, and the airport bus on hand, plus Holy Week processions late in the month. The most reliable base in March.
  • Sóller and the Tramuntana villages: Sóller, Valldemossa, Deià, and Fornalutx have boutique hotels and agroturismos open in spring, and they put you right among the best hiking, cycling, and green countryside.
  • Port de Sóller and early-reopening coast: Toward Easter, more coastal hotels begin reopening, so a seafront base becomes an option late in the month, though choice is still limited.

Where to Be Cautious in Early March

  • The big beach resorts: Magaluf, Alcúdia, Cala d'Or, and similar towns are largely shut until around Easter. Earlier in March they can still feel half-closed, so check what is open before booking one.

If you have booked March holidays in Mallorca for early in the month, Palma or a mountain village is the surer bet; by late March, as the coast reopens for Easter, a beach base becomes more workable.

What to Pack for Mallorca in March

Packing for Mallorca in March is about warming but changeable spring weather: mild, sunny afternoons, cooler mornings and evenings, and the odd shower. Layers and good footwear are the key.

  • A versatile mid-layer: The single most useful item, for the swing between a cool 7°C morning and a mild 17°C afternoon.
  • A light waterproof: Spring showers pass through, so a packable rain jacket or umbrella is worth carrying.
  • Proper walking or hiking shoes: March is peak hiking season, so bring footwear with grip for the Tramuntana trails.
  • Layers for cool evenings: A sweater or fleece for after the early sunset, especially in the mountains.
  • Sunglasses and sun cream: The spring sun is stronger than it feels, particularly on the trails and the water.
  • A daypack: For layers, water, and snacks on hikes and long sightseeing days.
  • Swimwear (optional): Only if you are a hardy swimmer or your hotel has a heated pool; the sea is still cold.

Is Mallorca Worth Visiting in March?

Yes, Mallorca is well worth visiting in March, especially in the first three weeks, if you want warming spring weather, the island at its greenest, and the best hiking and cycling of the year, all at low-season prices. You also get calm monuments and a lively, open Palma. The honest catch is that the sea is still too cold to swim, much of the coast is only just reopening, and prices jump at Easter at the very end of the month.

Our experience: Early-to-mid March is our favorite of the quiet months, because you get spring warmth and green hills without the winter chill or the summer crowds. Come now for hiking, cycling, and culture, not the beach. If swimming and the coast are the point, wait until at least May, when the sea warms and the resorts are fully open.

In short: choose early-to-mid March for value, spring scenery, and the outdoors, choose late March only if you want the Semana Santa processions, and choose late spring or summer if the beach is the priority. For the months just before, see our Mallorca in February guide, and for how the rest of the year compares, our guide to the best things to do in Mallorca.

From Our Experience

The detail that catches first-timers out is Easter timing: most of March is quiet and cheap, but prices and crowds jump sharply once Holy Week begins, on March 29 in 2026, so if value matters, book the first three weeks and avoid the final Easter days.

Tips for Visiting Mallorca in March

  • Book early-to-mid March for value: The first three weeks are quiet and cheap; prices and crowds climb sharply once Holy Week starts at the end of the month.
  • Come for the hiking and cycling: March is the peak of the season, so plan your trip around the Tramuntana trails and the quiet mountain roads at their green best.
  • Rent a car for the countryside: A car is the best way to reach the trailheads, the wildflower back roads, and the mountain villages; early March rates are still low.
  • Pack for changeable spring weather: Layers, a light waterproof, and proper walking shoes cover the cool mornings, mild afternoons, and the odd shower.
  • Mind the clocks on March 29: The clocks go forward at the end of the month, stretching the evenings to past 8:00 PM and giving you much more daylight.
  • The beach can wait: The sea is still around 15°C, so build the trip around the countryside, the city, and the trails, not bathing.
  • Decide about Holy Week: Late March 2026 brings Semana Santa processions; come for them deliberately, or avoid the final days if you want the quiet, cheaper island.
  • Coming in February or April? Our Mallorca in February guide covers the almond blossom just before, and our Mallorca in April guide the warmer month just after, when the coast reopens for the season. For the wider year-round picture, see our guide to the best things to do in Mallorca.

How We Put This Guide Together

The Spain Travel Insider team built this March guide around what actually changes month to month in Mallorca: the weather, the daylight, the sea temperature, the crowd levels, the prices, and which experiences are at their best or worst in early-spring conditions. We cross-checked typical March climate figures, the timing of Holy Week and the clock change, the gradual reopening of the coast, and the seasonal pricing patterns we track for Palma 4-star hotels, then matched each activity rating to how it really feels in spring rather than in the abstract. The aim is an honest picture: where March shines, like the green countryside, the peak hiking and cycling, and the low early-month prices, and where it falls short, like the still-cold sea and the Easter price spike, so you can decide whether it fits the trip you want.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Mallorca good in March?+

Yes, especially in the first three weeks. March brings warming 17°C days, green countryside and wildflowers, and the year's best hiking and cycling, all at low-season prices and with quiet monuments. The catch is that the sea is still around 15°C and too cold to swim, much of the coast is only just reopening, and prices spike for Holy Week at the very end of the month.

What is the weather like in Mallorca in March?+

March is mild and warming: Palma afternoons reach about 17°C (63°F) and nights drop to around 7°C (45°F), with roughly six rainy days and about twelve hours of daylight. The clocks go forward on March 29, stretching the evenings. The Serra de Tramuntana is cooler, and the sea is around 15°C, still too cold for most swimmers.

Can you swim in the sea in Mallorca in March?+

Not comfortably for most people. The sea is around 15°C in March, warming but still cold, so it suits only hardy swimmers. The beaches are pleasant for walks, but a March trip is best built around the countryside, the hiking, and Palma rather than bathing. For warm-sea swimming, wait until at least late May.

Is Mallorca warm in March?+

Mallorca is mild and warming in March rather than hot. Palma afternoons reach about 17°C (63°F), comfortable for walking and sightseeing in a light layer, while mornings and evenings are cooler at around 7°C. It is pleasantly spring-like, but the sea at 15°C is still too cold for the beach.

When is Easter in Mallorca in 2026?+

In 2026, Holy Week (Semana Santa) begins on Palm Sunday, March 29, with Easter Sunday on April 5, so the main processions fall in late March and early April. Palma and the island's towns hold solemn evening processions, and prices and crowds rise noticeably for the Easter period, in contrast to the quiet, cheaper first three weeks of March.

Is March expensive in Mallorca?+

For most of the month, no. Early and mid-March stay in the low-season range, with Palma 4-star hotels around €90 a night. The exception is the end of the month: prices climb sharply for Holy Week and the Easter holidays, so the cheapest time to visit is the first three weeks before that spike.

What is the best week to visit Mallorca in March?+

The first three weeks, roughly March 1 to 22, are the sweet spot: warming weather, green hills and wildflowers, the best hiking and cycling of the year, and still-low prices before the Easter spike. Choose late March instead only if you specifically want the Semana Santa processions and do not mind the higher prices.

What are the best things to do in Mallorca in March?+

March is for the outdoors: hike or drive the Tramuntana for the green hills and wildflowers, with Valldemossa and Sóller as scenic stops. Add a Palma walking tour, the Cathedral of Mallorca, a cooking class, a wine tasting, and the year-round Caves of Drach. Late in the month, catch the Holy Week processions; save the beach and most boat trips for later in spring.

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