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Visiting Palma de Mallorca in March

Visiting Palma de Mallorca in March

Weather in March: Average high 16.4°C, 34.6mm rainfall.

# Palma de Mallorca in March: The Honest Version

March in Palma sits in that slightly awkward shoulder season where the island hasn’t fully woken up yet but isn’t dead either. The weather is genuinely pleasant rather than spectacular – you’re looking at around 16 degrees, which means comfortable walking weather but absolutely not beach weather, regardless of what optimistic travel blogs tell you. Pack a proper jacket. You’ll use it, especially in the evenings when temperatures drop sharply and the wind off the water has real bite to it.

The rain is light but present. Roughly 35mm across the month means you’ll likely catch a grey day or two, possibly a proper downpour. Nothing catastrophic, but enough to matter if your whole trip is built around sitting outside.

The crowd situation is honestly one of March’s best arguments. The old town is genuinely walkable without navigating tour groups. The Cathedral looks like a cathedral rather than a backdrop for a thousand selfie sticks. You can get a table at decent restaurants without planning three weeks ahead, and locals are still actually present in the neighbourhood bars rather than having retreated from the tourist invasion.

What’s open is mostly fine. The Cathedral, Bellver Castle, Es Baluard museum – the proper cultural stuff runs year-round. Some beach clubs and resort-focused restaurants remain shuttered, but central Palma’s food and nightlife scene operates normally. The market at Santa Catalina is excellent and worth half a morning.

Is it worth going? Genuinely yes, but for a specific type of traveller. If you want culture, food, architecture, walking, and affordable flights and hotels, March delivers well. If you need guaranteed sunshine and want to lie on a beach, wait until June and accept the crowds that come with it.

**One practical tip:** Don’t hire a car unless you’re planning day trips around the island. Central Palma is compact and walkable, parking is an expensive nightmare, and you’ll resent the stress. Buses are cheap and decent. Save the car hire for one day if you want to explore the Tramuntana mountains – which, in March light, look absolutely beautiful.

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