A practical guide for expats moving to the Balearic Islands (Illes Balears) — Spain’s Mediterranean archipelago including Mallorca (Majorca), Menorca, Ibiza (Eivissa) and Formentera. The Balearics have become one of Europe’s premium relocation destinations for high-net-worth retirees, second-home owners, premium-tier remote workers, sailing enthusiasts, and German / British / Scandinavian retiree communities. This guide covers Mallorca in depth (Palma, North Coast, West Coast Tramuntana, Centre and East), Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera, the Balearic tax position (wealth tax applies; inheritance tax recent reforms), Catalan-Balearic language considerations, schools, hospitals and the insurance arrangements that matter most. We don’t recommend specific insurers on this page; we explain options based on where you’re settling and your situation, in plain English, seven days a week.
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Get a QuoteTalk to an AdviserThe Balearic Islands (Illes Balears) are one of Spain’s seventeen autonomous communities, comprising four main islands: Mallorca (the largest, often anglicised as Majorca), Menorca, Ibiza (Eivissa) and Formentera, plus several smaller uninhabited islets. Total population around 1.2 million, of which roughly 900,000 live on Mallorca itself. The archipelago sits in the western Mediterranean roughly 200km east of mainland Spain, with a long history of distinct Catalan-Balearic culture, Mediterranean lifestyle, and strong international tourism and residential presence.
For expats, the Balearics have become one of Europe’s premier relocation destinations, particularly for German and British retirees, high-net-worth movers seeking premium Mediterranean lifestyle, sailing and yachting enthusiasts, growing digital nomad communities (particularly Palma, Ibiza in winter), and families seeking international school access in a coastal Mediterranean setting. The trade-offs: premium cost of living and property, the Balearic tax position which is less favourable than Madrid or Andalusia at the higher-net-worth end, very restricted tourist licence regime, and the meaningful seasonality (winter quieter than summer in many resort zones).
This guide covers each island, the Balearic tax position with worked examples, healthcare, schools and insurance considerations.
Premium Mediterranean lifestyle — coastal living, sailing access, dining, cultural depth particularly in Palma de Mallorca.
Climate — Mediterranean, mild winters (15°C+ daytime average), warm summers (28–32°C, moderated by sea breezes), 300+ days of sun.
Established international community — German is widely spoken in many Mallorca expat and property areas. Substantial British, Scandinavian, Dutch, Belgian, French, Italian and American communities across the islands.
Direct flights to Europe — Palma (PMI) is one of Spain’s busiest international airports, with extensive direct connections to most European cities. Menorca (MAH) and Ibiza (IBZ) have substantial European traffic, particularly seasonal.
Sailing capital — Palma is one of the Mediterranean’s premier sailing destinations. Multiple major marinas, yacht clubs, regattas (Copa del Rey).
International schools — established cluster particularly in Mallorca.
Premium healthcare — the major private hospitals on Mallorca have international standards, English-speaking specialists, established protocols for international patients.
Tramuntana mountains — the Serra de Tramuntana is a UNESCO World Heritage cultural landscape, with hiking, traditional villages and dramatic terrain.
Palma is the Balearic capital, population around 415,000. Working Spanish city combining historic depth, premium lifestyle and substantial international community.
Palma is one of the Mediterranean’s premier yachting destinations. Real Club Náutico de Palma, Puerto Portals (premium marina), Club de Mar Mallorca, plus the Real Club Náutico de Palma facilities. Multiple Mediterranean regattas including the Copa del Rey Mápfre.
UNESCO World Heritage cultural landscape covering the mountain range along the western coast. Stone-built villages, terraced agriculture, hiking trails, dramatic coastline. Key towns: Sóller (with the historic tram to the Port de Sóller), Valldemossa (Chopin and George Sand residence), Deià (artist village, premium pricing), Pollença (north-end Tramuntana, year-round community), Bunyola, Esporles. Strong year-round expat presence particularly British, German and creative-class movers.
Including Pollença, Alcúdia, Cala Sant Vicenç. Established year-round resident communities, beaches, mild climate, family-oriented character. Substantial British and Northern European expat presence.
Including Manacor, Capdepera, Cala Ratjada, Porto Cristo. Mix of working Mallorcan towns and coastal resort zones. Year-round community alongside seasonal tourism.
Inland Mallorca with traditional Mallorcan villages, agricultural landscape, fincas with land. Lower property prices than coastal zones. Established Northern European retiree and lifestyle-mover communities.
Including Santanyi, Ses Salines, Colonia de Sant Jordi, Llucmajor. Quieter coastal zones, established residential communities, traditional Mallorcan character mixed with international presence.
Including Andratx, Camp de Mar, Port d’Andratx, Costa de la Calma, Santa Ponça, Magaluf. Mix of premium villa coast (Port d’Andratx particularly) and mass-tourism resort zones (Magaluf). Strong international community.
The second-largest Balearic island, population around 100,000. UNESCO Biosphere Reserve since 1993. Distinctively quieter, more authentic and less developed than Mallorca or Ibiza. Strong British community heritage (Menorca was British from 1708 to 1802, with cultural and architectural traces remaining).
The capital, population around 30,000. One of Europe’s great natural harbours. Working port, walking historic centre with British architectural influences, year-round resident community.
The historic former capital on the western end, distinct Catalan-Balearic character, walking historic centre, year-round community.
Menorca’s distinctive coastline of small turquoise-water calas (coves) is internationally famous. Notable calas include Macarella, Macarelleta, Mitjana, Galdana. Tourist licence restrictions mean these zones remain largely undeveloped compared with mass-tourist coasts.
Quieter, more authentically Spanish-Balearic than Mallorca or Ibiza. Strong year-round community even in coastal zones. Particularly popular with British retirees and creative-class lifestyle movers.
The third-largest Balearic island, population around 160,000. Internationally famous for the summer party scene but also a substantial year-round residential community alongside the seasonal tourism.
The capital, with the UNESCO World Heritage Dalt Vila (historic walled town), the harbour and the working town below. Year-round Spanish and international residential community.
The second-largest town and a major year-round residential centre with strong international community, less seasonal than other Ibiza zones.
Mass-tourist destination in summer, working Spanish town in winter.
Premium villa zones with substantial year-round international community.
Sant Joan, Sant Llorenç, Sant Carles, and other inland villages host substantial Northern European retiree and lifestyle-mover communities seeking a quieter Ibiza than the coastal resort zones.
The contrast between summer and winter Ibiza is dramatic. Summer (June-September) brings intense party and tourism activity. Winter is dramatically quieter, many seasonal businesses close, and the island shows its authentic Mediterranean rhythm.
The smallest main Balearic island (around 12,000 population), accessible by ferry from Ibiza. Distinctive Mediterranean island lifestyle with strict development restrictions, beaches and dunes (Es Pujols, Migjorn, Illetes). Year-round community but small — expat infrastructure limited, Spanish-language skills more important.
Mediterranean climate across the Balearics. Coastal winter daytime averages 14–16°C with mild nights; summer 28–32°C moderated by sea breezes. Rainfall concentrated in autumn-winter, generally modest annual totals. Tramuntana mountains (western Mallorca) have meaningfully cooler winters and occasional snow at altitude.
The Balearic climate is broadly similar to the Costa del Sol or Costa Blanca. Sea temperatures: 14–16°C in winter, 24–26°C in summer.
The Balearic Islands are officially bilingual. Catalan (in the Balearic Mallorquí, Menorquí, Eivissenc dialect variants) and Spanish (Castellà) are both official. Spanish is universally spoken and understood. Catalan-Balearic is the working language of public administration, regional government, much of public schooling and many community services. Some administrative documents arrive in Catalan-Balearic alongside Spanish.
The Balearic Catalan dialects are intelligible to Catalonia-Catalan speakers but have distinctive vocabulary, accent and grammar features. Spanish-only speakers can manage indefinitely; learning some Catalan-Balearic is appreciated socially and helps integration.
Palma de Mallorca has been growing as a DNV and remote-work destination. The Santa Catalina coworking scene, the Portitxol and Cala Gamba coastal districts, plus the Tramuntana villages for slower-pace remote work all support a substantial international remote-worker community alongside the established retiree and HNW communities.
Ibiza has a meaningful winter DNV community as the island transitions from summer party scene to quieter year-round resident rhythm. Several coworking spaces serve the year-round community.
Beckham Law applies as a national regime and may be attractive for higher-earning DNV-employee applicants in the Balearics — specialist tax advice on the Balearic interaction is sensible.
Mallorca has the strongest international school cluster in the Balearics:
Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera have smaller international school clusters — Menorca has Menorca British School plus several bilingual options; Ibiza has the Morna International College and other bilingual options. Engage early for popular years.
Standard Spanish visa framework applies. The Balearics use the standard national tax framework with regional adjustments.
Golden Visa investor route closed to new applications April 2025.
Standard couple threshold around EUR 36,000/year. Balearic cost of living typically requires meaningfully higher actual budgets — comfortable couple lifestyles in central Palma or premium Mallorca zones run EUR 3,500–5,500/month including rent and Spanish-regulated health insurance. Premium villa lifestyles substantially higher.
Standard Spanish-regulated DGSFP-authorised requirements apply.
The Balearic public healthcare system (IB-Salut) is part of the Spanish public healthcare framework. Major public hospitals are on Mallorca; Menorca and Ibiza have smaller hospitals with specialist referral typically routing to Mallorca. Private network depth is strongest in Palma and surrounding Mallorca; Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera have more limited private options. Insurer-network coverage varies by island — confirm with the insurer before purchase.
Same Spain-wide framework: EUR 40–220/month depending on age and plan tier.
For specialist care, smaller island residents may travel to Mallorca or mainland Spain. Confirm with insurer for direct billing arrangements.
The Balearics use standard national Spanish tax framework with Balearic regional adjustments.
Balearics has historically applied wealth tax with regional adjustments. National solidarity tax above EUR 3 million per individual applies. The Balearic position is less favourable than Madrid or Andalusia (full rebate) at the higher-net-worth end.
Balearics has implemented reforms in recent years for direct family. Subject to current Balearic rules and formal conditions, 100% relief may apply for Group I and II direct relatives (spouses, children, parents and direct-line descendants), but specific outcomes depend on estate value, current rules and circumstances. Engage Balearic-specialist tax advice.
Balearic ITP applies on a progressive scale — generally 8–13% depending on price band, with current bands to be verified before purchase. For premium Mallorca property purchases above certain thresholds, the higher ITP rate is a material cost.
National IRPF with Balearic regional component. Effective rates broadly in line with national average.
National regime applies for qualifying applicants.
Indicative examples. Tax outcomes depend on full personal circumstances and current rules — these are illustrative, not advisory.
Balearic wealth tax applies on net assets above the regional threshold. The position is less favourable than Madrid or Andalusia (both 100% rebated). National solidarity tax also applies above EUR 3M per individual. For HNW retirees comparing regions, the Balearic tax burden is a meaningful component of the Mallorca relocation decision.
Beckham flat 24% applies on Spanish-sourced income. Modelo 720 exempt during Beckham. The Balearic regional IRPF would otherwise apply. Beckham is particularly valuable for higher-earning DNV holders in the Balearics given the regional tax position.
Balearic inheritance tax position has been refined in recent years for direct family. Current position offers significant reductions but less generous than Madrid’s 99% bonification or Andalusia’s near-zero direct-family treatment. Specialist Balearic tax advice essential for high-value inheritance planning.
For premium property purchases at this level, the progressive Balearic ITP can be a material cost — verify the current banding structure. Total transfer-stage costs typically 11–15% on top of price for premium purchases.
Balearic rental market is one of Spain’s tightest. Central Palma, Ibiza Town, Mahon and the premium coastal zones have very limited long-term rental availability. Seasonal pricing variation is dramatic. Standard LAU framework applies.
Balearic property purchase costs typically total 11–15% on top of price including progressive ITP, notario, registro, abogado/gestoría. Premium tier purchases at the Mallorca top end can attract higher effective ITP.
The Balearics have one of Spain’s most-restrictive tourist licence regimes. New tourist licences (Vivienda Vacacional) are extensively restricted, with moratoriums applied across Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza. Do not buy in the Balearics assuming you can short-term let unless the licence position has been confirmed in writing by a specialist or the relevant authority.
For a typical EUR 600,000 resale apartment in central Palma or coastal Mallorca:
Total transfer-stage costs depend on the current progressive ITP banding. Balearic purchase costs are typically among the higher Spanish ranges due to the progressive ITP system.
Empadronamiento at the relevant Ayuntamiento — Palma, Calvià, Andratx, Pollença, Manacor, Mahon, Ciutadella, Ibiza, Sant Joan, etc. Required for TIE, IB-Salut access, school enrolment.
Long-haul travel typically routes via Madrid, Barcelona or European hubs.
Air Europa, Iberia and others operate inter-island flights. Baleària, Trasmediterranea and ferry operators connect the islands plus mainland (Barcelona, Valencia, Denia). Frequent service in summer, reduced winter schedules.
Balearic residents (with empadronamiento) receive substantial discounts on inter-island flights and ferries under the resident-discount scheme.
Palma is one of the Mediterranean’s premier sailing destinations. Real Club Náutico de Palma, Puerto Portals, Club de Mar Mallorca. Copa del Rey Mápfre regatta. Mallorca, Menorca and Ibiza all host substantial year-round sailing communities.
The Serra de Tramuntana UNESCO cultural landscape hosts world-class hiking including the GR-221 long-distance route through the mountain villages.
Mallorca is one of Europe’s premier road cycling destinations. Pro and amateur cyclists arrive year-round; January-March is the peak training season for professional teams.
Mallorca: ensaimada (sweet pastry), sobrassada (cured sausage), arròs brut, traditional fincas with agricultural produce. Menorca: gin (originating from the British colonial period), cheese, mahonesa. Ibiza: bullit de peix, sofrit pages. Mallorca Michelin presence (Marc Fosh, Adrián Quetglas).
Sant Sebastià (Palma, January), traditional village fiestas, Festes de Sant Antoni (Mallorca, January), Diada de Mallorca, Diada de Menorca, the Ibiza summer festival scene.
The Balearics have established healthcare infrastructure on Mallorca with strong private and public hospital networks.
UK pensioners with S1 entitlement may use S1 + IB-Salut as their primary healthcare, often with Spanish-regulated private top-up.
Spanish-regulated cover for Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera expats. English-speaking advisers, seven days a week.
Get a QuoteTalk to an Adviser247 Expat Insurance helps expats moving to Mallorca and the Balearics. English-speaking advisers, seven days a week.
Get a QuoteTalk to an AdviserYes — among Spain’s premium-tier regions. Port d’Andratx, Son Vida, central Palma, premium Tramuntana villages command top Spanish property prices. The wider Mallorca, Menorca, and inland Mallorca offer more affordable options.
Spanish is sufficient for day-to-day life. Catalan-Balearic (Mallorquí, Menorquí, Eivissenc) is co-official and used in public administration and schools. Learning some is appreciated socially.
Mallorca for established expat infrastructure and direct flights. Menorca for quieter authentic Balearic life. Ibiza for those wanting the summer scene plus year-round community. Formentera for very quiet island life.
Less than Madrid or Andalusia. Balearics applies wealth tax and progressive ITP. For HNW retirees prioritising tax, Madrid or Andalusia is typically more attractive; for HNW movers prioritising premium Mediterranean island lifestyle, Mallorca remains a major choice despite the tax position.
The Balearics have one of Spain’s most-restrictive tourist licence regimes. Do not buy assuming you can short-term let unless the licence position has been confirmed in writing.
One of Europe’s most-established German communities outside Germany. German is widely spoken in many Mallorca expat and property areas. Extensive German-language infrastructure including media, services and businesses.
Mallorca: King Richard III College, Bellver International College, Eden International School, Mallorca International School, BIC, Lycée Français André Malraux, Eurocampus Deutsche Schule, Agora Portals. Menorca: Menorca British School. Ibiza: Morna International College and others.
Around 2–2.5 hours to most major UK cities. Palma has extensive direct connections.
Progressive ITP, generally 8–13% depending on price band, with current bands to be verified before purchase. Higher rates apply for higher-value properties.
For higher earners typically yes — flat 24% on Spanish-sourced income up to EUR 600,000 for 6 years. Modelo 720 exemption is particularly valuable given the Balearic wealth tax position. Election within 6 months.
Network varies by insurer brand and tier but typically includes Quirónsalud Palmaplanas / Rotger, Clínica Juaneda, Vithas Palma. Confirm with the insurer.
Strongly recommended for Spanish assets. Non-Spanish nationals can elect home-country law via EU Succession Regulation 650/2012.
Copa del Rey Mápfre is the major Mediterranean sailing regatta held annually in Palma de Mallorca, attracting top international sailing teams.
The substantial German demand has been a major factor in premium Mallorca property pricing over the past 30+ years. The market continues to be heavily influenced by German buyer interest.
UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. Quieter, more authentic, less developed than Mallorca or Ibiza. Strong British community heritage. Distinctive coastline of small turquoise calas largely undeveloped due to tourist licence restrictions.
Dramatically quieter than summer. Authentic Mediterranean rhythm. Year-round community thrives; many seasonal businesses close. Some DNV community presence year-round.
At the Palma Oficina de Extranjeros for Mallorca residents; Menorca and Ibiza have local jurisdictions or refer to Palma.
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