€266.50 for 1 Night


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€266.50/ Night


24/7 Support
Looking for help choosing or for a property we don't list? Message our Private Rates Concierge on WhatsApp for member rates and insider knowledge on the right stay
An art-filled adults-only boutique hotel in a 19th-century palace on Palma's Paseo del Borne, with 16 rooms, a rooftop pool and a Mediterranean-Nikkei restaurant.
A complimentary bottle of Cava on arrival
Check in from 14:00; check out before 12:00.




€266.50 for 1 Night

Location
Calle Sant Feliu, 1, Palma de Mallorca 07012, Majorca, Spain
Can Alomar sits on the corner of Carrer de Sant Feliu and the Paseo del Borne in old Palma, a five-minute walk from the Cathedral. Palma airport is about 15 minutes by taxi, with a public bus also serving the centre. The old town is best on foot; the streets here are pedestrian and parking is limited.
A 10 minute taxi ride from Palma (PMI) airport. There's also a public bus from the airport.
250m
Last Updated: 2026-06-13

Expert Review
Origins
Can Alomar stands on the corner of the Paseo del Borne, the tree-lined avenue that has been Palma's golden mile for centuries, a few minutes' walk from the Cathedral. The site is old: a Gothic palace stood here from the middle of the fifteenth century, known then as Can Thomás des Predís des Born after the merchant family who built it. The building you see today is a nineteenth-century palace raised on those foundations, its grand façade kept while its interior has been wholly reimagined.
That reimagining is the work of Miguel Conde and the It Mallorca group, who opened the hotel in 2014 as one of a small family of Palma palaces. The guiding idea is art. More than forty works by Mallorcan and international artists — among them Jordi Alcaraz, Guillem Nadal, Roland Fischer and Manolo Ballesteros — hang through the public rooms and bedrooms, set against a pared-back, minimalist interior and design pieces by Davide Groppi and Carl Hansen. The signature is the lamp that greets arrivals, made by Conde from antique glass salvaged by the master restorer of the Cathedral's rose windows — a small emblem of the whole hotel's marriage of heritage and modern design.
What it adds up to is a calm, grown-up, sixteen-room retreat in the middle of the city. The rooms — six Deluxe, seven Junior Suites and three larger Can Alomar Suites — are quiet and uncluttered, and the life of the hotel rises to the roof: a shaded terrace with a plunge pool, a wellness suite, and a viewing tower with the Cathedral, the Almudaina, the Bay of Palma and the Tramuntana laid out beyond. Below, on terraces over the Borne, the De Tokio a Lima restaurant sets Mediterranean cooking against Japanese and Peruvian flavours. Adults only, and all the more restful for it.
Top Secret
The hotel has a secret amenity that few of its size can match: its own boat. Guests can take to the water aboard the hotel's Invictus 280 GT, a nine-metre Italian vessel docked in the Bay of Palma that carries up to eight, for a few hours of swimming and coastline that is usually the preserve of Mallorca's visiting superyacht set. It is the perfect counterpoint to a city stay — a morning among the calas and the clear water, back in time for a drink on the roof as the Cathedral lights up.

The Review
Can Alomar is among the most appealing small hotels in Palma, and its appeal is built on art and calm. It occupies a nineteenth-century palace on the corner of the Paseo del Borne, the city's smartest avenue, on the site of a fifteenth-century Gothic house — the old façade intact, the interior stripped back to a quiet, minimalist present hung with a collection of more than forty works by Mallorcan and international artists. With just sixteen rooms and an adults-only policy, it is deliberately grown-up and unhurried.
The rooms — Deluxe through to the larger Can Alomar Suites — are uncluttered and soothing, in soft neutral tones with art on the walls and good bathrooms. The pleasures, though, are shared and up high: a rooftop with a shaded plunge pool and a viewing tower that frames the Cathedral, the Almudaina palace and the Bay of Palma against the Tramuntana mountains, a small wellness suite for treatments and yoga, and the De Tokio a Lima restaurant, where chef Germán de Bernardi sets Mediterranean produce against Japanese and Peruvian technique on terraces over the Borne.
It suits couples and design-minded travellers who want art, quiet and a central old-town address over a beach resort or a big hotel — this is a calm city base, not a family or seaside stay. The whole of historic Palma is at the door, the Cathedral five minutes off, and the hotel's own boat waiting in the bay for a day on the water. For an art-led, adults-only stay in the heart of the city, it is among the most characterful choices in Palma.