Santa Ponsa — Where Mallorca’s Story Began

Most people meet Santa Ponsa as a wide Blue Flag beach and a promenade of cafés. Fewer realise they are standing on the spot where modern Mallorca began.

In September 1229, King James I of Aragon — Jaume I, the Conqueror — came ashore here with a fleet of more than 150 ships to take the island from its Moorish rulers. The cove where he landed, Sa Caleta, is now the Santa Ponsa marina. On the rise above it stands the Creu del Desembarc, the Cross of the Landing: a stone monument raised in 1929 for the 700th anniversary, carved with reliefs of the conquest, and rebuilt in 1996 after a lightning strike. Every September the town restages the moment with the Festes del Rei en Jaume — a mock battle between Moors and Christians fought out on the sand.

The beach and the town

Today Santa Ponsa wears its history lightly. The main beach is a wide arc of soft golden sand, more than 500 metres long, backed by pines and flying a Blue Flag for water quality. A promenade of restaurants and cafés runs behind it, and smaller, quieter coves — Caló d’en Pallisser, Cala Falcó with its well-known beach bar — sit within walking distance. Unlike some of its neighbours, Santa Ponsa has kept its scale: low villas and apartments folded into the hillside rather than high-rises along the shore. A steady international community means it stays open and alive year-round, not only in August.

Golf, sea and mountains

Santa Ponsa is also one of the island’s golf capitals — two 18-hole courses and a 9-hole, including the famous 18th green shaped like Mallorca itself, set in a pond and reached by a bridge. The Club Nàutic Santa Ponsa, built in 1975 in the old landing cove, moors hundreds of boats. Behind the town, the Puig de Sa Morisca archaeological park climbs past Talayotic and Moorish remains to long views over the bay; offshore, the Illes Malgrats sit in protected water. Palma and the airport are roughly 20 to 30 minutes away — close enough for a spontaneous dinner in the old town, far enough to feel like your own stretch of coast.

Living here, shared

This is the setting for El Mirador, the fully renovated villa we are bringing to co-ownership in Santa Ponsa — a €4M-plus home shared by up to eight owners, with the beach, the marina and the golf all minutes from the door. The history is free; the lifestyle, for once, is within reach.

Explore El Mirador →

Considering co-ownership?

WE'RE HAPPY TO TALK IT THROUGH

Peguera and Cala Fornells — The Coast Just West of Santa Ponsa

Port Adriano — The Southwest of Mallorca by Sea

Santa Ponsa — Where Mallorca’s Story Began