Mallorca · Photo shoot locations
Photo Shoot Locations in Mallorca
Traditional fincas, modern design villas, boutique hotels and cliffside sea-view estates — a hand-scouted shortlist for fashion, editorial, resort and campaign photography across the whole island. Every location scouted in person by the production team you’d book the shoot with.
Intro · Positioning
A production agency’s shortlist, not a marketplace
Lovely Locations is a production-first location agency in the Balearics. We’ve spent a decade walking these fincas, villas and hotels with a DOP’s eye — measuring their power supply, checking truck and van access, noting which bedrooms work for wardrobe and hair, and tracking how the light lands on the pool at 7pm in July versus 5pm in October.
Every location here has hosted a real photo shoot — fashion editorial, swim, resort, bridal, lookbook, campaign and brand content. None are tied to a single commission: we recommend whichever traditional finca, modernist villa, boutique hotel or cliffside sea-view estate actually fits the brief — and only locations whose owners genuinely welcome productions.
Request a shortlist →
Planning guide · long-form
Planning a photo shoot in Mallorca: the things worth knowing
Matching the location to the editorial brief
The first decision is tonal. A 300-year-old stone finca with weathered shutters, beamed ceilings and an olive-grove clastra is the canonical Mediterranean-editorial look — warm, slow, textured, right for resort, bridal and aspirational-lifestyle stories. A modernist hillside villa with polished concrete, open kitchen and minimal pool reads very differently on camera: flat, directional, contemporary, almost studio-clean — the natural fit for swim, athleisure and clean-line fashion. Cliffside Port d’Andratx and Deià estates give you horizon-to-horizon sea in every wide, paying off for swim and resort campaigns where the landscape is the product story. Boutique hotels and Palma old-town architecture cover the weather-proof urban register — stone archways, historic facades, service-led operations for multi-day lookbooks.
When to shoot in Mallorca
May, June, September and early October are editorial’s sweet spot on the island: long Mediterranean light, warm but not punishing heat for wardrobe and crew, and location rates 25–40% below July–August peaks. July and August bring intense midday sun (tough for unshaded shoots), peak rates, and narrow availability on the most-photographed properties. Winter (November–March) is underrated for interior-heavy editorial and fashion — fireplaces lit, mood weather on the Tramuntana, architectural detail readable in softer light, and locations at the year’s lowest day rates. Balearic golden hour lands roughly 6pm in April, 8pm in June, 6pm in September, 5pm in November — plan call sheets accordingly.
Crew, catering and production logistics
Mallorca shoots scale from 4-person content crews to 40-person campaign productions with photographer, DOP, assistants, hair, make-up, styling, producer, clients and talent. Bedroom count matters on villa shoots: for a 20-crew editorial you want at least one room each for hair/make-up, wardrobe, and client changing, plus a separate space for talent. Confirm three-phase power if you’re bringing HMI lighting (most traditional fincas run single-phase domestic supply — fine for LEDs, marginal for full HMI), truck and van access for kit, and whether the owner accepts catering trucks on the drive. Hotels weather-proof all of this — they have the infrastructure built in.
Permits, drones, protected areas and Palma street shooting
Private-property photo shoots in Mallorca generally do not require municipal permits — the owner agreement is the document that matters. Public Mallorca is different. Commercial shooting on a beach, in a Palma street or a municipal square usually needs a licence from the local ayuntamiento. Protected natural areas such as Cap de Formentor, Es Trenc, Sa Calobra and parts of the Serra de Tramuntana require permits from the Balearic environmental authorities, and drone use over these zones is specifically regulated — commercial drone flights in coastal ZEPA areas require professional-use authorisation. Expect 5–10 working days turnaround on application. We handle the paperwork end-to-end when required.
Photo shoot types our Mallorca locations regularly host
Fashion editorial and magazine shoots
Swim, resort and beachwear lookbooks
Bridal and wedding-dress editorial
E-commerce lookbook and campaign imagery
Brand and product campaign photography
Influencer and content creator trips
Beauty, fragrance and skincare campaigns
Interiors, lifestyle and travel editorial
If you know the shoot dates, the crew size and roughly the mood-board, we can have three to five shortlisted Mallorca locations in your inbox within 24 hours — availability-checked, with accurate room counts, real photos of the spaces you’d actually shoot in, power and access notes, and an honest pros/cons view against your specific brief. The shortlist is free; agency fees only apply if you move forward with a full production scope (permits, catering, crew, transfers).
Common questions
Frequently asked
Do Mallorca photo shoots need a permit?
On private villa, finca or hotel property, generally no — the owner agreement is the document that matters, not a municipal permit. You do need permits for commercial shoots on public beaches and Palma streets (issued by the local ayuntamiento), for drone work, and for protected natural areas like Cap de Formentor, Es Trenc, Sa Calobra and parts of the Tramuntana. Expect 5–10 working days turnaround on application. We handle the paperwork end-to-end when required and flag in advance when it’s not.
What are the best photo shoot locations in Mallorca?
It depends on the brief. For rural Mediterranean editorial, the Tramuntana fincas (Deià , Sóller, Valldemossa) and Porreres countryside estates are canonical. For swim and resort, cliffside Port d’Andratx and the south coast. For architectural and urban, Palma’s old town and the Illetas hotels. For design-forward swim and fashion, the modern hillside villas around Moscari and Andratx. Tell us the brief and we’ll map the shortlist to the story, not the other way round.
What’s the best time of year to shoot in Mallorca?
May, June, September and early October are editorial’s sweet spot — long Mediterranean light, mild temperatures, and location rates 25–40% below peak. July–August is hot and full, with the most photographed fincas booked months ahead. Winter is underrated for interior-heavy editorial and fashion: fireplaces, moody Tramuntana weather, architectural detail in soft light, at the year’s lowest day rates.
Can I shoot on the beaches — Es Trenc, Formentor, Cala Deià ?
Yes, but public beaches and protected coastal zones are the paperwork-heavy category. Es Trenc, Cap de Formentor and Sa Calobra sit inside protected natural areas managed by the Balearic authorities — commercial shooting and drone flights need advance authorisation, typically 5–10 working days. Cala Deià and most Palma beaches are managed by the local ayuntamiento and need a commercial licence. We can also suggest private-cove-access villas where the beach looks the same without the permit layer.
Do the locations have power and access for a full production crew?
Most traditional Mallorcan fincas run on single-phase domestic supply — fine for smaller crews using LEDs, continuous sources or portable batteries, marginal for a full HMI rig. Several larger design villas, sea-view estates and all of our hotel partners have three-phase power, and where it isn’t present we can bring a silent generator. Truck and van access is a real check for Tramuntana and hillside villas — we confirm for your specific rig size (3.5t, 7.5t, art cube) at shortlist stage.
How does shooting at a hotel compare to a villa or finca?
Hotels weather-proof the production. You get guaranteed three-phase power, multiple indoor rooms for wardrobe and hair, on-site catering, parking, and service staff used to productions. Villas and fincas give you exclusivity — whole-property takeover, no other guests, owner-aligned timing, a cleaner set. For a single-location editorial we usually recommend a villa or finca; for a multi-day lookbook with weather risk, a hotel footprint plus a feature villa on day one is the safer build.
How do I request a shortlist?
Send us shoot dates, crew size, brief type (editorial, commercial, e-com, campaign, content), rough budget and any mood-board references. We come back within 24 hours with three to five shortlisted Mallorca locations — availability-checked, with room counts, real photos, power and access notes, and honest pros/cons for your specific brief. No obligation, no drip campaign.