
Artello Gelato
Palma
Handcrafted gelato beside the basilica in Palma's old town – pistachio, „Mediterraneo“ and specialty coffee, 5.0-rated. Taste a few spoons, then choose.
Mallorca's ice cream parlours and delis — hand-picked for sweet and fine moments.

Palma
Handcrafted gelato beside the basilica in Palma's old town – pistachio, „Mediterraneo“ and specialty coffee, 5.0-rated. Taste a few spoons, then choose.

Palma
Artisan gelateria in Palma's old town: fresh daily gelato, 100% natural, with flavours like saffron-rose, rosemary or banana-turmeric. Come taste it.

Portals Nous
Healthy café and deli in Portals Nous, run by Amy Lauren since 2016: daily salads, açaí bowls and the Ocean Latte with blue spirulina. Eat in or take away.

Sóller
Handmade ice cream in Sóller since 1994: legendary sorbets from valley oranges and lemons, ~40 flavours and fresh juice in a shady courtyard.

Palma
Handmade Gelato de Luxe in the heart of Palma's old town: award-winning pistachio with sea salt plus 80+ flavours, steps from the cathedral. Come and taste.

Palma de Mallorca
Real Italian gelato opposite Sa Llotja in Palma's old town – made fresh daily in the laboratorio, 60–70 kg of pistachio a summer day. Come watch and taste.
On Mallorca, artisan ice cream meets an island with its own sweet heritage. Alongside the Italian gelato craft that family-run names like RivaReno and Giovanni L. have brought to Palma, you'll find Mallorcan almond ice cream (gelat d'ametlla) — creamy, dairy-free and made from the island's own ground almonds. If you want to taste Mallorca in a cone, that's where to start.
Delicatessen here means specific, rooted products: PGI-marked sobrassada, aged cheese, cold-pressed olive oil from the Tramuntana slopes, sea salt and the spiral ensaïmada. Spots like Cocos Deli in Portals Nous bring it together — ice cream, coffee and a curated shelf of local delicacies under one roof.
The densest cluster is in Palma: around Jaume II, the Rambla and Santa Catalina you'll find artisan gelaterias and gourmet shops side by side, many with their own production lab and daily-fresh batches. Here you'll meet both the classic Italian line — Bronte pistachio, Piedmont hazelnut — and local flavours like almond or orange blossom.
The north and west are worth the trip too. Sóller and its port are known for ice cream made with the valley's famous oranges; Claudio in Palma leans into natural ingredients and herbs such as rosemary. For edible souvenirs, the deli corners of the old town and the coastal hotspots deliver.
Look for the words "artesano" or "elaboración propia": real artisan ice cream is made on site in small batches, often visible in an attached lab. Good sorbets are over half real fruit, and good gelato comes with less air and more concentrated flavour than industrial tubs.
For delis, regional provenance beats volume. Ask for PGI sobrassada, island olive oil and ensaïmada baked that day. In summer, time your visit for late afternoon or evening when the heat eases — though that's also when the queues at the popular addresses tend to form.
The island's signature is almond ice cream (gelat d'ametlla) made from ground Mallorcan almonds — creamy and usually dairy-free. Orange and lemon sorbets from the Sóller valley and Italian-style gelato are also widely available.
Look for "artesano" or "elaboración propia". Real ice cream is made on site in small batches, has less air and more intense flavour; good sorbets are mostly real fruit rather than concentrate.
Classics include PGI sobrassada, island olive oil, aged cheese, sea salt and fresh ensaïmada. Many shops pack the ensaïmada for air travel or ship it for you.
In summer, late afternoon or evening is more comfortable once the heat eases. That's also when the longest queues form at popular Palma spots, so allow a little patience.
Yes. Gelaterias are casual and need no reservation, and many sit in walkable old-town or harbour areas. Prices are per scoop and fall within the usual range depending on location and craft level.