**Bell's Disco & Club** lives in the north of Mallorca, where the wide Bay of Alcúdia turns the sea a milky turquoise and the resort strip of Port d'Alcúdia comes alive after dark. Since 1984, the Bell's name has stood for the late-night dance experience of this coastline — a piece of North Mallorca disco history that earns its legendary status not from marketing claims, but from four decades of lived nights.

Sound & Programme
The dancefloor is the heart of Bell's. The sound is Latin commercial energy at its most direct: reggaeton, bachata, salsa and Spanish commercial pop form the backbone of the week. On Fridays, **Viernes Comercial** — the signature weekend-opener format — brings a blend of Latin rhythms and chart hits that puts the body on autopilot. Saturdays push even further into salsa, bachata and reggaeton, while regular themed nights stretch the playlist to cover the best decades ("from the 90s to today").
Behind the decks you'll find DJs such as Ronald Smith and Black Julius; live PA performances round out the offering — the "Live Music" claim in the venue's profile is not empty branding.

Crowd & Vibe
Bell's draws a genuine cross-section of Port d'Alcúdia's cosmopolitan holiday life: groups, couples, solo travellers and — a lively constant — the seasonal workers who keep the island's hotels, bars and restaurants running. **Resacón Temporero** is the format built for this core crowd: a community night that brings the hospitality industry together and gives Bell's its character as a real meeting point, not just a tourist box. Queer party nights (including "Lady's Lab" and the Pride finale "Euphoria") show how inclusive the venue thinks — Bell's is explicitly a mixed-crowd space.
Groups celebrating birthdays or planning a special night will find VIP tables, reservations and a relaxed lounge area alongside the main dancefloor.
The North Coast — What Makes Port d'Alcúdia
Port d'Alcúdia sits on one of the island's most beautiful bays: Platja d'Alcúdia flows seamlessly into Platja de Muro, the water shallow and turquoise, the horizon open. The resort district around Bell's runs along Avinguda del Tucà, right next to the enormous BelleVue complex — one of Europe's largest holiday resorts, channelling thousands of international guests into this corner of the north every day.
The nightlife infrastructure here is walkable and concentrated. The pubs and music bars of Avinguda Pere Mas i Reus (known locally as "Dollar Street") attract mainly British and Irish package-holiday crowds; further along the Tucà axis lies the disco cluster of Bell's, Banana Club, Menta and Eclypse — Latin-commercial disco rather than the cocktail-lounge clubbing of the southwest. This is honest north-coast night: louder, more colourful, more accessible.
Insider View
Bell's is not a shiny new opening with an Instagram-ready claim. The venue has known its way since 1984 — relaunched and back — and understands its audience: no forced exclusivity, no dresscode-gated experience, but a genuine programme with substance. The Argentina fiesta format, the surprise giveaways, the bottle raffles: these are not coincidences, but the language of a disco that knows how to make nights unforgettable.




