You hear it before you're inside — a muffled bass pushing through the walls of the compact venue, while outside the scent of Platja de Palma drifts along the boulevard. Right between Balneario 2 and 3, on El Arenal's beachfront promenade, the entrance waits — and anyone queuing here at night knows: this is no accidental choice.

Concept
Since 2013, Club NL has been the go-to address for the Dutch party scene on Mallorca. The self-description — “de grootste en populairste Nederlandse club van Mallorca” (the biggest and most popular Dutch club on the island) — is no empty marketing claim: every summer, thousands of Dutch holidaymakers flood Platja de Palma, and a large portion ends up here because nowhere else on the island does the beat of NL hip-hop and urban music hit as hard or as consistently.
The programme is curated, not random. Tickets are sold per act, and the line-up reads like a who's who of the Dutch charts: BOEF, Mula B, Josylvio, Jonna Fraser, LA$$A, $HIRAK, Dries Roelvink, WESLY BRONKHORST — top-tier names feature every season. Then there is the in-house festival format “Mallorca Open Air” with afterparty, produced with Dutch event specialist Sharp Productions. That De Telegraaf followed the club for its documentary series “Mallorca is van ons” says everything: the brand has long outgrown the scene.

Atmosphere
Lounge, table service, wellness promises — that is somewhere else. This is a club bunker: compact, loud, sweaty. The dance floor is tight, the energy concentrated, the crowd young and in committed party mode. That is the point — pure party output without design ambitions, bodies close together, bass pressure that makes the walls vibrate.
The contrast is part of the experience. After hours inside you step out into the night sea breeze, the boulevard noise fades, and the Mediterranean murmurs somewhere in the dark. That shift gives the evening its shape. Part of the crowd loves exactly this — the uncomplicated, unvarnished party mode. Anyone prioritising comfort and space is better served elsewhere. Those who commit to the format — live act, DJ afterparty, crowd, bass — find an energy that is hard to replicate.
Programme & Music
The musical identity: hip-hop, R&B, urban, house, top 40. The line-up is broader than it first appears — ACT OF RAGE brings hardstyle energy, SJORLEONE appears in the context of a “Sexy White Party”. Former residents such as The Partysquad, FeestDJRuud and Yung Felix have shaped the sound identity over the years.
The centrepiece is the live shows: acts perform on stage, then a DJ takes over for the afterparty. The “Sunset Sessions” extend the programme beyond the classic late-night format — sometimes the party starts in the late afternoon. Current line-ups are posted on the website and @clubnlmallorca; announcements often come at short notice, so keep an eye on the socials.
Who It's For & When
Club NL is built for Dutch holidaymakers — and that is a feature, not a limitation. Anyone who loves NL urban music finds here the densest concentration of top acts, resident DJs and like-minded crowd on the whole island. Groups celebrate birthdays, end-of-season nights and classic summer evenings. Staff and atmosphere are mostly Dutch, communication easy.
International guests are explicitly welcome — but know what to expect: language, music and vibe are strongly Dutch in character. That gives the night an insider warmth that generic tourist clubs cannot replicate.
Insider Tip
The drinks system runs cashlessly via coins — load credit, then spend. Anyone coming for a specific act should book in advance via the club website: for big names, tickets go fast and the queue gets long. When loading credit: smaller top-ups are smarter than buying a large amount upfront.















































