
Vela Beach Cala Romántica — Terrace Restaurant Above the Finest Sandy Cove on the East Coast
Anyone exploring Mallorca's east coast will eventually find themselves at Cala Romántica — and whoever sits hungry or thirsty on the promenade quickly understands why Vela Beach has been the gastronomic anchor of this bay for decades. The venue sits on the Passeig de s'Estany d'en Mas, a few metres above the sand, offering from its shaded terrace — white chairs, whitewashed walls, and a bespoke glass-and-stainless-steel railing designed to keep sightlines unobstructed — a direct view over the two-tone turquoise water of the cove.
A Family Story You Can Taste
Vela Beach describes itself as a family business with roots stretching back to the early 1970s: founder Miguel, son of a fishing family, is said to have turned a small coastal corner into a local gastronomic destination. Whether the founding year on the official website is exact or carries a dash of romantic storytelling, the DNA of the place is palpable: fresh produce, locally anchored cooking, none of the overblown beach-club glamour found elsewhere.
What Arrives at the Table
The focus is squarely on Mediterranean cuisine built on the day's catch and seasonal ingredients. Classic paella and rice dishes form the heart of the menu — not uncommonly a guest drives over from Porto Cristo for that alone. Fresh fish and seafood, salads, meat dishes and pasta round out the offer. Vela Beach operates as an all-day venue: morning continental breakfasts with ensaïmada and coffee, lunch as a natural pause after a beach morning, and in the evening a sunset dinner with a signature cocktail on the terrace.
Pricing sits at a moderate level — honest Mediterranean cooking without a luxury premium, which suits perfectly the predominantly German and British family clientele of the Calas de Mallorca stretch.
The Setting: Natural Scenery Included
Cala Romántica — Catalan name S'Estany d'en Mas — is roughly 160 metres long and faces southeast, which means afternoon and evening sun falls directly onto the Vela Beach terrace. The bay is flanked by pine-covered limestone cliffs; the northern side shows low-rise development, the southern remains untouched. The water is shallow enough for children, turquoise enough for postcards. A note on the micro-geography: immediately adjacent lies Cala Anguila to the north, and a few minutes' walk away Cala Mendia to the south — three coves within less than a kilometre. Anyone wanting to walk all three in one day has Vela Beach as the natural centrepiece.
There is also a smaller bar directly on the sand; the difference from Vela Beach is quickly explained: the elevated terrace, the full menu, and the gastronomic concept set Vela Beach clearly apart from a standard beach chiringuito.
Sunset Cocktails and the Right Table
At sunset, the cove transforms into a natural amphitheatre of orange and pink. Vela Beach has this moment firmly in view: signature cocktails developed specifically for the evening hour complement the dinner menu. The right table is one at the railing — ideally facing the water directly, where the new glass railing gives an entirely unobstructed view of the bay.
Connections to the Hinterland
Cala Romántica falls within the municipality of Manacor, the island's largest inland town. About twenty minutes away lies Manacor with the Majorica pearl factory and the Rafa Nadal Academy. Porto Cristo — the gateway to the Coves del Drac, one of the most visited cave systems in the Mediterranean — is around ten minutes to the north. Vela Beach is therefore not just a restaurant stop, but a natural anchor for a full day-trip along Mallorca's east coast.




