Gay beach menorca
Hotels for gays
Menorca
Top gay friendly hotels in Menorca where you will feel at home
Menorca is an island in Spain, part of the Balearic Islands. You can visit Mahón, the capital, where you find a profound natural harbor. Ciutadella, the former capital, has narrow streets, a cathedral, and a historic port. Naveta des Tudons, a prehistoric burial site, is also worth seeing. If you like beaches, you have many options. Cala Macarella and Cala Macarelleta own clear
Menorca is an island in Spain, part of the Balearic Islands. You can stop by Mahón, the capital, where you find a deep natural harbor. Ciutadella, the former capital, has narrow streets, a cathedral, and a historic port. Naveta des Tudons, a prehistoric burial site, is also worth seeing.
If you like beaches, you acquire many options. Cala Macarella and Cala Macarelleta have clear moisture and white sand. Cala Mitjana is smaller but easy to reach. Son Bou has the longest beach on the island. If you prefer a quieter spot, Cala Pregonda has reddish sand and rocky surroundings.
In Menorca, the main gay-friendly area is in Ma
Son Bou is the biggest beach on Menorca, and truly it offers something for everyone. At the easternmost end, nearest the large resort hotels, it is bucket-and-spade heaven for families, but you don’t need to walk very far at all before finding the first of the resort’s enthusiastic naturists.
Keep on walking for 10 minutes in a westerly direction and the crowds thin out dramatically and you can savor space and freedom to sunbathe as you please in a sandy wilderness backed by nature-reserve dunes. It’s a beautiful see and rightly considered the most popular beach in Menorca for naturists. Thanks to a length of around km, there’s plenty of space for everyone – even those who demand a 50ft exclusion zone around them! That said, if you hope for to squash in with lots of like-minded naked folk, there are loungers available for hire nearer the east end.
Facilities A multitude of bars and restaurants nearer the resort; there’s nothing at the remote end
Car park There is a large ride park just behind the beach
Best time to go Any time
How to find there Son Bou is a large res
Menorca's Nudist / Naturist Beaches
Menorca is different, an unspoilt beach paradise so close to home.
Find your flawless sunning spot where you can be free.
updates in progressGood to Know
What to expect?
The fluid quality around Menorca is exceptional with crystal clear, turquoise waters and many fine sandy Caribbean like natural beachesmore
Naturism on Menorca - good to know
While there are no officially designated nudist / naturist beaches - in life this means nothing :-)
Remoter virgin beaches ( aka Playas Virgines ) and sections of not so remote beaches are where you find textile free sun bathing.
Remoter Nudist beaches around Menorca
Algairens ( La Vall ) , Binimel-la , Cala Coves , Cala Pilar , Cala Macarelleta , Cala Mitjanetta , Cala Pilar , Cala Pregonda , Cala Presili , Cala Mesquida , Cala Trebaluger , ,Cala des Tamarells, Cala Mica,Cala Barril,Cala Calderer und Cala Es Bots.Quieter spots of larger resort beaches will also be used eg Son Bou, Santo Thomas and Cala en Porter.
The northern coast beaches are very varied with coars
Gay Balearic Islands
Mallorca (or Majorca) is the largest of the three and over the last three decades has become the archetypal sun-sea-and-sangria island beloved of package tourists from Northern Europe. Parts of it, particularly around the southern coastline are heavily built up with high-rise hotels and apartments.
Away from the coast however it is a different story, particularly in the stunning unspoiled Tramuntana hills. Recently the whole island has been given something of a facelift. In package ghettoes like Magaluf old-style hotels have been, literally, blown up and replaced in a symbolic attempt to rebrand the island. And the capital, Palma, is now one of Spain's most beguiling and trendiest small cities.
Ibiza has long been famous for its rave scene, concentrated in the charming hippy-chic capital of Ibiza Town, the high-rise canyons of San António and in the resort of Playa d'en Bossa. Away from here however, the island is remarkably rural.
A confined channel separates Ibiza from Formentera, the smallest inhabited Balearic, fringed by mushy white sands and onl