5 Best Beaches in Ibiza You Can't Miss

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5 Best Beaches in Ibiza You Can't Miss

7 min readUpdated: May 20, 2026
Search in IbizaMay 23 - May 242 guests
Tomas Achmedovas
Tomas Achmedovas

CEO and co-founder

This guide covers the 5 best beaches in Ibiza that genuinely earn a spot on a 2026 itinerary - the coves locals return to and the ones first-time visitors should not miss between bigger nightlife stops. We have grouped the picks by region so visitors can plan a sensible day around each: the west coast around Sant Josep and Sant Antoni for Cala Comte and Cala Bassa, the protected south for Ses Salines, the dramatic south-west cliffs for Cala d'Hort, and the quieter north for Benirràs.

Every entry includes the exact street address, nearest bus line, parking situation, and a Pro Tip drawn from how the beach actually behaves in peak season - when the sand fills up, where shade is realistic, and which arrival time keeps the day calm. The list mixes easy-access classics with one beach (Cala d'Hort) that rewards effort with the most cinematic view on the island. We have skipped purely party-driven sand in favour of swimming spots where water clarity, surrounding landscape, and afternoon atmosphere are the main reason to be there.

1
Cala Comte (Cala Conta) - Ibiza's Most Iconic Sunset Beach

Cala Comte (Cala Conta) - Ibiza's Most Iconic Sunset Beach

Topping any list of the best beaches in Ibiza, Cala Comte sits roughly 8 km west of Sant Antoni de Portmany on Ibiza's western flank. Four shallow stretches of pale sand fan out around low rocky points and look across to the offshore islets of S'Illa des Bosc and Sa Conillera. The water shades from clear turquoise close in to deep cobalt offshore - the visibility is among the best on the island and snorkelling around the rocks at either end of the main beach is worth bringing a mask for.

The sunsets are why most people come back. The angle of the beach means the sun drops behind the islets directly out to sea, and on a still evening the entire bay turns gold. Sunset Ashram, the chiringuito perched on the headland, gets crowded after 6 pm in July and August, so the trick is to claim sand earlier in the afternoon and order food up the hill rather than at the water.

Access by car is straightforward from Sant Antoni (15 minutes) or Ibiza Town (25 minutes). In summer, bus line L4 from Sant Antoni runs roughly every 30 to 60 minutes and drops passengers at the upper car park.

Pro Tip: Arrive before 11 am in July or August to find sun-lounger space and beat the L4 bus rush from Sant Antoni. Use the upper car park (around 10 euros in 2026 high season) rather than circling the lower one - the walk down is about five minutes either way.
Platja de Cala Comte, 07830 Sant Josep de sa Talaia, Illes Balears
Bus L4 from Sant Antoni de Portmany (summer service, every 30-60 min), drops at upper car park
West coast, 8 km west of Sant Antoni de Portmany, 25 min drive from Ibiza Town

2
Cala Bassa - Family-Friendly Pine-Fringed Swimming Cove

Cala Bassa - Family-Friendly Pine-Fringed Swimming Cove

Cala Bassa is the family-friendly counterpoint to Cala Comte, tucked into a pine-fringed cove on the opposite side of the same western peninsula in the municipality of Sant Antoni de Portmany. The water shelves gently for around 30 metres before any meaningful depth, which makes it the most reliable swimming beach in Ibiza for small children. The crescent of fine white sand runs about 250 metres, and a band of Aleppo pines comes right down to the back of the beach - rare on the island and the reason locals call it the cool-down cove.

The hub here is Cala Bassa Beach Club (CBbC), which runs the sun-bed concession, a restaurant, and a more upscale beach-club area towards the western end. Day-bed reservations open online roughly two weeks ahead and high-season Saturdays sell out fast. For free public sand, head to the eastern half away from the club setup.

Getting there: Bus line L7 from Sant Antoni runs from May to October with several daily departures each way. By car, it is about 15 minutes from Sant Antoni along the Carretera de Cala Comte, with a paid car park at the entrance.

Pro Tip: Skip the car-park bottleneck by taking the seasonal Cala Bassa Ferry from Sant Antoni harbour - it runs every 30 minutes from May to October, costs around 16 euros return, and the 25-minute crossing is half the appeal.
Carretera de Cala Bassa s/n, 07820 Sant Antoni de Portmany, Illes Balears
Bus L7 from Sant Antoni de Portmany (May to October, multiple daily departures), or seasonal Cala Bassa Ferry from Sant Antoni harbour
West coast, 12 km from Sant Antoni de Portmany, 15 min drive

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3
Ses Salines (Las Salinas) - Ibiza's Most Stylish Natural Park Beach

Ses Salines (Las Salinas) - Ibiza's Most Stylish Natural Park Beach

Ses Salines - also written Las Salinas - sits inside the 2,838-hectare Ses Salines Natural Park on Ibiza's southern tip, a protected wetland ecosystem that doubles as the island's most stylish swimming beach. The kilometre-long strip backs onto working salt pans (Ibiza's original export industry, dating to Phoenician times) and a salt-tolerant forest of juniper and pine. From the sand, the runway of Ibiza Airport (IBZ) is visible across the marsh, and low-flying arrivals are a regular show.

The chiringuitos along the back of the beach - Jockey Club, Sa Trinxa, Malibu - are why Ses Salines became famous: long lunches, house music drifting along the sand from 3 pm, and a celebrity-spotting culture that has aged into the broader summer scene. Mid-week mornings are still gloriously calm if a quieter swim is the priority.

The park was declared a Natural Reserve in 1995 and upgraded to Natural Park status in 2001, with the protected zone running south across the channel to the north of neighbouring Formentera.

Pro Tip: Use the dedicated Salinas car park at the end of the access road (around 8 euros for the day in 2026) rather than parking along the verge - park rangers have stepped up enforcement and fines are routine. Bus L11 from Ibiza Town runs every 30 minutes in summer.
Platja de Ses Salines, Parc Natural de Ses Salines, 07817 Sant Josep de sa Talaia, Illes Balears
Bus L11 from Ibiza Town (every 30 min in summer), stops at the access road to the beach
Southern tip of Ibiza, 10 km south of Ibiza Town, 15 min drive

4
Cala d'Hort - The Beach with the Es Vedrà View

Cala d'Hort - The Beach with the Es Vedrà View

Cala d'Hort is the beach with the view. The arc of golden sand looks straight out at Es Vedrà, the 400-metre limestone monolith rising from the sea about 2 km offshore - one of the most photographed natural features in the Mediterranean and the reason Cala d'Hort lands on every Ibiza shortlist. The beach itself is smaller than the western stars (around 200 metres of usable sand), and the sand is a touch coarser, but the backdrop more than compensates.

There are two chiringuitos at the back of the beach (El Carmen and Restaurante Cala d'Hort), both fish-focused, both still run by the same families that built them in the 1980s. The water is clean, the rocky ends are good for snorkelling, and the cliff-top viewpoint just above the car park is the spot that turns up in most Ibiza postcards.

Cala d'Hort sits in the south-west of the island in the municipality of Sant Josep de sa Talaia, about 15 minutes' drive from the village of Sant Josep or 10 minutes from the small resort of Cala Vadella. There is no direct year-round bus, so a car or taxi is the realistic way in.

Pro Tip: The unpaved car park (around 200 spaces) goes paid in 2026 (around 5 euros for the day). For the most iconic sunset shot, drive 10 minutes south to the Es Vedrà mirador on the PMV-803 cliff road rather than shooting from the beach itself.
Platja de Cala d'Hort, 07830 Sant Josep de sa Talaia, Illes Balears
No regular bus service; nearest stop is Sant Josep village, then 15 min by taxi
South-west coast, 30 km from Ibiza Town, 35 min drive via Sant Josep

5
Benirràs - The Drum-Circle Sunset Beach on Ibiza's North Coast

Benirràs - The Drum-Circle Sunset Beach on Ibiza's North Coast

Benirràs is the quieter, more bohemian counterpoint to the southern beach scene. Set in a deep horseshoe cove on the north coast in the municipality of Sant Joan de Labritja, the beach is surrounded by steep wooded hills that frame the view of a curious offshore rock formation locals call Cap des Mussol - the watchman or finger-of-god rock - rising from the centre of the bay.

The beach is best known for its drum circles, an anti-war tradition that started in 1991 and now runs most evenings from June to September. Sundays were officially restricted by the Sant Joan municipality in 2020 to manage crowding and illegal parking, so the busiest drumming sessions now fall on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings. The atmosphere from around 7 pm until the sun drops behind the headland is the singular reason people make the 30-minute drive from Sant Antoni or Ibiza Town.

There is one full-service restaurant at the back of the beach (Elements Ibiza), no public transport in low season, and limited shade - the cove faces north-west so afternoon sun is direct.

Pro Tip: Arrive by 4 pm on a drum-circle evening to find car-park space - by 6 pm the access road from Sant Miquel is gridlocked. Bring cash and water; the kiosks accept cards but coverage drops in busy hours.
Platja de Benirràs, Lugar Venda de Benirràs 154, 07815 Sant Joan de Labritja, Illes Balears
No regular public bus service; nearest village is Sant Miquel de Balansat, then 10 min by taxi
North coast, 25 km from Ibiza Town, 30 min drive via Sant Miquel
Tomas Achmedovas
About Tomas Achmedovas

CEO and co-founder

Tomas is the co-founder and director of trip1, an European company specializing in reservation services. He launched the company in 2025 with a focus on building scalable, efficient operations.

5 Best Beaches in Ibiza You Can't Miss - FAQ

Realistically, no. The 5 best beaches in Ibiza are spread across three corners of the island - west (Cala Comte, Cala Bassa), south (Ses Salines, Cala d'Hort), and north (Benirràs) - and each deserves at least a half-day to enjoy properly. Plan two beach days for a short trip and combine the two western beaches into a single day, then split the rest across separate outings to keep travel time short.

Group them by region rather than ranking. Day 1: Cala Comte and Cala Bassa on the west coast (they are 10 minutes apart by car). Day 2: Ses Salines for a long lunch and swim, then drive 25 minutes west to Cala d'Hort for sunset over Es Vedrà. Day 3: Benirràs in the late afternoon for the drum circle if visiting Thursday to Saturday between June and September.

None require beach entry tickets - all five are public beaches with free access. Sun-bed and beach-club reservations are recommended in high season: Cala Bassa Beach Club opens day-bed bookings around two weeks ahead online and sells out on summer Saturdays; Sa Trinxa at Ses Salines does not take reservations but arrivals after 1 pm in July and August mean a long wait.

Beach access is free. Budget around 25-40 euros per day per person if eating at chiringuitos (a fish main and a drink), plus 5-10 euros for parking at most of these beaches in 2026 (Cala d'Hort and Cala Bassa charge seasonally). A sun-bed and umbrella set typically runs 20-30 euros for the day; beach-club day beds at Cala Bassa Beach Club and Sa Trinxa run 60-150 euros depending on location and season.

Four of the five are. From Ibiza Town, bus L11 reaches Ses Salines every 30 minutes in summer; from Sant Antoni de Portmany, L4 reaches Cala Comte and L7 reaches Cala Bassa, both running daily May to October. The Cala Bassa Ferry from Sant Antoni harbour adds a scenic alternative. Benirràs and Cala d'Hort have limited or no scheduled bus service, so a hire car or taxi is the realistic option for those two.

Late May through mid-June and September are the sweet spots in 2026 - water is warm enough for swimming (21-25°C), crowds are thinner than peak season, and all beach clubs and bus lines are operational. July and August deliver the warmest water and full atmosphere but mean full car parks by 11 am at every beach on this list. October is fine for swimming on calm days but chiringuitos start closing mid-month.

Aguas Blancas on the east coast (a long sandy beach popular with younger travellers and naturists), Cala Llonga (a wide family bay 20 minutes from Ibiza Town with good water sports), and Cala Xarraca for snorkelling among volcanic rock formations near Sant Joan. We focused on the 5 best beaches in Ibiza for first-time visitors balancing iconic views, swimming quality, and access.

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