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Campos, Balearic Islands

Es Trenc (Platja d'Es Trenc)

Es Trenc is a roughly three-kilometre stretch of fine white sand on Mallorca's south coast, near the small town of Campos.

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Es Trenc (Platja d'Es Trenc)

About this place

Es Trenc is a roughly three-kilometre stretch of fine white sand on Mallorca's south coast, near the small town of Campos. It's one of the few large beaches on the island that never got built up — the entire stretch sits inside the Es Trenc-Salobrar de Campos natural park, which kept developers out for decades. The result is a beach that locals call the 'Caribbean of Mallorca' for its turquoise shallows, pine-and-dune backdrop, and complete absence of resort hotels.

Clothing-optional use is long established at the eastern end of the beach, the stretch closest to the Salobrar saltflats. The western/Ses Covetes end is more textile-mixed, with families and casual beachgoers. The naturist convention is tolerated rather than officially sanctioned — Spain's general acceptance of naturism at recognized beaches applies here, but Es Trenc isn't formally listed in FEN's directory as a naturist beach. In practice, no one will hassle you on the eastern third in any non-peak month.

Es Trenc draws a real mix in summer — Mallorcan locals, German and Scandinavian visitors who treat it as the island's signature beach, and dedicated naturists for the quieter ends. Parking is paid at small lots near Ses Covetes and Es Carbó; both fill early in July and August. There are seasonal beach bars (xiringuitos) near the main access points, but the eastern naturist stretch has no facilities — pack water, shade, and reef-safe sunscreen. The natural park status means strict no-littering enforcement and protected dune-walking corridors.

Visitor notes

Contributed by ClothingOptional.org Editorial Team

Who visits

A genuinely diverse summer mix: Mallorcan locals (especially weekday mornings), German and Scandinavian tourists, and dedicated naturists at the eastern end. Mostly couples and solo travellers; families gravitate toward the textile sections. Shoulder months (May, June, September) are best for a predominantly naturist atmosphere.

How to find it

From Campos, follow signs to Ses Covetes or Es Carbó — both have paid parking lots a short walk from the sand. The clothing-optional stretch is at the eastern end of the beach; walk left (east) from the Ses Covetes access for about 15-20 minutes, or park at Es Carbó for closer access. Coordinates 39.3422, 2.9892 put you in the general eastern stretch.

Things to watch out for

Parking fills early — by 10 AM on summer weekends. Strong sun and almost no natural shade; the dunes are off-limits for shelter. Wind can pick up by afternoon. The natural park has strict no-disturbance rules — don't approach the saltflats or walk on dune vegetation. Glass containers and amplified music are prohibited.

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Etiquette & ground rules

Stay on the eastern third of the beach for nude sunbathing — the central and western sections are more textile-mixed and naturism isn't expected there. The beach sits inside a protected natural park, so littering and dune-walking outside marked corridors are enforced. No photo or video of other beachgoers. Pack out everything; the eastern end has no bins or facilities. Seasonal beach bars near the main parking are clothing-required.

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