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After Storms: How the Weather on Mallorca Will Develop in the Coming Days

After Storms: How the Weather on Mallorca Will Develop in the Coming Days

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After intense thunderstorms, conditions on Mallorca will remain changeable until midweek. Here's a pragmatic look at warnings, temperatures, and beach weather.

Storms over, but not forgotten: changeable island weather

Tuesday has left many here with lingering effects: on some streets cars were submerged in water, in coves detached fenders floated, and conversations in cafĂ©s on Plaça Major were shorter and more matter-of-fact. For early Wednesday, the national weather service Aemet again issued local yellow warnings – especially for midday and afternoon hours.

What applies today (summary)

Between 12 and 7 pm there can be heavy rain in the island's center as well as on the east, northeast and south coasts. Aemet speaks of localized heavy rainfall and isolated thunderstorms. If you are in Cala Millor or Campos, don't forget your umbrella. Along the Passeig Marítim in Palma there was a noticeable easterly wind this morning — nothing wild, but enough to rattle cafe terrace awnings.

Temperatures and a bit of summer feeling

The high temperatures remain pleasant. We're not talking 40 degrees, but around 27 to 31 °C depending on location: Sa Pobla and Sóller could see up to 31 °C again, while in Deià in the Tramuntana the expectation is 26–27 °C. In short: sunny moments are coming, but the big heat is not yet there.

Weekend: more sun again

From Thursday on, the whole thing calms down. It stays mostly dry with a mix of sun and clouds, temperatures around 29–31 °C and a light easterly breeze. For Saturday beach plans it looks good: Calvià and Andratx could reach around 29 °C, Palma about 30 °C. On Sunday the clouds locally increase again, but rain is not planned.

Sea temperature – a small consolation for beach fans

Good news for bathers: the water is still warm. Measurements on Wednesday morning showed values around 26.2 to 26.4 °C (Pollença, Andratx, Dragonera buoy). So yes — one last dip in the sea is still worth it.

Practical tips for the coming days

  • Drive with caution: after heavy rain, roads in valleys and on descents can be slippery.
  • Pay attention to public transport: delays are possible, especially when water stands on secondary routes.
  • If you work outdoors (gardening, construction, outdoor terraces): plan flexible breaks; in the afternoon it can be unpredictable.

A local impression at the end

I was briefly at ColĂČnia de Sant Jordi this morning — the sky played Hallelujah between thick clouds and garish light. An older lady was filling smaller rubber boots at the market, laughing and saying: "The sea is still calling." It's that simple here often: rain belongs, but summer hasn't hung up the shovel yet. We stay vigilant, but staying home? No, the island is too beautiful for that.

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