
Refugios reopen: Mallorca's mountain huts fill up after the summer break
The seven public refugios in the Serra de Tramuntana have reopened after the summer break. Around 6,500 reservations through the end of the year show that hiking on Mallorca is no longer just a summer affair.
Refugios in the Tramuntana are back
This morning as early as half past eight backpacks hung on the clotheslines in Escorca and the smell of fresh coffee mingled with cool mountain air. After the short summer break, the island's seven public refugios have reopened – for many a small mountain revival, for others the best escape from the heat on the coast.
More demand, different guests
The island administration reports about 6,500 reservations through the end of the year – that's roughly 25 percent more than in the same period last year. No coincidence: from September the climbs become more pleasant, the air clearer, the sun milder. Those who love the steep paths are again planning weekends in the Serra de Tramuntana. You can hear it in the conversations at the long wooden tables: away from sand and deckchairs, towards summit experiences and simple hut evenings. Recent coverage notes that all seven refuges were fully booked during a long holiday weekend, illustrating rising demand.
Traditional spots like Tossals Verds are popular meeting points by late afternoon. The terrace fills up, eyes turn to Puig Major, and people exchange route recommendations. Huts located to the west seem to be filling particularly quickly this year. For some locals, October is already the "second high season" – and the calendars of many huts confirm it: weekends will soon be scarce.
Practical matters and small changes
A hut warden laughed on the phone: “People now ask more often for beds with blankets than for sleeping mats.” Such small details show how the visitor profile is shifting: fewer pure summer tourists, more nature lovers, weekend trekkers and families seeking a different perspective of Mallorca.
Those who want to head out spontaneously are in luck: some huts hold individual places free. On weekends or public holidays, online reservation has become the norm. Starting spots are often tight, parking is limited, and the huts have fixed capacities for safety and comfort reasons.
Protect nature, secure mountain enjoyment
For the island administration, good occupancy is also a balancing act. More bookings bring income, but responsibility for nature conservation rises as well. Wardens and volunteers remind visitors of simple but important rules: no open fires, take your waste with you, keep dogs on a leash. Especially now, when forest fire warning levels can rise seasonally, such notices must be taken seriously. Local reports of rescue operations at Puig de Galatzó and Torrent de Pareis highlight why preparedness matters on these routes.
The refugios are not all the same. Some lie on longer trekking routes; others are family-friendly and offer shorter approaches. There are huts where the chirping of crickets accompanies the night, and places where a shepherd dog barks at dawn and the sun rises behind the rocks. For beginners, the shorter sections are ideal; ambitious hikers plan multi-day stages with overnight stays.
What you should bring
A small packing list: headlamp, warm clothing for cool nights, a waterproof jacket (a short shower can arrive quickly in the mountains), sufficient water and biodegradable bags for rubbish. And a bit of patience: if one gorge is full, it usually just means the island is spread out over the mountains in small groups – and that is exactly what makes Mallorca so appealing.
Practical tip: Information and bookings run through the island administration's official website. For spontaneous trips, an early start on a weekday is recommended – and a phone call to the hut if you want to stay flexible.
The huts are back. With them return the quiet mornings, the hearty conversations at the communal table and the smell of coffee over stone walls. Anyone who has experienced a sundowner on a refugio terrace knows: Mallorca has more faces than just beach and harbour.
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