
Palma 2025: 115 Filming Permits – Curse, Blessing, and What to Do Now
In the first half of 2025 the Palma Film Office issued 115 filming permits. That brings money into the city – but also cables on cobblestones, early starts and annoyed neighbors. How can Palma find the right balance?
Palma as a filming location: heavy activity, early starts and cables on the cobblestones
When I walk along the Plaça Major early in the morning, it's no longer just market stalls and handcarts that animate the paving. Increasingly there is a truck with lights, a young director with headphones or an interpreter hurriedly switching between Spanish and English. In the first half of 2025 the Palma Film Office issued Palma 2025: 115 filming permits in the first half. A figure that shows: Palma remains in demand — but it also forces us to make choices.
What are producers filming here?
The majority of permits this year went to photo projects and documentaries. No surprise: short distances from the old harbor to winding alleys, clear Mediterranean light and the modern harbor promenade make ideal backdrops. Notable, however, is the rise in feature films — from two last year to six in the first six months. Small productions mix with international co-productions; German and British applications follow as usual in second and third place behind Spain.
The central question
How can we balance economic benefit with the quality of life of residents? This question is central because both sides have solid arguments: hotels, caterers, taxi drivers and small craft businesses earn from shoots. At the same time residents complain about early closures, cables across cobblestones and the constant truck noise.
Aspects that are often overlooked
Public debate usually focuses on visible disturbances: road closures or spotlights in front of a residential building. Less discussed is the indirect effort for the city administration: staff for permits, on-site supervision, urban traffic planning and possible damage to public space. The ecological balance is also often insufficiently examined — additional trips, transport of heavy equipment and energy consumption for lighting and generators add up.
Concrete everyday problems
Logistics really are half the script. A morning on the Avinguda Gabriel Roca: a truck parks, cables struggle across the cobblestones, a café owner moves tables because a shot is to take place right there. On the Passeig de Born the entrance is draped with tarpaulins. In such moments nerves are thin. Some neighbors find it exciting — they wave to the actors. Others are annoyed by the early starts. And there are tradespeople whose schedules are disrupted when a street is briefly blocked.
Economic benefit – but for whom?
The economic effects are real: hotel bookings, extra revenue in restaurants, orders for local service providers. Yet the added value is distributed unevenly. Large productions usually bring in external money but more often use international service providers. Smaller projects, on the other hand, more frequently hire local suppliers. A targeted incentive logic could amplify this leverage: those who buy locally should benefit from discounts on fees. This imbalance echoes other local policy debates, such as Palma moratorium on new short‑term rental licences.
Solutions Palma should consider now
Counting numbers is not enough. Palma can design rules so that shoots can take place — but with fewer collateral damages. Suggestions:
Time windows and noise guidelines: Stricter limits for very early starts in residential areas and a clear maximum duration for generator activity, in line with EU environmental noise policies.
Transparency and communication: A digital map with upcoming shoots so residents and businesses can plan. Clear contacts at the Film Office who are reachable on site.
Community fund: A small additional fee on permits that flows into neighborhood projects — for example noise protection measures, street repairs or support for local artists.
Local preference rules: Discounts for productions that hire local crews or use Mallorca-based service providers.
Sustainability requirements: Rules for CO2 reduction, minimizing trips and using LED technology instead of energy-hungry generators, referencing Albert sustainable production guidance.
Protection of public space: Technical requirements for protecting cables on cobblestones to avoid damage (soft ramps, cable bridges) and a deposit system for possible repairs.
Examples from everyday Palma
Recall the scene at Parc de la Mar a few weeks ago: a camera truck parked, a drone circled over the cathedral in the still morning light. Residents were fascinated, and the delivery address of a small furniture store benefited from the set. Such encounters can be pleasant. But it also became clear: better coordination would have made access easier for older residents.
Conclusion: rules instead of resigned tolerance
Palma remains on the world's film map. That is an opportunity — economically and culturally. The challenge is to create conditions under which this opportunity is not borne on the backs of neighborhoods. City administration, film producers and residents need clear rules, faster communication and a realistic plan for sustainability. A bit of neighborhood tolerance helps, but it does not replace well-organized regulations. And frankly: if the crew is already enjoying the best coffee in the morning, they should at least make sure the truck doesn't ruin the cobblestones.
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