Rain falling on terracotta roofs near Parc de la Mar in Mallorca with flooded streets and enclosed café terraces

Persistent Rain in Mallorca: Are We Really Prepared?

👁 7241✍️ Author: Ana Sánchez🎨 Caricature: Esteban Nic

Storm Alice brings persistent rain, flooded access roads and full canals. A look at weak points, short-term measures and what travelers should know now — so Mallorca comes out of the rain not only soaked, but wiser.

Key question: How well is Mallorca prepared for persistent rain and floods?

Anyone walking along the Parc de la Mar right now doesn't hear the rhythmic sea, but the steady drumming of rain on terracotta roofs. Cafés are enclosing their terraces, flights are stacking up at Son Sant Joan airport — and water pools in depressions on the MA-1 near Andratx. Storm Alice continues. The question remains: are our infrastructure, authorities and the industry sufficient to cushion such autumn events?

The situation on the ground

Orange and yellow warnings from the weather service apply to parts of the island. Temperatures are not wintry; daytime values remain a mild 23 to 26 degrees. That makes the rain psychologically more bearable for many. Nevertheless, this is more than a few wet hours. Wind in the pine trees, the slap of rain on windows and the wail of sweepers trying to keep gullies clear all remind us that logistics and everyday life are under strain.

What often gets overlooked

Public discussion quickly revolves around flight cancellations and soggy holiday photos. Other, less visible problems often fall by the wayside:

Drainage and road condition: Many side roads, especially inland, have narrow drainage channels or outdated drains that overflow during heavy rain. Access roads to villages can become temporarily impassable — as happened yesterday in some western towns.

Small businesses: A bodega, a market stall or a family-run guesthouse have hardly any financial buffers. If a market is canceled or a shop is flooded, livelihoods are at stake.

Communication: Warning levels exist — but do they really reach everyone? Many tourists check flights and social media, not always the local authority pages. Messages in several languages are not yet automated everywhere.

Concrete measures that would have immediate effect

Some proposals can be implemented quickly and would have direct impact:

Automated, multilingual alert chains: Hotels, landlords and tour operators should be required to forward information automatically — in English, German and Spanish. An SMS or WhatsApp channel linked to municipal warnings would be practical.

Visible barriers and signage: Temporary closures at known problem spots and clearly visible notices on access roads reduce risky driving maneuvers.

Emergency aid for small businesses: Short-term microgrants or tax deferrals would help bridge liquidity gaps until insurance payouts or reconstruction take effect.

Promote indoor offers more strongly: Museums, wineries, local indoor markets and the aquarium are weatherproof alternatives that can cushion losses and offer visitors good experiences.

Medium-term projects

Beyond immediate measures, strategic steps are needed: expanding drainage networks where water regularly pools; increasing permeability of urban surfaces with soakable pavements; systematic inspection of bridges and culverts before the rainy season. This also includes local emergency plans and regular drills for municipal workers — too often one sees improvised solutions instead of prepared procedures.

Clear distribution of responsibilities is also important. Who clears, who warns, who pays? Without transparent responsibilities, aid is delayed — many businesses know this from painful experience.

What travelers can practically do now

Don't pack only sunscreen: rubber boots, a rain jacket and sturdy footwear are useful. Check flights and rental conditions, never drive through deep puddles and respect road closures. Hidden alternatives: Sineu, Binissalem or Palma's museums offer dry hours away from the beaches.

An honest look — and a final note of optimism

Mallorca is vulnerable to unusually heavy rain, as current scenes show. But vulnerability does not mean inevitability. With pragmatic alert chains, targeted support for small businesses and sensible infrastructure investments, the island can become more resilient.

And one more thing: persistent rain has its charms — empty lanes, steaming coffee in a traditional bar, the sound of rain on the tiles. If administrations, businesses and visitors take the current weaknesses seriously, Mallorca will be better prepared for the next autumn storm. Until then: get information from your accommodation and the authorities — and don't worry, the beach isn't going anywhere. It's just a bit wetter right now.

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