Why Ibiza Town Is the Perfect Beach Base
Most visitors to Ibiza assume you need a car to reach the island’s best beaches. We hear it all the time from guests checking in at hIbiza: “Which beaches can we actually walk to?” The answer always surprises them. Ibiza Town sits on a stretch of the southeastern coast where some of the island’s finest sand is literally at your feet — no rental car, no taxi, no stress.
After years of living and working in the heart of Ibiza Town, we’ve mapped out the seven best beaches you can reach on foot from the city centre. Some take just ten minutes; others are a pleasant half-hour stroll along the waterfront. Grab your towel, your sunscreen, and leave the car keys behind.
1. Platja de Talamanca — The Local Favourite
Walking Time from Ibiza Town Centre: 15–20 minutes
Talamanca is the beach we send almost every guest to on their first morning. It’s a generous 900-metre arc of fine sand tucked into a sheltered bay just north of the harbour. The water is calm, remarkably clear, and shallow enough to wade out for dozens of metres — perfect if you’re not the strongest swimmer or just want to float in peace.
From hIbiza, walk down towards the port, follow the promenade past the Marina Botafoch area, and you’ll see the beach open up ahead of you. The path is flat and pleasant, passing fishing boats and a few cafes where you can grab a coffee on the way.
What makes Talamanca special is its dual personality. The western end near the restaurants has sunbeds and a polished beach-club atmosphere. Walk east and it turns quieter, with patches of posidonia seagrass (a sign of clean water) and plenty of open sand. Solo travellers love the relaxed mid-week vibe; on weekends it fills up with local families.
- Best for: Swimming, relaxed sunbathing, long walks along the shore
- Facilities: Sunbed hire, beach restaurants, showers, lifeguard in summer
- Tip: Visit on a weekday before 11am for the quietest experience
2. Platja de Ses Figueretes (Figueretas) — The Closest Urban Beach
Walking Time from Ibiza Town Centre: 10 minutes
Figueretas is the beach you can see from half the balconies in town, and it’s the one you’ll visit most often simply because it’s so close. A ten-minute walk south from the Vara de Rey boulevard brings you to a compact, lively stretch of sand backed by hotels and a seafront promenade.
We won’t pretend Figueretas is a hidden paradise — it’s an urban beach through and through. But that’s part of its charm. You can pop down for a quick swim before lunch, dry off over tapas at one of the beachfront chiringuitos, and be back exploring Dalt Vila by mid-afternoon.
The beach has been renovated in recent years with improved sand replenishment and better accessibility. There’s a dedicated walkway running its full length, making it one of the most wheelchair-friendly beaches on the island.
- Best for: Quick dips, convenience, sunset drinks on the promenade
- Facilities: Sunbeds, restaurants, promenade, accessible ramps
- Tip: Walk the promenade south towards Playa d’en Bossa at sunset for stunning views of Formentera
3. Platja d’en Bossa — The Longest Beach on the Island
Walking Time from Ibiza Town Centre: 20–30 minutes
At nearly three kilometres long, Playa d’en Bossa is Ibiza’s biggest beach and one of its most famous. Walking from Ibiza Town, you continue south past Figueretas along the coastal path. The urban landscape gradually gives way to a sweeping expanse of pale sand with the silhouette of Formentera floating on the horizon.
Playa d’en Bossa has a well-earned reputation as a party beach — some of the island’s biggest clubs sit right on its northern end. But walk further south and the character shifts dramatically. The middle section is popular with families and water-sports enthusiasts (jet skis, parasailing, paddleboards), while the southern tip near the Torre de ses Portes watchtower is genuinely tranquil.
If you’re staying at hIbiza and want to experience the full spectrum of Ibiza beach life in one walk, this is it: start at Figueretas, stroll through Playa d’en Bossa’s party zone, and end up watching kitesurfers near the salt flats.
- Best for: Water sports, beach clubs, long walks, varied atmosphere
- Facilities: Full services — sunbeds, restaurants, water-sport rentals, clubs
- Tip: The southern half is significantly less crowded and more scenic
4. Platja des Codolar — The Quiet Pebble Escape
Walking Time from Ibiza Town Centre: 35–40 minutes (or quick bus ride)
If you walk past the airport end of Playa d’en Bossa and keep going south, you’ll reach Platja des Codolar — a pebbly, windswept beach that most tourists never find. It sits along the edge of the Ses Salines natural park, and on a busy August day you might share it with a handful of people.
We’ll be honest: this isn’t a lounging beach. The stones can be uncomfortable without a good mat, and it’s exposed to south-westerly winds. But the water clarity is extraordinary, the landscape is raw and beautiful, and there’s a sense of solitude that’s hard to find on the island in high season.
If you’re planning your trip, you might also want to read Ibiza Beach Guide for Solo Travelers: From Figueretas to Talamanca.
- Best for: Solitude, snorkelling, nature photography
- Facilities: None — bring everything you need
- Tip: Wear water shoes for the rocky entry; the snorkelling just offshore is superb
5. Cala de Sant Vicent de sa Cala — The Hidden Harbour Beach
Walking Time from Ibiza Town Centre: 15 minutes
This tiny patch of sand sits below the old fisherman’s quarter, right at the foot of the Dalt Vila walls on the harbour side. It’s barely 50 metres wide, squeezed between the old port and the rocks, and most visitors walk right past it without noticing.
We love recommending this spot to guests who want a quick swim without the trek. The water is deep enough to dive in from the rocks, and on calm mornings the clarity is stunning — you can see straight to the sandy bottom. It’s not a place to spend an entire day, but for a refreshing dip after exploring the old town, it’s unbeatable.
- Best for: A quick swim after sightseeing, jumping off rocks, Instagram photos
- Facilities: Minimal — restaurants nearby in the port area
- Tip: Go in the morning when the sun hits the water directly
6. Sa Caleta — The Red-Cliff Cove (Bus + Short Walk)
Getting There: 15 min by bus + 5 min walk
Sa Caleta is technically beyond comfortable walking distance from Ibiza Town, but we include it because it’s so easy to reach by bus and so spectacularly beautiful that it would be criminal to leave it off any beach list. A short bus ride south followed by a five-minute walk through pine forest brings you to a small cove framed by dramatic red-orange cliffs.
The beach is compact — maybe 100 metres across — and can fill up by midday in summer. Arrive early and you’ll have an almost private amphitheatre of rust-coloured rock, turquoise water, and the kind of scenery that makes you understand why the Phoenicians settled here 2,600 years ago. The UNESCO-listed archaeological site is just a short walk along the clifftop path.
- Best for: Dramatic scenery, snorkelling, history lovers
- Facilities: One beach restaurant, limited sunbeds
- Tip: Combine with a visit to the Phoenician settlement — free entry and fascinating
7. Ses Salines — The Iconic Ibiza Beach (Bus Ride)
Getting There: 20 min by bus
No list of Ibiza’s best beaches is complete without Ses Salines. This is the beach that launched a thousand magazine covers — a long strip of white sand backed by ancient salt flats and a protected nature reserve, with water so transparent it looks digitally enhanced.
For more on this topic, check out Hidden Coves Near Ibiza Old Town: A Local Guide.
From hIbiza, catch the bus heading south to Ses Salines (runs frequently in summer). The atmosphere here is bohemian-chic: a well-dressed crowd, laid-back beach bars playing balearic beats, and a pine-shaded area behind the sand where you can escape the heat for free without renting a sunbed.
The beach faces south towards Formentera, and on clear days you’ll swear you could swim there. (You can’t — it’s six kilometres, and the currents are serious.) Instead, wade into the crystal shallows and appreciate one of the Mediterranean’s most beautiful coastal ecosystems.
- Best for: Crystal-clear water, people-watching, beach bars, photography
- Facilities: Beach clubs, restaurants, sunbeds, parking
- Tip: Walk south along the shore for ten minutes to find much quieter stretches
Explore Our Rooms
Your Beach-Hopping Base in Ibiza Town
The beauty of staying in Ibiza Town is that you don’t have to choose just one beach — you can visit a different one every day of the week without ever starting a car engine. At hIbiza, we’re located right in the centre, which means Figueretas is a ten-minute stroll and Talamanca is just over fifteen. Even Playa d’en Bossa is an easy walk along the coast.
We keep beach towels, local bus timetables, and our handwritten beach map at reception. Just ask us which beach suits your mood — whether you want party energy, quiet coves, or crystal-clear swimming water, we’ll point you in the right direction.
Ibiza Town isn’t just the island’s cultural heart. It’s also the best base for exploring every beach the southeast coast has to offer — on foot, on a budget, and at your own pace.






