San Antonio bay sunset with Cafe del Mar and waterfront promenade

Ibiza Town vs San Antonio: Two Different Holidays on the Same Island

These are the two main towns on Ibiza, and between them they account for the majority of visitor stays. At first glance, they might seem interchangeable — both are coastal towns with bars, restaurants, and nightlife. But spend a single evening in each and the difference becomes obvious.

Ibiza Town is a Mediterranean capital with 2,500 years of history, a UNESCO World Heritage fortress, and a cultural identity that goes far deeper than tourism. San Antonio is a purpose-built resort town on the western coast, known for its legendary sunsets and a nightlife strip that pulses until dawn.

This guide compares them honestly across the categories that matter most to travellers, so you can decide which one fits your trip.

The Vibe: What Each Place Actually Feels Like

Ibiza Town

Walking through Ibiza Town, you move between worlds. The narrow lanes of Sa Penya are lined with independent boutiques and art galleries. The harbour promenade hosts a mix of luxury yachts and fishing boats. Climb up to Dalt Vila and you’re inside Renaissance-era fortress walls, with views across the sea to Formentera. At night, the streets fill with a cosmopolitan crowd — local Ibicencos mixing with international travellers, the soundtrack leaning towards live music, conversation, and clinking glasses rather than thumping bass.

The atmosphere is urban and layered. There are tapas joints next to Michelin-recommended restaurants. Vintage shops next to high-end fashion. It feels like a real city that happens to be on an island, not a place built solely around tourism.

San Antonio

San Antonio’s energy is different. It’s unashamedly a holiday town, built around the idea that people come to Ibiza for a good time. The sunset strip along the western waterfront is genuinely beautiful — dozens of bars with sea-view terraces, chill-out music, and that famous golden light. But once you move inland, the streets shift to a more commercial feel: neon signs, happy hour promotions, English breakfasts, and bars competing for attention with increasingly loud music.

This isn’t necessarily a criticism. If you’re coming with a group of friends for a high-energy week, San Antonio delivers exactly what it promises. It’s just a very specific type of holiday, and it’s worth knowing what to expect.

Sunset at Cafe del Mar in San Antonio Ibiza with people watching from the waterfront

Nightlife: Different Flavours of After Dark

Ibiza Town

Ibiza Town’s nightlife is more varied than people expect. Pacha, one of the island’s original super-clubs, sits a five-minute walk from the port and runs legendary themed nights all season. But beyond Pacha, the town’s strength is its breadth: cocktail bars in Dalt Vila with candlelit terraces, late-night tapas spots, underground music bars in Sa Penya, and the summer-long Ibiza Rocks events. The crowd tends to be slightly older and more mixed than San Antonio — you’ll find people in their 20s alongside couples in their 50s.

You can have an early dinner, wander the harbour, have drinks at two or three different bars, and then decide whether to head to Pacha or call it a night. Everything is walkable, and there’s never pressure to commit to one venue for the entire evening.

San Antonio

San Antonio’s nightlife is more concentrated and intense. The West End — a handful of streets near the harbour — hosts dozens of bars, many with promoters outside offering deals. Inside, you’ll find cheap shots, loud pop and dance music, and a predominantly British crowd in their late teens to mid-twenties. The clubs Eden and Es Paradis anchor the scene, with big-name DJs and themed nights through the summer.

If you’re looking for a specific type of high-energy, affordable party night — cheap drinks, loud music, everyone your age — San Antonio is hard to beat. If you want variety, a more international mix, or the ability to choose your own level of intensity, Ibiza Town has the advantage.

Beaches: Where You’ll Spend Your Days

Ibiza Town

Ibiza Town doesn’t have a headline beach right in the centre, but Talamanca — a wide, sheltered bay just 10 minutes’ walk (or 3 minutes by bus) from the port — is an underrated gem. It faces west, catches the afternoon sun, and has a handful of good beach restaurants. Figueretas, a 15-minute walk south, is another option with a long promenade and watersports.

More importantly, staying in Ibiza Town gives you bus access to beaches across the island. Playa d’en Bossa (10 min by bus), Cala Llonga (20 min), and even the beautiful southern coves like Ses Salines (15 min) are all reachable without a car.

San Antonio

San Antonio’s own bay beach is functional but not the island’s best — it’s a wide urban beach with calm water, fine for swimming but not especially scenic. The real beach draws are west and south: Cala Conta (stunning turquoise water, 15 min by bus), Cala Bassa (sheltered cove with a beach club, 15 min by bus or boat), and Cala Tarida (family-friendly, 20 min drive).

The catch is that these beaches require transport. In peak season, the buses fill up and parking is limited, which can mean an early start or a taxi. From Ibiza Town, you have easier access to a wider range of beaches in every direction.

If you’re planning your trip, you might also want to read Where to Stay in Ibiza: A Complete Area-by-Area Guide.

Restaurants and Food: Where to Eat Well

Ibiza Town

This is where Ibiza Town pulls clearly ahead. The capital has the island’s deepest and most diverse dining scene. Within walking distance you’ll find traditional Ibizan restaurants serving bullit de peix (local fish stew), contemporary Mediterranean bistros, Japanese restaurants, Italian trattorias, Middle Eastern kitchens, and several options that have earned critical acclaim well beyond the island.

The market in the old town, Mercat Vell, is worth a morning visit. And the sheer density of options means you can eat well on any budget: from a €5 bocadillo at a local bar to a €100 tasting menu overlooking the harbour.

San Antonio

San Antonio’s food scene has improved markedly in recent years. The waterfront now has some solid mid-range restaurants, and the sunset strip bars serve reasonable food alongside their drinks. However, the inland streets still lean heavily towards tourist-oriented fast food, English pubs, and chain restaurants.

If food is a significant part of your holiday, Ibiza Town offers more choice, more quality, and more authentic local cuisine.

Transport and Convenience

Getting to the airport

Getting around the island

Walking

Price Comparison

San Antonio has traditionally been the cheaper option, and that remains true for accommodation. Budget hotels and hostels in San Antonio typically run €25–55 per night in mid-season, while comparable places in Ibiza Town range from €30–70. The gap narrows if you look at mid-range hotels (€80–150 in both areas).

However, hidden costs change the equation. From San Antonio, you’ll spend more on taxis to beaches, to the airport, and to clubs on the other side of the island. A return taxi to Ushuaïa costs ~€25 each way. Over a week, those taxi fares can easily add €100–200 to your budget — potentially wiping out the savings on accommodation.

Ibiza Town’s central location means you spend less on transport, even if the room rate is slightly higher.

Who Should Choose Where

Choose San Antonio if you:

Choose Ibiza Town if you:

The Verdict

Both towns are valid choices, and the right one depends entirely on what kind of holiday you want. San Antonio delivers exactly what it promises: affordable accommodation, spectacular sunsets, and a full-throttle nightlife scene.

But for overall versatility — the ability to walk everywhere, eat well, soak up history, enjoy nightlife at your own pace, and use public transport to reach any beach on the island — Ibiza Town comes out ahead. It’s a real place with its own identity, not just a resort that happens to be on Ibiza.

If Ibiza Town sounds like the right fit, consider a stay at hIbiza. We’re a boutique guest house right in the centre, near Vara de Rey, offering private rooms with personality at guest-house prices (€40–80/night). It’s a genuine base for exploring the island — central, walkable, and far from the anonymous chain-hotel experience. See our rooms and availability here.

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