Bierkönig

Arenal, Mallorca

FAQ

Carrer del Pare Bartomeu Salvà 6-8, 07600 Playa de Palma, on the stretch known as Schinkenstrasse or "Bierstrasse" (Balneario 6). It is five kilometers from the airport and twelve from Palma city center. The local brand is BK; as soon as you get off the A2 bus, you're at the door.

Open 365 days a year with approximate hours from 09:00 to 05:00 — one of the few non-stop venues in Mallorca. The high season starts with the opening from April 16 to 19, 2026, and closes in mid-October. Off-season the pace slows down but the venue remains open.

18+ with ID or passport due to Spanish alcohol sales regulations. The official FAQ does not publish a specific minimum age; door staff may request ID when capacity is high. Minors are not the target audience for the venue.

Casual with no formal dress code — most guests wear the venue's own T-shirt, shorts, or jeans. The only requirements: a shirt must be worn and closed-toe shoes (no flip-flops at the bar area). Full costumes or provocative accessories are not permitted for safety and capacity reasons.

Entry is free during regular operation — no admission fee. Only purchase tickets if you reserve a table for a group or want advance entry for special events: the opening (April 16-19) and closing (October) are managed at partyisla.com. Every liter drink comes with a free Bierkönig T-shirt.

The most direct option is the A2 bus from the airport (every 15 minutes in season, 5 EUR, 30 min, get off at "Balneario 6 / Schinkenstrasse"). From Palma city center, take line 15 to Playa de Palma. From Can Pastilla it's four kilometers: bus 23 or 25 or taxi (10-12 EUR). A taxi from anywhere in Playa de Palma costs 8-15 EUR depending on the starting point.

The German nickname for Carrer del Pare Bartomeu Salvà — the inner street of S'Arenal where the big Ballermann venues are concentrated (Bierkönig on one side and Megapark on the other). The name comes from the German ham stalls that used to line the street decades ago. For German tourists, it's a more commonly used landmark than the official street name.

German Schlager dominates — songs from the usual circuit names (Mickie Krause, Mia Julia, Tim Toupet, Lorenz Büffel and successors) — mixed with German pop and house DJ sets, and live bands on the main stage. There’s Frühschoppen in the morning, afternoon sets, and late-night sessions. Music never stops for more than an hour each day.

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