Weinsonntag auf Mallorca

REVIEW · MALLORCA

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca

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  • 3 hours
  • From $105
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Operated by Opcion Events GmbH · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.7 (20)Duration3 hoursPrice from$105Operated byOpcion Events GmbHBook viaGetYourGuide

A Sunday winery picnic, with music in the air. Wine Sundays on Mallorca turns a simple evening out into something social: tastings, local food, and live performers in a relaxed outdoor setting.

I love that it feels easygoing instead of stiff, and I also like that you get a real sense of place without needing a wine textbook. One watch-out: this isn’t built for a deep, structured wine lecture every step of the way.

If you’re after the highlights, two things land well. The picnic on a country estate has that laid-back Mediterranean vibe, and the wine tasting includes at least four wines, served in a clear sequence during the night.

Based on recent experiences, the main drawback is that pacing can vary a bit, and the music is meant as background rather than a full concert.

Wine Sundays on Mallorca: The Easy-Going Winery Night You Can Plan Around

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - Wine Sundays on Mallorca: The Easy-Going Winery Night You Can Plan Around
This is a Sunday evening event designed for “come as you are” fun. It runs from 19:30 to 22:30, and the whole thing has a light mood: you arrive to a welcome pour, eat at a comfortable pace, and enjoy local music that stays friendly and in the background.

The format matters because it changes what you should expect. You’re not sitting in a classroom. You’re moving through a tasting, sharing food platters, and letting the winery atmosphere do most of the work. The best part is that it feels like a Mallorca tradition in spirit: local flavors, a country setting, and people chatting instead of rushing.

Different Winery Every Sunday: How the Location Works

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - Different Winery Every Sunday: How the Location Works
One key thing to know: the event moves to a different winery each Sunday. Your meeting point is directly at the winery, so don’t plan a “quick stop” somewhere else first.

After you book, you’ll receive the winery name and location one day before the event. Transfers from your accommodation to the winery and back are optional, and those can be booked after you secure your spot.

This shifting-location model can be a pro or a con. It’s a pro if you like variety and you want a new setting each week. It’s a con if you’re hoping for one specific winery view or building. The upside is that the experience consistently targets the same kind of countryside atmosphere and hospitality.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Mallorca.

Meeting Time Reality: No Official Start and Mixed Arrival Times

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - Meeting Time Reality: No Official Start and Mixed Arrival Times
The event has no official start, which is more important than it sounds. In Spain and on Mallorca, guests rarely arrive all at once, and the evening runs more like a gentle flow than a strict clock.

Practically, this means you should plan to show up during the 19:30–22:30 window, not obsess over being on the minute. If you do arrive early, you’ll still be part of that first welcome moment. If you arrive later, you won’t feel stranded; the structure is flexible and unfolds across the evening.

Also, the music doesn’t automatically start the moment you arrive. You’ll notice it begins after a certain time, and the performers are there to create atmosphere rather than “turn it on” like a concert.

The Wine Tasting Sequence: Welcome White to Final Red

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - The Wine Tasting Sequence: Welcome White to Final Red
You taste at least four wines, and the serving order is part of the plan. The night begins with a welcome glass of white wine, then a second white is served.

After that comes the color shift you’ll remember: the third wine is rosé, followed by a red wine. This structure keeps the tasting moving and gives you an easy compare-and-contrast night without making you stop and study labels.

What I like about this sequence for real life: it’s simple. You’re not guessing what will be served next. You can also keep expectations reasonable if you’re not a hardcore oenophile. You’ll learn just enough, taste enough, and still enjoy the rest of the picnic.

In one recent experience, the tasting went beyond the minimum promised and reached six wines. That suggests there can be a little variation, but the baseline remains four.

The Picnic Setup: Shared Platters and Local Cold Dishes

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - The Picnic Setup: Shared Platters and Local Cold Dishes
Food is a big part of why this works as an evening plan. You’ll get a picnic with local food, served as a selection of local cold dishes in a picnic style.

Here’s how the serving works: the food arrives on platters typical of the region, and participants share the dishes and serve themselves. That matters because it keeps things casual. You’re not waiting for your personal plate. You’re tasting, helping yourself, and mixing with whoever is nearby.

One thing to note: the format is “at your pace.” The tasting and the music aren’t meant to trap you in a schedule. After the main flow, you can still enjoy the food and drink on your own discretion.

The only real caution from recent experiences: not every group had the exact same dessert situation. If dessert is a must-have for you, treat this evening as primarily wine + picnic + music, not a guaranteed full multi-course finish.

Live Music That Works: Background Performers, Not a Concert

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - Live Music That Works: Background Performers, Not a Concert
The live music is one of the biggest reasons to book this instead of doing a DIY tasting.

But manage expectations: this is not an all-out concert. The musicians are there as background music, and they prefer to play that way. Different styles can show up, and the goal is atmosphere over intensity.

Music starts after some time has passed, and it runs for around two hours. Then the performers wrap up, but the event doesn’t instantly end. You can still stay for the food and drink at your own pace and on your own account.

Why this style is good: you can actually talk. You aren’t shouting over a stage. You get that evening hum—great for couples, friends, and small groups who want fun without the stress of big venue noise.

One thing I really like about the setup is that it can feel more local than a ticketed show. You’re in the winery setting, not in a separate entertainment bubble.

The Ambiance and Location Factor: Country Estate Energy

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - The Ambiance and Location Factor: Country Estate Energy
You’re not in a shopping-mall wine bar. You’re on a country estate feel—outdoor space, vines, and that Mallorca “evening light” mood.

In recent feedback, people highlighted a beautiful outdoor venue and even views over the Tramuntana from winery grounds. That kind of scenery is hard to replicate with a standard tasting room.

What you should expect practically is an outdoor setup, and that means comfort matters. If you’re sensitive to seating or long sitting, plan for the reality of outdoor benches or casual seating arrangements. One recent guest reported their seating was uncomfortable and that the first wine was served too warm with no ice cubes available. That’s not universal, but it’s a useful reminder: wine preferences are personal.

Price and Value: What $105 Includes (and What It Doesn’t)

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - Price and Value: What $105 Includes (and What It Doesn’t)
At $105 per person for a 3-hour experience, this is priced like a quality evening event, not a cheap flight-at-a-bar.

Here’s what’s included:

  • Entrance fee
  • Wine tasting with at least four wines
  • Water
  • Picnic with local food
  • Live music

That inclusion list is the core value. You’re paying for the whole package: a tasting, the food plan, and the setting. Optional transportation is separate.

Also, the alcohol rule is clear: in Spain, alcohol consumption is only permitted from age 18. If you’re booking for a group, it helps to know early so nobody gets stuck on the night.

One more value note from recent experiences: at least one guest felt the evening was a very good price-performance match for what they got—great food, good organization, and fun music.

Service Style and Language: English or German Hosts

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - Service Style and Language: English or German Hosts
Hosts speak English and German, and a greeter is part of the experience. That said, the “language match” can depend on the day and the local team.

In one recent group, the host tried to explain wines in English and focused on the practical bits like grape varieties and barrel aging, not a long, lecture-style breakdown. In another, the group described very welcoming hospitality from staff including a host named Julia, with a strong sense of inclusion.

So my advice is simple: if you want a deep technical tasting in German, treat that as a bonus, not the guarantee. The structure you will get is the tasting flow and the food experience.

The Pacing Question: When the Evening Feels Shorter Than Planned

Weinsonntag auf Mallorca - The Pacing Question: When the Evening Feels Shorter Than Planned
Most of the time, this runs like a proper evening. Still, keep one detail in mind: music ends after about two hours, and while it’s not the end of the event, some guests found their table cleared and the room managed in a way that made it feel like it was over.

If you’re the type who wants a long, leisurely sit-down after the music stops, arrive with a flexible mindset. The safest plan is to think of the event as a three-hour experience window where the main energy is front-loaded into the tasting + music, then you finish at your own pace.

Also, one guest reported the event began later than expected. That’s not something you can control, so it helps to come with a “Sunday pace” attitude.

Who Should Book Wine Sundays (and Who Might Skip)

This fits well if:

  • You want a social, relaxed winery evening in Mallorca
  • You like live music as background, not a loud concert
  • You’re happy with a picnic-style meal and shared platters
  • You want a tasting with at least four wines and straightforward pacing

You might skip it if:

  • You need a highly structured, in-depth wine class with strict timing
  • You’re extremely sensitive about seating comfort in outdoor settings
  • You expect dessert and every course to appear exactly as listed

Couples and friend groups often love it because the format encourages easy conversation. If you’re traveling solo, it can work too, since sharing platters naturally creates small interaction moments.

Quick Tips to Make Your Night Smoother

A few practical moves can turn a good evening into a great one:

  • Dress for an outdoor evening. Even in good weather, winery settings can cool down.
  • If you’re picky about wine serving temperature, pay attention when the first white arrives. One guest found theirs was warm and ice cubes weren’t available.
  • Use the tasting sequence as your guide: white, then white, then rosé, then red. Don’t overthink it.
  • If the music matters to you, plan to stay through the main music window, since that’s when the atmosphere peaks.

And if you’re booking with friends, agree on a meeting plan ahead of time. Since arrivals are spread out, showing up together can help you anchor the evening.

Should You Book It? My Take on Wine Sundays

I’d book Wine Sundays if you want a fun Mallorca winery night that combines tasting, local picnic food, and live music without forcing you into a formal schedule. The value is strong because what you pay for includes the tasting, food, water, and music.

If you’re chasing a deep technical tasting lecture or a perfectly timed production, this might feel a bit casual. There can also be day-to-day variation in pacing and small service details, like seating comfort or whether certain extras show up as expected.

My decision rule: book it for the experience format. Not for a “strict German wine seminar” promise.

FAQ

Where is the meeting point?

The meeting point is directly at the winery. You’ll get the name and address for the specific winery one day before the activity, since it changes every Sunday.

Does Wine Sundays happen at the same place every week?

No. Every Sunday it takes place at a different winery on Mallorca.

What time does it run?

It runs every Sunday from 19:30 to 22:30.

How long is the experience?

The activity is listed as 3 hours.

How many wines will I taste?

You’ll taste at least four wines. The night starts with a welcome white wine, then a second white, followed by rosé, and then red.

Is food included?

Yes. You get a picnic with local food, served as cold dishes on regional platters, with participants sharing and serving themselves.

Is there live music?

Yes. There is live music from local performers. It is not described as a concert, and the musicians play more as background music.

What languages are available?

The host or greeter is available in English and German.

Is transportation included from your hotel?

No. Transfers from your accommodation to the winery and back are not included, but they can be booked as an optional extra after you book the activity.

What’s the alcohol age rule?

In Spain, alcohol consumption is only permitted from age 18.

Can I cancel or pay later?

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. You can also reserve now and pay later to keep plans flexible.

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