REVIEW · MALLORCA
Sa Clasta Mallorca Wine Tours
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A Mallorca wine morning can feel like a holiday shortcut. Sa Clasta Mallorca Wine Tours focuses on two winery visits in the heart of the island, with tastings and a lunch built around local flavors. I like that you get pickup and drop-off so you can concentrate on the wine instead of maps.
What makes this plan work is the pacing and the size. The private-feeling format (up to 7 people) keeps the day flexible, while the overall cap stays small. I also like that the day includes both tastings and food, so you are not scrambling for lunch after the first pour.
One thing to consider: this tour is aimed at groups (minimum of 4), so solo travelers or couples should double-check availability. And as with any two-winery itinerary, the second stop may be a better fit for some tastes than others.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Two-Winery Mallorca Days: How Sa Clasta Sets the Pace
- Mallorca Pickup and the 9:00 am Start: Easy Morning, Real Schedule
- Visiting the Heart of Mallorca: What the Two Winery Stops Feel Like
- Tastings That Don’t Feel Rushed: How the Wine Portion Works
- Pa Amb Oli Lunch: The Local Meal That Keeps You Going
- Guides and Communication: When Names Like Kristin, Cristina, Dominic Matter
- Group Size Rules: Private-Feeling for Friends, Practical for Small Groups
- Price and Value: Is $187.45 for a 6-Hour Wine Day Fair?
- Timing Tips: How to Get the Most from a Wine-First Schedule
- Should You Book Sa Clasta for Your Mallorca Wine Day?
- FAQ
- What time does the Sa Clasta wine tour start?
- How long is the tour?
- Do they pick you up and drop you off?
- How many wineries do you visit?
- Is lunch included?
- What group size is the tour for?
Key things to know before you go

- Hotel pickup across Mallorca is included, so you can start from wherever you’re staying.
- Two wineries, one day: you get variety without burning your whole schedule on driving.
- Small group feel with a private tour setup for 7 or fewer.
- Wine tastings plus pa amb oli lunch keeps the day practical and filling.
- English-friendly experience with a team that handles communication by email and updates.
- Start time is 9:00 am, so you’ll want an early breakfast plan.
Two-Winery Mallorca Days: How Sa Clasta Sets the Pace

This is the kind of Mallorca wine tour that makes sense if you want more than a quick tasting room stop. Your day is built around two wineries, visited in the heart of Mallorca, with enough time at each place to actually learn what you’re drinking. Six hours is a sweet spot: long enough to taste multiple wines and eat well, but short enough that you still have energy left for the rest of your vacation.
The other thing I like is that the tour isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. It does wine. It does food. It doesn’t waste time with a rigid “see everything” checklist. That matters in Mallorca, where roads can eat time fast if you’re bouncing between far-flung villages.
Also, the experience has an English option, and the day is designed to be manageable for most visitors. If you’re traveling with people who just want a fun, guided day and not a complicated logistics puzzle, this format usually plays nicely.
You can also read our reviews of more wine tours in Mallorca
Mallorca Pickup and the 9:00 am Start: Easy Morning, Real Schedule
Your tour day begins at 9:00 am. If you’re staying in a hotel, pickup and drop-off are included. The provider says they’ll pick up anywhere on the island and asks you for your exact location. Once you book and the date is confirmed, you’ll receive the schedule by email.
That pickup piece is not a small detail. In Mallorca, it’s the difference between feeling relaxed and feeling like you’re sprinting for a meeting point. It also helps if you’re coming from Palma or a cruise port day, where timing can be tricky and instructions can get messy.
One practical tip: if email directions feel confusing the day-of, use the phone number tied to your driver/guide to confirm the meeting place and time. Some guests have had conflicting messages before pickup, and a quick text cleared it up fast.
Visiting the Heart of Mallorca: What the Two Winery Stops Feel Like

The tour works with a bank of wineries on the island. On your day, you’ll visit two. In practice, that means you can get a contrast: one winery that leans historic and traditional, and another that may be smaller and more personal.
From the experiences shared by past guests, one of the stops can be at an older Mallorca estate with serious local recognition—one vineyard described in this way had recently won Best Wine in Mallorca. The second stop often leans more boutique, with family-run character and a setting that makes you pause even if you’re not the type to “soak in views.”
Here’s why that two-stop mix matters. If you only visit one place, you’re stuck comparing everything back to that single style. Two wineries let you notice:
- differences in grape choices and wine styles
- how production scales (large-established vs. small micro-operations)
- how the setting shapes the story you hear during the tour
A small heads-up: the second winery is the one where you may feel the “why this one?” factor more, depending on your tastes. In other words, the day is great overall, but not every second stop will land for every palate.
Tastings That Don’t Feel Rushed: How the Wine Portion Works

You’ll get wine tasting at both wineries. The goal is not just to sample and move on. You should expect a guided setup where staff talk you through what’s in the glass, and where you can compare styles across the day.
One detail that stood out in the feedback: pour size and wine volume can be more generous than you might expect from a half-day tasting. People described the portions as larger, with enough variety to make it feel like a real tasting experience rather than a quick sip tour.
If you’re the type who likes to take a bottle home, plan space in your suitcase. At least one guest said they’d have bought more if they had had room. That’s a good sign. It means you’ll likely find a bottle or two worth bringing back.
Pa Amb Oli Lunch: The Local Meal That Keeps You Going

You also get pa amb oli lunch, which is exactly what you want on a wine day. It’s practical, local, and designed for eating before the next tasting rather than as an afterthought.
Guests described the food in a few ways—tapas-style snacks, hors d’oeuvres, and food pairings—so the lunch and bites look like they’re built to go alongside the wines. The big takeaway is that the meal tends to be enough that you may not need dinner plans that same evening.
What I’d watch for is repetition. One person felt the second stop’s food setup didn’t add much because the feel was too similar to the first winery. That doesn’t mean it’s bad—it just means you might want to keep your expectations flexible. The main value is the overall day, not each dish being brand-new.
Guides and Communication: When Names Like Kristin, Cristina, Dominic Matter

This tour lives or dies on the people handling your day. The names that came up most in the experience notes include Kristin, Cristina, Dominic, and Xisca.
- Kristin was praised for taking great care of a group and going the extra mile to fix meeting-up confusion.
- Cristina earned compliments for being knowledgeable and accommodating, making the day feel smooth and personal.
- Dominic was described as friendly and very knowledgeable about the region and wines.
- Xisca was highlighted for prompt, thorough email communication and responsiveness to suggestions for wineries.
The practical meaning for you: you’re not just booking a bus-and-wine plan. You’re booking a day where someone is actually managing details. If you respond quickly to emails and confirm your pickup location clearly, your day should run in a tidy line.
Group Size Rules: Private-Feeling for Friends, Practical for Small Groups

Sa Clasta Mallorca Wine Tours is set up for small groups. The highlight is a private tour for 7 persons or fewer, which keeps the conversation flowing and makes it easier to tailor the day if your group has preferences.
There’s also a minimum group size of 4 people per tour, which is why this works especially well for friend groups. If you’re traveling as a couple or solo, you may need to check whether your date meets the minimum or whether you’ll be combined with other smaller parties.
At the same time, the overall activity cap is listed as a maximum of 15 travelers. That means you should not end up with a huge crowd experience. It’s built to feel personal, not like you’re waiting in a line at a factory outlet.
Price and Value: Is $187.45 for a 6-Hour Wine Day Fair?

At $187.45 per person for about 6 hours, the value comes down to what’s included and how much effort the tour removes.
You’re paying for:
- pickup and drop-off anywhere on the island
- two winery visits (not just one)
- wine tasting
- pa amb oli lunch
In Mallorca, transport can be expensive, and a driver who handles timing often costs a lot on its own. So even though the price looks straightforward, the hidden value is that you’re not piecing together a rental car plan, fighting parking, and trying to coordinate who’s on time.
If you’re splitting a car with friends, the savings depend on your group size. This is where the “minimum 4 people” detail becomes important. With 4+ in your group, the tour is usually a smarter deal than DIY—especially if you want one day where logistics stop being your main activity.
Timing Tips: How to Get the Most from a Wine-First Schedule
Since the tour starts at 9:00 am, plan your morning like a local: eat something simple before pickup. You’ll likely be sampling wines early, then heading into lunch and tasting. A light breakfast helps you enjoy the day rather than just survive it.
Also, wear shoes you’d be comfortable walking on around winery grounds. Some wineries are set up on uneven paths or outdoor areas. You may not be doing long hikes, but you will be on your feet.
One more realistic tip: if you want to shop for wine, treat it like a suitcase decision. People often want to buy more than their luggage can handle—especially if one stop surprises you with a bottle you didn’t plan on loving.
Should You Book Sa Clasta for Your Mallorca Wine Day?
I’d book this when you want a simple, guided wine day with real value: two wineries, a local lunch, and transport handled end-to-end. It’s especially appealing if you’re traveling with friends (4+ people) and you want a small-group feel rather than a big bus day.
Skip it or be cautious if you’re looking for a very specific winery or a strict itinerary with guaranteed “this exact estate only.” Since wineries can vary and the second stop may land differently for different tastes, keep an open mind.
If you like tasting wine alongside food, enjoy guided stories, and want the day to be easy from door to door, this one fits well.
FAQ
What time does the Sa Clasta wine tour start?
The tour starts at 9:00 am.
How long is the tour?
The duration is about 6 hours.
Do they pick you up and drop you off?
Yes. Pickup and drop-off are offered anywhere on the island and are included in the price. You send your exact location, and you’ll get the day’s schedule by email after confirmation.
How many wineries do you visit?
You visit two wineries during the tour.
Is lunch included?
Yes. The tour includes wine tasting and pa amb oli lunch.
What group size is the tour for?
It’s set up as a private tour for up to 7 people, and it works best for groups of at least 4. The overall activity has a maximum of 15 travelers.
































