🏆 Madeira wins 80 OVR vs 79 · attribute matchup 3–3
Madeira
Portugal
Mallorca
Spain
Madeira
Mallorca
How do Madeira and Mallorca compare?
You want an island with mountains and hiking, not just sun loungers, and these two are the European shortlist. Mallorca's Serra de Tramuntana is UNESCO-listed limestone — you can stage the GR-221 dry-stone route through Deià, climb the switchbacks down to Sa Calobra cove for a swim, and finish with grilled fish on a Port d'Andratx terrace. Madeira is the volcanic outlier in the Atlantic — you walk the levada irrigation channels into the laurisilva UNESCO cloud forest, summit Pico Ruivo at sunrise above the clouds, eat espetada (beef on bay-laurel skewers) in Funchal's Old Town, and sip a fortified Madeira wine that's older than the country it's served in.
Costs are friendly to both — about $130/day mid-range in Madeira versus $180/day in Mallorca — and Madeira ranks marginally safer at 92 versus 86, though both feel completely relaxed in practice. Mallorca wins on beaches (Madeira's coastline is mostly cliffs with pebble coves and the manufactured Calheta sand), nightlife, food variety, and direct flights. Madeira wins on hiking density, dramatic mountain-meets-ocean scenery, lower crowds even in August, and the kind of trail network that rewards a full week of walking without repeating a route.
Seasons differ: Madeira works March–October with year-round mild temperatures (it's known as the island of eternal spring), while Mallorca's window is April–October with a hot, busy July–August core. Pro tip: rent a car in Madeira but pre-book it a month out — the island has limited fleet, prices spike in summer, and the levada trailheads are unreachable without your own wheels. Pick Madeira for a hiking-led trip with cooler weather and lower crowds, and Pick Mallorca for a beach-and-village week with stronger food and faster transfers.
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Madeira
Madeira is one of the safest destinations in Europe, with very low crime rates and no significant security concerns. As an EU territory with Portuguese administration, it benefits from European safety standards. The primary risks are natural — trail hazards, steep cliffs, and occasionally rough Atlantic conditions.
Mallorca
Mallorca is generally very safe — violent crime is rare and the Guardia Civil and Policía Local are visible and effective. The main risks are everyday tourist-economy ones: pickpocketing in central Palma and the harbour, opportunistic vehicle break-ins at trailheads and beach car parks, and the well-publicised drunk-tourism issues in Magaluf and Playa de Palma. The road network requires respect — the Tramuntana coast road and the Sa Calobra descent are not forgiving — and the Mediterranean current at certain north-coast beaches genuinely catches swimmers out.
🌤️ Weather
Madeira
Madeira's weather is the island's greatest paradox: it can be simultaneously sunny on the south coast (Funchal) and completely overcast in the mountains. The island creates its own microclimates — the north is wetter and cooler than the south, and the high peaks above 1,000m are frequently in cloud. Overall, the "Island of Eternal Spring" title is well-earned.
Mallorca
Mallorca has a textbook Mediterranean climate — hot dry summers, mild wet winters, around 300 sunny days a year. Palma averages 18°C across the year, with July highs around 31°C and January lows around 6°C. Annual rainfall is 350–500 mm depending on where you are on the island (the Tramuntana mountains catch significantly more than the southern plain), concentrated almost entirely in October–December. Sea temperatures are swimmable June through October — peaking around 26°C in August and still 23°C in early October. The island's tourist season is dictated by air temperature: charter traffic from May 1 to October 31, near-silence in winter outside Palma itself.
🚇 Getting Around
Madeira
Madeira has a decent bus network and an excellent motorway tunnel system, but the island's mountainous topography means a rental car gives access to many trailheads and viewpoints that buses don't reach. Funchal is walkable in the center; everywhere else requires transport.
Walkability: Good in central Funchal (Zona Velha, city center, waterfront). Moderate on the Monte Cable Car route. Low everywhere else — the island's steep, mountainous terrain and spread-out attractions make a car effectively necessary for serious exploration.
Mallorca
Palma itself is walkable and well-served by EMT city buses and a small Metro; the rest of the island is best explored by hire car, with the TIB (Transports Illes Balears) intercity bus network as the main alternative. The 1912 Tren de Sóller is a destination in itself rather than a real transit option. Distances are deceptively long — Palma to Cap de Formentor is 75 km and 90 minutes — and a hire car for at least three days is the standard recommendation for any non-Palma trip.
Walkability: Excellent inside Palma's old town (1.5 km square), good along the seafront and into Santa Catalina, limited beyond. Almost no resort towns are walkable end-to-end without a hire car. The Tramuntana hill villages (Valldemossa, Deià, Sóller, Fornalutx) are individually walkable but the connections between them are road-only.
The Verdict
Choose Madeira if...
you want year-round mild climate in the Atlantic — levada hiking through laurel forests, dramatic sea cliffs, Madeira wine, and an island that invented "eternal spring"
Choose Mallorca if...
you want the largest Balearic island — Palma's Gothic La Seu cathedral, the Serra de Tramuntana UNESCO landscape, Cap de Formentor, Deià, Valldemossa, Sa Calobra, and pine-fringed coves on every coast
Madeira
Mallorca