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    Restaurant in Port de Pollença, Spain

    Terrae

    290pts

    Daily menu, zero-mile produce, Michelin-noted.

    Terrae, Restaurant in Port de Pollença

    About Terrae

    Terrae is the strongest case for creative dining in Port de Pollença: a Michelin Plate restaurant (2024 and 2025) at the €€ price point, with a daily-changing menu built entirely on Mallorcan zero-mile produce. Chef David Rivas offers à la carte, a half-omakase, and a full Omakase tasting menu. Book ahead in summer; easy to secure a table in shoulder season.

    Who Should Book Terrae — and When

    If you are visiting Port de Pollença and want a meal that rewards curiosity rather than just ticking off a tourist-friendly paella, Terrae is your clearest option at the €€ price point. It suits couples looking for a considered dinner, food-focused solo travellers willing to sit at the intersection of grill cooking and seasonal produce, and anyone who finds the island's more conventional waterfront restaurants too predictable. First-timers should know upfront: this is not a fixed-menu restaurant in the traditional sense. The kitchen works around what Mallorca's small-scale producers can deliver that day, so what you find on the menu changes almost daily.

    Timing matters here. Mallorca's shoulder seasons — late April through June and September into October , are when Terrae operates at its natural leading. Local produce is at peak availability, the town is less crowded, and you are more likely to secure a table without planning weeks ahead. The height of summer (July and August) brings the island's full tourist wave, which increases demand across Port de Pollença's dining options. Book as early as you can if you are visiting then. For the leading experience, aim for an early evening sitting , Terrae's relaxed ambience and the chef's habit of explaining dishes tableside work better when the room is not at full pressure.

    What to Expect at Terrae

    Terrae holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, which signals consistent cooking that Michelin's inspectors consider worth noting, even if it sits below star level. At the €€ price range, that recognition carries real weight: you are getting creative, produce-led cooking at a fraction of what you would pay at comparable Michelin-recognised addresses on the mainland. The Google rating of 4.5 across 489 reviews reinforces that this is not a one-off performance for critics , the kitchen delivers consistently for paying guests.

    Chef David Rivas runs a kitchen built on a zero-mile, zero-waste philosophy. Ingredients come from Mallorca's island producers; no chemicals or additives enter the process. The grill is central to the cooking approach, which gives the food a directness that suits the setting. Rivas also finishes dishes tableside and explains what is on the plate , useful for first-timers who want to understand what they are eating, and a signal that the restaurant takes its sourcing seriously enough to explain it. The menu spans à la carte, a half-omakase format, and a full Omakase tasting menu, giving you genuine choice over how deep you want to go.

    Lunch vs Dinner at Terrae

    This is the practical question worth answering before you book. Lunch at a restaurant like Terrae , with a daily-changing menu driven by market availability , tends to reflect whatever the morning's producer deliveries brought in. That can mean fresher, lighter preparations, and a lower spend if you opt for à la carte or the 1/2 Omakase rather than the full tasting menu. Lunch also gives you the afternoon light, which matters in a town where the outdoor character of a meal is part of what you are paying for.

    Dinner, by contrast, is where the full Omakase tasting menu makes most sense. The format is unhurried, and the chef's tableside involvement , explaining each course, adding finishing touches , is better suited to an evening when neither you nor the kitchen is watching the clock. If value is your priority, lunch with à la carte ordering is the sharper choice. If you want the complete Terrae experience and are willing to give the meal the time it deserves, dinner with the Omakase is the one to book.

    How It Compares

    See the full comparison section below for peer context against Spain's leading creative restaurants.

    Practical Details

    DetailTerraeTypical €€ Creative (Mallorca)
    Price range€€€€ – €€€
    AwardsMichelin Plate 2024 & 2025Varies
    Google rating4.5 (489 reviews)Typically 4.0–4.3
    Booking difficultyEasy (book ahead in summer)Easy to moderate
    Menu formatÀ la carte, 1/2 Omakase, OmakaseUsually fixed or à la carte only
    Menu frequencyChanges almost dailySeasonal changes only
    Cuisine approachZero-mile, zero-waste, grill-ledMediterranean standard

    Booking Terrae

    Booking is direct. Terrae is not in the category of restaurants where you need to set an alarm for a reservations drop or join a waiting list months out. Outside of peak summer weeks, you should be able to plan a visit with a week or two of lead time. In July and August, book as soon as your travel dates are confirmed , Port de Pollença fills quickly and a table at the leading restaurants in town goes fast. No phone number or online booking link is listed publicly in our data, so the most reliable route is to contact the restaurant directly via the address at Carrer de la Verge del Carme, 28.

    More in Port de Pollença and Beyond

    Creative Dining Worth Comparing Across Spain

    FAQ

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Terrae?

    • Yes, if you are a first-timer who wants to understand what Terrae is about. The Omakase format lets Chef Rivas sequence courses around the day's leading produce, and the tableside explanation adds context you do not get from à la carte.
    • If price is a consideration, the 1/2 Omakase is the smarter entry point. It gives you the tasting-menu structure at a lower commitment.
    • At the €€ price range with a Michelin Plate in two consecutive years, the value case for the full Omakase is strong compared to similarly ambitious restaurants operating at €€€ or €€€€.

    Does Terrae handle dietary restrictions?

    • The kitchen's daily-changing menu, built around whatever local producers supply that morning, means there is natural flexibility in what can be prepared.
    • Because the menu shifts almost every day and the chef engages tableside, this is a restaurant where dietary requirements are leading communicated directly and in advance.
    • No phone or website is listed in our current data. Contact the restaurant at the physical address or via direct inquiry when making your reservation to confirm what they can accommodate.

    Can Terrae accommodate groups?

    • There is no published seat count in our current data, so we cannot confirm maximum group size.
    • For groups of four or more, book early , in Port de Pollença's busier months, the smaller creative restaurants fill faster than the larger tourist-facing venues on the waterfront.
    • If your group is large, reach out to the restaurant directly before booking to confirm availability and whether the tasting menu format works for your party size.

    Is Terrae good for solo dining?

    • Yes. Chef Rivas's habit of explaining and finishing dishes tableside makes solo dining at Terrae an engaged experience rather than an isolated one.
    • The à la carte option gives solo diners control over spend, while the Omakase format rewards those willing to hand over decision-making entirely.
    • At the €€ price point, a solo meal here is one of the more affordable ways to access Michelin-recognised creative cooking in the Balearics.

    What are alternatives to Terrae in Port de Pollença?

    • Port de Pollença does not have a deep bench of creative restaurants at this standard within the town itself. Terrae is the clearest Michelin-recognised option at €€ in the area.
    • If you want to step up in ambition and budget, the closest point of comparison on the island would require travelling to Palma, where the creative dining offer is broader.
    • For the highest-level creative cooking in Spain, addresses like Quique Dacosta in Dénia and El Celler de Can Roca in Girona operate at €€€€ and represent a significant step up in both price and formality.

    Compare Terrae

    Value Check: Terrae and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Terrae€€Easy
    Quique Dacosta€€€€Unknown
    El Celler de Can Roca€€€€Unknown
    Arzak€€€€Unknown
    Azurmendi€€€€Unknown
    Aponiente€€€€Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Terrae?

    Yes, if you want to see what chef David Rivas is doing with the island's small-scale producers on any given day. Terrae offers two tasting menu formats — Omakase and a shorter 1/2 Omakase — alongside an à la carte, so you can calibrate how deep you go. At a €€ price point with a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, the Omakase represents solid value compared to equivalent tasting menus in Mallorca's resort dining circuit. If you prefer to pick and choose, the daily à la carte and specials give you flexibility without sacrificing the zero-mile philosophy.

    Does Terrae handle dietary restrictions?

    Terrae's daily-changing menu is built around whatever the island's producers supply that morning, which means the kitchen is already working with ingredients rather than fixed recipes — a setup that tends to be more adaptable than a static menu. Chef David Rivas is hands-on at the table explaining and finishing dishes, so flagging restrictions directly when you book or on arrival is the practical move. Confirm specifics when reserving, as the zero-mile, seasonal format means substitutions depend on what's available.

    Can Terrae accommodate groups?

    Terrae works well for small groups who want a shared, exploratory meal rather than a conventional set menu. The format — daily-changing dishes, chef interaction at the table, tasting menu options — suits groups of four to six who are aligned on the style. For larger parties, contact Terrae directly via Carrer de la Verge del Carme, 28, Port de Pollença, as availability and format suitability will depend on the day's menu and seating.

    Is Terrae good for solo dining?

    Yes. Chef David Rivas's habit of explaining and finishing dishes at the table means solo diners get genuine engagement rather than being left to sit quietly. The 1/2 Omakase format is a practical fit for one — enough range to understand the kitchen's direction without overstretching. At €€ pricing with a Michelin Plate credential, it's a reasonable solo spend for the quality on offer in Port de Pollença.

    What are alternatives to Terrae in Port de Pollença?

    Port de Pollença is a small harbour town, and Terrae occupies a distinct position as the area's most credentialled creative restaurant, holding a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025. For comparable sustainable, market-driven cooking elsewhere in Mallorca, you'd need to travel into Palma or the island's interior. If the zero-mile, daily-changing format isn't your preference and you'd rather have a fixed menu with more certainty, a conventional seafood restaurant along the port is the practical alternative — though none currently carry equivalent recognition.

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