Palma residents cry out against the noise of nightlife: "It's torture that destroys coexistence"

Neighborhood associations demand declaring Santa Catalina, el Jonquet, the Maritime Promenade and Llotja-Born acoustically contaminated zones

One of the initiative's posters.
18/05/2026
2 min

Palm'Noise is torture'. With this forceful slogan, various neighborhood associations in Palma have intensified their protest against the noise pollution that, they claim, neighborhoods like Santa Catalina, El Jonquet, the Paseo Marítimo, and the sa Llotja-Born area have suffered for years due to uncontrolled nightlife.

The campaign has become visible with posters hung on the balconies of the affected neighborhoods to denounce a situation they consider "unsustainable" and which directly affects the health, rest, and coexistence of residents. Neighborhood groups warn that public administrations "cannot continue ignoring" a problem they define as "a serious issue that pollutes entire neighborhoods and affects residents' rights."

Acoustically Contaminated Zones

Organizations are demanding immediate and structural measures from the Palma City Council. Among the main demands is the installation of certified sound meters in the most exposed neighborhoods to create noise maps with public and real-time accessible data. Based on this data, they propose to formally declare Acoustically Polluted Zones those areas that exceed legal limits.

Residents also demand the suspension of new licenses for bars and restaurants in saturated areas, as well as exhaustive control of existing establishments to verify that they comply with regulations on soundproofing, capacity, and the closing of doors and windows. Furthermore, they ask to limit new terraces and to sanction irregular occupations of public spaces.

'Noise is torture' is the campaign slogan.

Among the measures proposed is also the reduction of opening hours for premises and terraces, especially in residential areas, as well as the prohibition of new concerts and musical activities in public spaces in the most affected neighborhoods.

The associations also demand more police control against incivility in the street, public drinking (botellón), and noise caused by whistles or music, in addition to active surveillance of street musicians and vehicle traffic.

Epicenters of uncontrolled leisure

The collectives assure that they are willing to collaborate with the City Council to find solutions, but they insist on asking municipal representatives for measures to confront "the problem in acoustically polluted neighborhoods such as Santa Catalina and El Jonquet, the Paseo Marítimo and Sa Llotja Born, epicenters of uncontrolled leisure in Palma".

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