Hotel in Mallorca, Spain
Cap Vermell Grand Hotel
1,150ptsVillage-Format Resort Dining

About Cap Vermell Grand Hotel
Cap Vermell Grand Hotel occupies Mallorca's east coast above the Canyamel valley, designed as a low-rise hilltop village that draws on traditional Mallorquin architecture and local art. Its 142 rooms and suites come with private terraces and Carrara marble bathrooms, while VORO Restaurant holds two Michelin stars. A Leading Hotels of the World member with a Michelin Key, it sits firmly in the island's upper tier of resort properties.
A Village Built Around a Star Kitchen
Mallorca's east coast has long been the quieter counter-argument to the Magaluf strip: fewer package hotels, more limestone coves, villages where the afternoon siesta is still observed. The resort properties that have taken root here tend to reflect that character, and Cap Vermell Grand Hotel, above the Canyamel valley at Urb. Atalaya de Canyamel, is the east coast's most deliberate expression of that design philosophy. Where the island's west-coast properties, including La Residencia, A Belmond Hotel, Mallorca and Son Bunyola Resort and Villas, have tended to convert historic fincas or terraced olive estates, Cap Vermell was conceived from the outset as an architectural statement: a new building that performs the language of an old village.
The Architecture: A Village That Isn't
The resort's organizing concept is the Mallorquin hilltop village, translated into a working luxury property. Low-lying stone buildings are arranged around a central square, mimicking the spatial logic of settlements like Artà and Capdepera a few kilometres inland. The scale is deliberately human: no single structure rises to tower over the valley, and the circulation between buildings follows the meandering logic of a medieval street plan rather than the corridor-and-lobby grid of a conventional large hotel.
References to local art and cultural heritage are woven into the physical fabric rather than applied as decoration. That distinction matters in a regional hospitality market where Mallorquin identity is sometimes reduced to ceramic tiles in the elevator lobby. Here the connection reads as structural, which is partly why the property earned Michelin's recognition at the property level: a Michelin Key award in 2024, a designation applied to hotels where the experience of staying is itself considered worthy of evaluation.
All 142 guest rooms and 16 suites include private terraces oriented toward either the valley or the Balearic Sea beyond. Bathrooms are lined in Carrara marble, fitted with large soaking tubs and televisions integrated into the mirrors. Rooms come with Nespresso machines and Bose audio systems. The specification is consistent across the category, which means the differentiating factor between room types is primarily orientation and scale, not equipment. For a property of this size, that consistency is worth noting.
VORO and the Dining Village
The dining program at Cap Vermell is structured around the central square concept, presenting multiple restaurant options as a kind of open village rather than a single dining room. At the leading of that hierarchy sits VORO, which holds two Michelin stars, placing it in the small tier of Mallorca properties where fine dining reaches national rather than merely regional significance. For context on the island's broader dining scene, the full Mallorca restaurants guide maps the competitive set.
Two Michelin stars at a resort restaurant is an unusual credential. Most starred restaurants in Spain operate as standalone destinations: properties like Akelarre in San Sebastián or Atrio Restaurante Hotel in Cáceres have built the hotel around the dining reputation rather than the reverse. VORO's positioning inverts that dynamic slightly: the kitchen operates within a larger resort context, which gives it a different guest relationship than a standalone counter, but the award itself is assessed on the same terms.
Scale, Position, and Peer Set
With 142 rooms, Cap Vermell sits at the larger end of Mallorca's luxury segment. Properties like Convent de La Missió in Palma or Grand Hotel Son Net operate on a far smaller footprint and compete on intimacy and architecture rather than facilities breadth. Cap Vermell's scale permits a different offer: two pools plus a children's pool, a fitness centre with cardiovascular and weight equipment, the Sirenitas Spa and Wellness Centre, and the Cap Vermell Residences, a dedicated set of meeting and event spaces arranged around a Mallorquin courtyard.
That facilities spread means the property competes differently to boutique properties like Pleta De Mar Luxury By Nature or Fontsanta Thermal Spa and Wellness, which each occupy specific niches. Cap Vermell is closer in ambition to Jumeirah Mallorca at the island's north end: both properties operate at resort scale with full-service amenity stacks, though Cap Vermell's east-coast location gives it a quieter geographic context and a different coastal character.
The Leading Hotels of the World membership (current as of 2025) provides the peer signal that most directly calibrates the property's international positioning. LHW membership does not guarantee a specific experience, but the curation process filters for physical standards and service consistency, which means Cap Vermell occupies the same global consideration set as comparable properties across Spain, including Mandarin Oriental Ritz, Madrid, Mas de Torrent Hotel and Spa in the Costa Brava, and Terra Dominicata in the Priorat.
Location and Access
The Canyamel address places Cap Vermell roughly an hour's drive from Palma's Son Sant Joan Airport on the island's main eastern road. The surrounding coastline runs through Cala Mesquida, Coves d'Artà, and the medieval walled town of Artà, all within a short drive. The property is not beachfront: the village layout sits above the valley rather than at sea level, which is the trade-off for the refined views and the spatial organisation that makes the design concept work. Guests who require direct beach access should account for that factor in their planning.
Mallorca itself is accessible from most major European hubs year-round, though the island logs over 300 days of sun annually, with peak season running from late spring through early autumn. The east coast benefits from slightly less congestion than the resort clusters around Alcúdia in the north or the Palma Bay marinas to the southwest, which makes Canyamel a more considered base for guests whose interest extends to the interior.
Planning Your Stay
Cap Vermell Grand Hotel is located at Urb. Atalaya de Canyamel, Vial A, 12, 07589 Canyamel. It carries a Google rating of 4.6 from 933 reviews, a reliable signal at that volume. Booking through the hotel directly or through the Leading Hotels of the World portal typically provides access to the full room and suite inventory. Given the resort's size, availability is less constrained than at boutique properties, but the suite tier books ahead during summer months. Guests considering comparable resort-scale properties elsewhere in Spain may want to assess Marbella Club Hotel on the Costa del Sol, or for an urban counterpoint, Mandarin Oriental Barcelona.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which room category should I book at Cap Vermell Grand Hotel?
The 142-room inventory divides between standard guest rooms and 16 suites. All categories include private terraces, Carrara marble bathrooms, soaking tubs, Nespresso machines, and Bose sound systems, so the specification floor is consistent across the board. The primary variables are room size, terrace scale, and sea-versus-valley orientation. For most stays, a well-positioned deluxe room delivers the full architectural experience; the suites add proportionally more living space and, in some configurations, more direct sea-facing exposure. Guests visiting specifically for VORO's two-Michelin-star kitchen may find that the room is secondary to the dining reservation, which should be secured well in advance regardless of room category.
Why do people go to Cap Vermell Grand Hotel?
The combination of resort-scale facilities and a two-Michelin-star restaurant on-site is uncommon in Mallorca, and that pairing draws two distinct but overlapping groups. The first comes for VORO specifically: it is one of a small number of restaurants on the island operating at that recognition tier, and staying in-house removes the logistical challenge of driving the east-coast roads after dinner. The second group is drawn by the east-coast location and the architectural concept: the property offers a quieter alternative to the more densely developed resort areas, with the Canyamel valley, nearby limestone coves, and the walled town of Artà within easy reach. The Leading Hotels of the World affiliation and the Michelin Key award (2024) confirm the property's position at the leading of the island's resort hierarchy, which for some guests is itself sufficient reason.
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