Access note
Located in central Puerto de Mazarron. Street parking available nearby. Facilities include lifeguards, disabled bathing access, toilets, and chiringuitos in summer season.
A curving sandy bay in Puerto de Mazarron with a small rocky island just offshore. The water is consistently calm and shallow, making it one of the best family beaches on this coast. The seabed around the island is also home to an important underwater archaeological site — a Phoenician trading vessel wreck — though diving requires a permit. Lifeguards and facilities operate in summer.
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The place layer exists to make the village logic clearer, not to imitate a broad pin map.
Located in central Puerto de Mazarron. Street parking available nearby. Facilities include lifeguards, disabled bathing access, toilets, and chiringuitos in summer season.
37.5612, -1.2478
fine sand
Current
Last checked 29 March 2026.
These guide links carry the reader back into the planning layer where this place changes the answer.
Puerto de Mazarron is a working fishing port first and a resort second, and the dining scene reflects that priority. The Lonja de Pescado — the fish auction hall — operates most weekday mornings when the fleet returns, and anyone can watch the auction though only licensed buyers can purchase. The restaurants closest to the port buy directly from the lonja, which means the fish-to-plate chain here is shorter than almost anywhere else on the Costa Calida. Restaurante El Puerto, operating for over 50 years beside the fish market, is the most established option for fresh-catch seafood and traditional rice dishes. La Farola, also port-side, is known for its paella, fish soup, and fried chopitos. The local speciality to look for is caldero, the Murcian rice dish cooked with grey mullet and dried peppers in a two-course format — fish served first, then the rice cooked in the remaining stock. Dining rhythm runs late: the evening crowd starts after 21:00 in summer, and many restaurants close between lunch and dinner. The seafront walk from the port to Playa de la Isla connects the dining zone to the beach zone in about 15 minutes, making it practical to combine a late swim with an early dinner stop.
Mazarron · Reserve Zone
West of Bolnuevo, the Mazarron coastline breaks into a series of small coves accessible via narrow tracks off the coast road, backed by steep volcanic cliffs. Percheles is the standout — roughly 300 metres of sand with no hotels, no bars, and rarely more than a few dozen visitors even in August. The dark sand mixed with fine gravel and the rocky seabed on both flanks make it one of the best snorkelling spots on the Costa Calida for anyone willing to walk 15 minutes from a car. Further along, Cala Amarilla, Covaticas, and Parazuelos offer even more isolation, though access can be rough and shade is nonexistent. For easier snorkelling, the rocks around Playa de la Isla in Puerto de Mazarron are the lowest-effort option — the underwater archaeological site here (a Phoenician trading vessel wreck) is not diveable without a permit, but the surrounding rocky seabed is open and full of posidonia beds. Kayak-and-snorkel excursions depart from Puerto de Mazarron bay during summer, typically covering the cliff-base coves that are difficult to reach on foot. Water visibility on this coast averages 8 to 15 metres depending on conditions, peaking in June and September when summer crowds are thinner and wave action is low.
Mazarron · Reserve Zone
Mazarron works for families because it solves the problem that La Manga and Cartagena do not: low density, flat-access beaches, and a pace that does not require a car for every meal. The practical base is either Puerto de Mazarron or Bolnuevo — both have wide sandy beaches suitable for young children, with lifeguards and chiringuitos in summer. Playa de la Isla and Playa del Rihuete in Puerto de Mazarron have the calmest water and the most facilities, including disabled bathing access. Bolnuevo is better when the family wants space and a quieter atmosphere — the beach is over a kilometre long and the residential low-rise backdrop means less noise. The daily rotation that works for a full week: mornings at the base beach, a midday break at the apartment, and a late-afternoon drive to a different beach for variety — Bahia (between Puerto and Bolnuevo, open and spacious), Nares (small and sheltered), or the Gredas end of Bolnuevo for the rock formations. One day should go to a kayak excursion from Puerto de Mazarron — operators run family-friendly coastal paddles that include snorkelling stops. April starts milder, usually around 20 degrees by day, and conditions rise toward the mid-20s by June, with long sunshine hours that make shoulder season particularly strong for families avoiding the peak August heat above 35 degrees.
Mazarron · Reserve Zone
These business records appear here because they are already used alongside this place inside village guides.
The most established seafood restaurant in Puerto de Mazarron, operating for over 50 years just metres from the Lonja de Pescado. Buys directly from the morning fish auction. Known for traditional rice dishes — especially caldero, the Murcian grey mullet and dried pepper rice served in two courses — and fresh-catch grilled fish. The port-side terrace gives views of the working harbour.
Plaza del Mar, 18, Puerto de Mazarron
Boat and excursion operator that adds bay access, island logic, and a more active day layer to an otherwise slower Mazarron stay.
Puerto Deportivo de amarre No 1, Puerto de Mazarron
Promenade-adjacent stay in Puerto de Mazarron for travelers who want a quieter bay base without losing practical beach-day convenience.
Calle Mulhacen, 1, Puerto de Mazarron
A boutique 8-room hostal in Puerto de Mazarron with a rooftop terrace for sunset views, free breakfast, and a shared kitchen. Walking distance to the Gredas de Bolnuevo and the bus station. The small scale and personal service make it the closest thing Mazarron has to a design-led stay. Rooms include air conditioning, wifi, and private bathrooms. Rates from around 60 euros per night.
Calle Progreso, 6, Puerto de Mazarron
Visible source framing matters because access, position, and practical use can drift over time.
https://www.spain.info/en/beach/puerto-mazarron/