Mallorca Cycling Route: Femenia

Your in-depth, road cyclist's guide to cycling Mallorca's famous Coll de Femenia. This detailed step by step guide includes GPX, Strava, Google Map, profile, photos, cafe stops and tips. 

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Femenia is your gateway to the mountains!

If Cap de Formentor is your introduction to the Tramuntana mountains, then Coll de Femenia is the gateway. A short ride North East from Alcudia brings you around Pollenca Old Town and onto the MA10. This beautiful road will lead you all the way down to Andratx on the Western coast, but for the purposes of this route it will see you up Femenia, past Lluc and drop you off at the top of Sa Batalla. So clip in, head towards the sun, and if you are feeling spicy go for the KOM!

What to expect

The first 5km are identical the start of the Cap Formentor route, but that's where the similarities end. An early detour from Pollenca bay takes the backroads to the old town, and a long straight section of the MA10 soon winds you up to Coll de Femenia. By the time you reach the top you'll have most of the days climbing done, so a regroup at infamous Petrol station cafe will be just what the coach ordered. From there it's a fast and fun descent down Sa Batalla into Caimari,  before riding the rolling flats back to Pollenca Old Town. The winds normally come from East, so expect the sun on your back and wind on your face as you cruise back to the Clubhouse in Alcudia.

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Femenia Highlights

The Tramuntana is a formidable and exciting mountain range to navigate, but coming from Alcudia we're lucky enough to have the MA10 road to take us right form the North East to the far South West. The Femenia route is the perfect climbing sandwich - a slow & steady climb to start, a fast & fun winding descent to finish, and a solid cafe stop in the middle. It's the dream. Add in some rolling flats to get home, a see breeze, and a cheeky spot of lunch in Pollenca Old Town... and you've got a pretty fantastic day in the saddle.  But make the most of the pleasantries today, as once you start to venture further west the climbs get longer and noticeably harder!

View from high up, showing the road around Pollenca bay

Cruising along the

Back road to Pollenca

This is where the magic happens - an early start or sunset finish in ether direction will give you amazing sunsets against palm tree silhouettes. Trust us - cruising from Pollenca Bay to Pollenca Old Town is something to be savoured.

Flat road form Pollenca Old town to the base of the Femenia Climb

Calm before the climb

Pan flat to the climb

A quick circle anti-clockwise around Old-Town Pollenca and you'll find yourselves on a long and perfectly flat road heading West. With the Tramuntana mountains on either side, you can enjoy the silky smooth road surface and seasonal forests. But be ready, because at the end of this road is where the mountains meet and the climb up Coll de Femenia begins.

Screenshot of the Femenia KOM Table on Strava

You know you want it

The Coll de Femenia KOM

Registered as a Category 2 Climb, you'll be treated to a comfortable average of 5.5%  incline over 7.5km, with some very smooth tarmac. See the Femenia Strava segment here & add it to your favourites - you'll be following in the footsteps of some absolute legends, like Ben Zwiehoff, Harry Sweeny and Mavi Garcia.​

The first 2 hairpins at 1km & 1.8km are the steepest sections (12% & 13.5% turns), so make sure you hit these hard & to not lose any speed. Then hold it steady up til 3km where there is another small (but straight) 13% kicker.

But the key to smashing your mates PB's lies in the small flats at 4.5km & 6.5km. Most people insticitvely ease off on lower gradients, so show 'em who's boss by pushing harder than ever! Give it 80% at the first & 90% at the second - then it's full gas to the finish whoop whoop!!! Just don't stop until you've hit the sign!

Photo of the view back from the Femenia climb towards Alcudia

Look back for

Views over Pollenca

Half way up the 7.5km of Femenia, make sure you lookback over your shoulder to an amazing view over the valley and towards the bay in the background.. You'll be able to see the whole section of the MA10 that you've just ridden from Pollenca Old Town, and the 14th century Santari de la Mare sat on top of the loaf mountain. 

Rolling flat road along the top of the mountain

Cruise Along

Rolling Mountain Top

You'll know when you hit the top of the climb because there is a large unmissable 'Coll de Femenia' sign on the right, and the road immediately drops down ahead. This wonderful little descent leads you into 5km of rolling flats, that take you south along the mountain tops towards your pit stop at the Repsol petrol station.

View of the mountains, highlighting the Puig Major radar station on the horizon

Get a glimpse of

Puig Major

Somewhat of a teaser as to what's to come, today you can get your first glimpse of the radar dome on the top of Puig Major. As you work along the rolling flats, look to the horizon on your right and you can't miss it. The famous dome is well worth a note, because Sa Calobra falls down the right hand side and Soller just passed it on the left. 

Petrol Station 'Repsol Cafe'

This is another cafe great cafe that everyone knows. It's not going to win an award for the best views, menu, or even decor... But it does have exactly what you need, and in exactly the right place. Massive fridges filled with cold drinks, snacks, water, locally produced Mega Raw Bars, cake and coffee - all served up with indoor and outdoor seating. In the winter they even have a fire going in the covered area. Everyone stops here, and we mean everyone!

  • Snacks at the cafe
  • Riccardo having a thick hot chocolate at the cafe
View looking South over the island

Descending Sa Batalla

Now you've refuelled and rested the legs, you've definitely earnt some down hill fun. Turn left as you leave the cafe and you'll immediately start rolling down Sa Batalla. Look right at this first section for amazing views south across the island, then straight through the causeway and into the hairpins.

Overhead view of the hairpins

Hold on tight

Hairpins

No more than 1km from the cafe you'll hit the first of 6 hairpins. Remember to stay in lane and if in doubt slow down on the corners because the drop are very high! As you emerge from the last turn you'll get another few km or almost straight and extremely fast downhill into Caimari. Tuck tight and hold tighter because there are speed rumbles before you enter the village.

Rolling flats home

Fast & fun

Rolling flats home

Now you'll turn left / East and make your way home. With some good miles in the legs you may want to cruise along the flat winding roads back to Alcudia, or get organised and chaingang the whole way at 50kph! However you do it, this is a lovely countryside route with only a few turning points.

Best photo spots

Femenia doesn't have the winding go-kart loops of Sacalobra, but it does give you a great pool of Coll photos and the epic descent of Sa Batalla. If you're going to get 2 team photos on this route, these are the ones you need:

➊  Femenia is one of these climbs where the peak really is 'the peak'. There's a reasonable incline right up to the sign, and then it immediately switches to a speedy downhill descent. This perfect positioning on the rounded top of the climb can give you a great photo with the ground rolling away out-of-site. Get the squad and the sign in there too, and you'll have a great addition to the Strava album.

➋  The second-to-last corner of Sa Batalla descent has a small lay by where you can stop, and from there you can see the switchbacks and steep incline of the climbing road above. Plonk yourself on the apex and get your photographer buddy to crouch down low for an epic shot.

Coffee Stop

Every one knows and stops at the petrol station cafe at the top of Sa Batalla, so here we're going to flag the equally famous Sa Ruta Verda in Caimari.  This staple of the Mallorcan cycling  community has been led by Lennart since 2015, but as of 2023 new management Emma & Javier have picked up the reigns.

Check out their instagram here for the latest, they'll be open again from March 2024!​

New owners at Sa Ruta Verda cafe

Tips & Advice

#1: Are 'Port de Pollenca' & 'Pollenca' the same place?

Nope these are two different towns. You'll see the same arrangement with other towns including Alcudia, where the 'old towns' tend to be inland, and the 'ports' are the newer settlements built on the coast.

#2: The flats after Sa Batalla can get HOT ...

Whilst January to May is almost perfect cycling weather, once you edge into June and July things can get a little spicy. Imagine a real world version of Watopia desert flats! If you're riding this route on a hot afternoon please make sure you have plenty of water before you hit the long flats back to Pollenca (from the bottom of Sa Batalla). It's only 20km, but with peak heat it can be very easy to overheat!

#3: Use the bathrooms at Petrol Station / Repsol Cafe

Good bathrooms can be hard to find, so let us save you some work and direct you to this one. It must have been refurbed recently as the black and white marble floors, mirrors and cubicles are absolutely spotless.

#4: Petrol Station / Repsol Cafe has a tool bench

Yup you read it here first. There is a bike mechanics tool bench at the front of the Petrol Station / Repsol cafe! It's just to the left of the front door, right underneath a window. To be honest we can barely believe it took us 20 or so visits before we spotted it, but it's there and it has some of the handy tools you definitely would not have in your saddle back (like a Shimano cassette tool and chain whip).

#5: You have several solid option for lunch

The petrol station is. agreat spot, but just down Sa Batalla into Caimari, and later in Polllenca Old Town there are some great options for a longer sit down and something to eat:

Sa Ruta Verda, Caimari: Website | Instagram | Facebook | Google Maps

Es Parc, Selva: Website | Google Maps

Pollenca Main SquareGoogle Maps

  • Ricc from Watford

    “I saved a goat there (Femenia) once!"

  • Mike from Wales

    "Sa Rutaverda is such a great place to stop, and right at the bottom of Sa Battalla. You'll have to get down there when they open again in the spring!"

  • Chap from Leeds

    “Descending Sa Batalla at sunset is THE SH!ZZ!”

  • Sarah from Scotland

    “We nearly ran out of water on the way back, it was SO hot. Thank god for coke & pamboli at Pollenca Old Town!... YESS!”

A quick note on the writing process

Everything we review, and the tips we provide are learnt through experience (often found the hard way)! We are not sponsored and we aren't briefed. We write about the things that help us, and we hope that they help you too!