Beachouse Ibiza Is Back for 2026: Astro Travel, Written in the Stars
From full moon gatherings to a once-in-a-century solar eclipse on the southern shore, Beachouse has built its most ambitious season yet around the rhythms of the sky.
Beachouse Ibiza, 2026 by Georg Roske.
There is a particular kind of return that feels less like going back and more like picking up exactly where you left off. Beachouse Ibiza has always understood this. The beloved Platja d'en Bossa institution, which we first covered last year when it redefined what a beach and wellness experience in Ibiza could look like, opened its 2026 season on 24 April with a calendar that is, by any measure, its most considered to date.
Where previous seasons were shaped by the sun and sea alone, this year Beachouse has looked further up: an entire programme built around celestial events, from monthly full moon gatherings to a solar eclipse on the southern coast of the Mediterranean that will not happen again for a century.
The season runs through October from Beachouse's home on Platja d'en Bossa, where the format remains as it has always been: beach yoga at dawn, long lunches built on Ibizan wood-chargrilled produce, candlelit evenings, shared tables and music that moves through the afternoon a perfect Ibiza day-to night venue.
A Season Written in the Sky & ASTRO TRAVEL
The celestial thread is not incidental. In a year when astro-travel has emerged as one of the most compelling reasons to build a trip around a specific date, Beachouse has arrived at the idea with characteristic unhurriedness. The season does not chase a trend so much as find the natural meeting point between the island's existing spirit and the sky above it.
At the centre of the calendar is LUNAR, a series of five full moon gatherings that have quietly become one of Ibiza's most sought-after tickets. Once a month, as the full moon rises over the island's southern coast, guests gather at shared tables beneath the open sky for an evening of collective dining and music rooted in the Balearic spirit of transformation and connection. This year's five moons run from the Blue Moon on 30 May through the Strawberry Moon (30 June), Buck Moon (29 July), Sturgeon Moon (28 August) and the season's final Corn Moon on 26 September. Each gathering pairs Beachouse's signature menu with performances from artists including Deer Jade, Avangart Tabldot and Parallelle, the music woven through the evening rather than placed on top of it.
SOLAR — 12 August 2026
The date that will define the season is 12 August. At approximately 7:40pm, a total solar eclipse will cross the Mediterranean, briefly pulling darkness over the shore as stars appear above in the middle of the evening. It coincides with the peak of the Perseid meteor shower, when the night sky above Ibiza is already performing. Beachouse presents SOLAR as one of the island's most beautiful settings in which to witness an event that will not recur for a century, with full programming details to follow. For those planning ahead, this one warrants building the trip around the date rather than the other way around.
The Rhythm of a Beachouse Day
The daily structure at Beachouse is the product. Beach yoga opens each morning at 9:30am, followed by strong coffee, fresh fruit and breakfasts with uninterrupted ocean views. As the day settles into itself, guests move to loungers beneath palms, lunches arrive built around locally sourced produce chargrilled over Ibizan wood, marinated and fermented with the kind of care that elevates simplicity rather than complicates it. A curated programme of DJs soundtracks the afternoon from noon to close, the Balearic spirit informing the selection: nothing that pulls you away from the present.
Moonlit Dinners return every Friday and Saturday from 5 June at 7pm, with long shared tables, candlelight and the sea at night providing the setting. Fridays are hosted by A Balearic Life with resident Be.lanuit; Saturdays belong to Kiriku, whose live looping sessions have become a fixture of the Beachouse weekend. BOHO, the iconic Thursday gathering, runs from 6pm to midnight throughout the season. Little Beachouse, the daily kids' club from 12pm to 4pm, offers beach yoga, games, crafts and creative workshops, giving families the luxury of an afternoon at their own pace.
The Season Opening event on 24 April begins at 6pm on the shore as the sun goes down, soundtracked by Angelos, Valentin Huedo and Yamil, three artists who between them define the sound of a Balearic summer. It is the best possible way to begin.
Sofija Mehta, the founder of Island Hospitality, which operates Beachouse, describes it simply: "We didn't build Beachouse to be a destination. We built it to be a feeling." In 2026, that feeling has a celestial backdrop
Where is Beachouse Ibiza? Beachouse is located on Platja d'en Bossa, Sant Jordi de ses Salines, Ibiza, on the island's southern coast.
What is the LUNAR event at Beachouse Ibiza? LUNAR is a series of five full moon gatherings at Beachouse across the 2026 season, taking place on 30 May, 30 June, 29 July, 28 August and 26 September, combining shared dining and DJ performances beneath the open sky.
What is the SOLAR event at Beachouse Ibiza? SOLAR is a special Beachouse gathering on 12 August 2026 to mark a total solar eclipse crossing the Mediterranean at approximately 7:40pm, coinciding with the peak of the Perseid meteor shower.
What time is beach yoga at Beachouse Ibiza? Beach yoga takes place daily at 9:30am throughout the Beachouse season.
How long is the Beachouse Ibiza season? The 2026 Beachouse season runs from 23 April through to October.
Read our Chilled Ibiza feature here
Photography, Beachouse Ibiza by Georg Roske.