mayor is warning boozy British tourists there will be a “zero tolerance” policy for drunken behaviour. Juan Antonio Amengual, who is the head of Calvia - a district which includes Magaluf - said it’s not that the city doesn’t want tourists, but they just want tourists to have the same respect for Majorca that they do for their home countries. He said: Of course, all tourists are welcome to Majorca, but we are asking them to behave like they do at home.
Take care of our people and the environment.” Magaluf is joining other Balearic locations in cracking down on the low quality tourism that has plagued it for decades, earning it the monike or the high volume of drunken revellers it attracts. A street drinking ban is in place, and new restrictions on the sale of alcohol have come into effect too.
The reports that undercover police have been deployed to Magaluf’s party strip to ping people skirting the ban. Amengual said: 'In your country, you cannot urinate in the street, walk around with alcohol, drinking as if there is no tomorrow or being half naked, and the message is that it's the same here. Majorca and Ibiza toughened up regional government restrictions last month as an extension of the 2020 decree introduced to rein in unruly tourist behaviour.
The new rules carry fines of up to £1,300 for street drinking and necessitate shops selling alcohol to shut during the night. Under the legislation, anti-social street drinkers could face a fine between €500 (£430) .
