Cala Codolar is a cove located along the southern coast of Ibiza, in the municipality of Sant Josep de sa Talaia
It is a small cove and is considered one of the most beautiful bays on the southwest coast of the Balearic Island.
It is oriented southwest and falls within the coast for a length of about 250 meters.
It is surrounded by steep rocky ridges, which accommodate on the right side a small urban settlement and on the left side a pine forest that descends almost to the sea.
The seabed consists of sand and seaweed and is good tenors, and its depth varies from 11 meters present at the entrance to the bay to 6 meters in the center of the cove to 3 meters deep, about 100 meters from the beach. These details make the bay a suitable place for boaters to anchor. The winds affecting the bay are westerly, northwesterly, and southwesterly, and anchoring near the beach almost always provides good protection.
Cala Codolar beach has fine, light-colored sand and is located in the central-eastern part of the inlet.
It has a fairly shallow slope (at almost 40 meters from the shore the water depth does not exceed one and a half meters)
Access is via a path.
Upon reaching the site it is possible to rent various equipment (sunbeds, umbrellas) and find a small kiosk (only in the high season months).
The beach is also easily accessible by land.
You can decide to arrive by car -leaving the car in a nearby free parking lot-, or by bus (the bus stop is about 100 meters from the trailhead).
Not far from Cala Codolar is Cala Llentia, which is more rugged and more difficult to reach by land.
Cala Codolar is located about seven kilometers from the center of Sant Josep de sa Talaia, in the region south of Evissa.
The area is famous for evidence of the Punic, Roman, and Phoenician civilizations that inhabited it and for churches from the medieval period.