Azure Residences · Palm Jumeirah
A Private Balearic Island, Transplanted
Tagomago takes its name from a rugged, privately-owned island sitting a few nautical miles off the north-east coast of Ibiza — the kind of place where superyachts moor up for sundown and mobile-phone signal ends at the water's edge. The Dubai iteration, opened by the team behind Twiggy and Kyma at RIKAS Hospitality, is a remarkably faithful translation: lush green planting, sun-bleached timber, terracotta pots, and the kind of unhurried barefoot luxury that has nothing to prove. On the trunk of Palm Jumeirah, just below Azure Residence, it faces directly east across the Gulf toward the Burj Al Arab. The light at 5pm here is genuinely Ibizan.
The footprint is generous without feeling over-scaled. 120 sunbeds line the sand in tight pairs shaded by cream macrame parasols and woven-reed umbrellas. Behind them, an elevated timber terrace holds the main restaurant — pergola-draped, overlooking the pool, with dining for around 200 covers. The chiringuito — a bar-and-tapas counter that is pure Spanish coastal archetype — sits between the two, open to the breeze on three sides and built from salt-whitened wood. In 2024 the club added an adults-only infinity pool, a separate body of water reserved for 21+ guests that runs cooler music and more serious cocktails as afternoon bleeds into evening.
The food is unapologetically, fully Spanish — and this matters, because Dubai has very few beach clubs that genuinely commit to a single cuisine rather than a pan-Mediterranean mood-board. Tagomago's kitchen runs paella valenciana cooked to order, jamón ibérico sliced table-side from the leg, tortilla española rich with smoked paprika, gambas al ajillo in terracotta cazuelas, and a whole grilled sea bass (lubina a la sal) that emerges encased in a salt crust and is cracked open at the table. The wine list is almost entirely Spanish — Albariño, Verdejo, Rueda, Rioja — and the sangria is made fresh in jugs, the way it should be.
Tagomago works for several versions of a Dubai beach day: a long Spanish lunch with friends that drifts into afternoon cocktails, a more intimate couple's afternoon on the adults-only pool deck, or — on Fridays and Saturdays — an elevated sunset-into-night session as the DJ tempo picks up and the fairy lights come on in the pergola. It is not a heavy party venue. It is a Mediterranean-chic, music-led, food-led beach club. Compare all Dubai beach clubs →