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Best UK Seaside Towns to Visit This Summer

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From the colourful harbour of St Ives to the gothic drama of Whitby, the UK’s seaside towns are among the most rewarding places you can visit. Here are our favourites for a brilliant summer break.

There’s something about a British seaside town that never gets old. The smell of fish and chips, the sound of seagulls, the feel of sand between your toes — it all combines into something uniquely wonderful that no foreign beach holiday can quite replicate. And the great thing about the UK’s seaside towns is that they’re all so different from each other. Dramatic and gothic, bright and vibrant, artistic and bohemian, wild and remote — there’s a seaside town here to suit every mood and every taste.

Here are some of our absolute favourites for a brilliant summer visit — with ideas for where to stay nearby so you can make a proper break of it.


🌊 St Ives — Cornwall

St Ives Cornwall harbour

St Ives is quite simply one of the most beautiful towns in England — and on a sunny summer day it genuinely looks like somewhere in the Mediterranean. The harbour, the turquoise water, the whitewashed cottages climbing up the hillside, the narrow winding streets packed with art galleries, independent shops and brilliant restaurants — St Ives has an atmosphere unlike anywhere else in the country.

The town has been drawing artists since the 19th century and has a wonderful creative energy. The Tate St Ives gallery is one of the best art galleries outside London. The beaches — Porthminster, Porthmeor and Porthgwidden — are all beautiful and each has its own distinct character. Go early in the morning before the day trippers arrive and you’ll have the harbour almost to yourself.

Best for: Couples, art lovers, foodies, beach holidays

Don’t miss: Breakfast at Porthminster Beach Café, a walk to the Island, the Tate St Ives, the Barbara Hepworth Sculpture Garden

Explore Cornwall

Where to Stay Near St Ives

St Ives itself has some wonderful small hotels and B&Bs, but if you want more space the surrounding area has brilliant self-catering cottages. Cornwall Hideaways and Sykes Cottages both have excellent properties in and around St Ives, from harbourside apartments to farmhouses in the surrounding countryside.

Search Cornwall Hideaways    Search Sykes — Cornwall

🦇 Whitby — North Yorkshire

Whitby harbour and abbey North Yorkshire

There is nowhere quite like Whitby. Perched dramatically on the cliffs of the North Yorkshire coast with a ruined gothic abbey silhouetted against the sky, a working fishing harbour, narrow streets of independent shops and some of the best fish and chips in England — Whitby has a character that is completely its own. It’s moody, atmospheric, historic and endlessly fascinating.

The town is famously the inspiration for Bram Stoker’s Dracula — the Count arrives in Whitby harbour in the form of a black dog, and the 199 steps leading up to the abbey feature prominently in the novel. Every autumn thousands of goths descend on the town for the Whitby Goth Weekend — one of the most extraordinary events in the British calendar. But you don’t need to be a Dracula fan to love Whitby — the harbour, the abbey, the beaches and the food are reason enough to visit.

Best for: History lovers, foodies, walkers, anyone who loves dramatic scenery

Don’t miss: Whitby Abbey, the 199 steps, fish and chips on the harbourside, a walk to Robin Hood’s Bay, the Captain Cook Memorial Museum

Explore North Yorkshire

Where to Stay Near Whitby

Whitby has excellent accommodation options from cosy harbourside B&Bs to holiday cottages in the surrounding North York Moors. Sykes Cottages has a brilliant range of properties in and around the town — staying in a cottage within walking distance of the harbour is a wonderful experience.

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🎡 Brighton — East Sussex

Brighton beach and pier East Sussex

Brighton is the UK’s most vibrant seaside city — and it earns that description easily. It’s colourful, creative, welcoming and endlessly entertaining. The famous pier, the extraordinary Royal Pavilion, the bohemian lanes packed with vintage shops and independent restaurants, the pebble beach buzzing with life on a summer weekend — Brighton has an energy that’s completely addictive.

It’s also one of the most easily accessible seaside destinations from London — just 50 minutes on the train — which makes it perfect for a spontaneous summer day trip or a weekend break. The food scene is exceptional, the nightlife is legendary and the range of things to see and do is genuinely impressive. Brighton is also one of the most welcoming and inclusive cities in the UK.

Best for: City breakers, day trippers from London, foodies, nightlife, shopping

Don’t miss: The Royal Pavilion, Brighton Pier, The Lanes, the i360 observation tower, a swim in the sea

Explore East Sussex

Where to Stay in Brighton

Brighton has a fantastic range of hotels from boutique seafront properties to well-known chains. LateRooms is a great place to find and compare Brighton hotels — particularly useful if you’re booking close to your travel date.

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🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 Tenby — Pembrokeshire, Wales

Tenby harbour Pembrokeshire Wales

Tenby is one of those places that makes you catch your breath the first time you see it. The colourful Georgian townhouses ranged around the harbour, the medieval town walls, the beautiful beaches on either side — North Beach and South Beach — and the dramatic rocky headland all combine into a picture-postcard scene that is genuinely one of the most beautiful in Wales.

The town is compact and wonderfully walkable, with excellent restaurants, independent shops and a brilliant atmosphere in summer. Caldey Island — a real, inhabited monastery island — is just a short boat trip away and makes a fascinating half-day excursion. The surrounding Pembrokeshire Coast National Park is one of the most spectacular stretches of coastline in Britain.

Best for: Families, beach holidays, walkers, anyone who loves beautiful scenery

Don’t miss: South Beach, the town walls, Caldey Island boat trip, the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, a pasty from one of the harbour cafés

Explore South Wales

Where to Stay Near Tenby

Pembrokeshire has some brilliant holiday cottages — rural and coastal — and the Blue Lagoon waterpark at the Bluestone Resort is a great option for families. Sykes and HolidayCottages.co.uk both have excellent Pembrokeshire properties.

Search Cottages — Pembrokeshire

🎨 Whitstable — Kent

Whitstable harbour Kent

Whitstable is the seaside town that Londoners discovered and fell in love with — and it’s easy to see why. Just an hour from the capital by train, it has all the ingredients of the perfect British seaside town: a working harbour, brilliantly fresh oysters and seafood, colourful beach huts, independent shops and a wonderfully relaxed atmosphere.

The oysters are the thing here — Whitstable native oysters are among the finest in the world and the annual Whitstable Oyster Festival in July is a genuine highlight of the summer calendar. But even if oysters aren’t your thing, the town has plenty to offer — excellent restaurants, a beautiful shingle beach, the harbour with its fishing boats and a lovely easy pace of life that makes it perfect for a weekend of proper switching off.

Best for: Foodies, couples, day trips from London, relaxing weekends

Don’t miss: Fresh oysters at the harbour, the beach huts, the Whitstable Oyster Festival (July), a walk along the beach to Tankerton

Explore Kent

Where to Stay Near Whitstable

Whitstable has some lovely small hotels and B&Bs — book early as they fill up fast in summer. The surrounding Kent coast also has excellent self-catering cottages in places like Herne Bay, Faversham and the Isle of Thanet.

Search Whitstable Hotels

🦞 Padstow — Cornwall

Padstow harbour Cornwall

Padstow is Cornwall’s foodie capital — and has been ever since Rick Stein opened his famous seafood restaurant here in the 1970s. The harbour is beautiful, the surrounding beaches (Rock, Harlyn Bay, Constantine Bay) are spectacular and the food scene is genuinely world-class. It’s a small town that punches well above its weight.

The Camel Trail — a brilliant cycling and walking route that follows the estuary to Wadebridge and on to Bodmin — is one of the most enjoyable traffic-free routes in England. The ferry across to Rock is a lovely short trip with great views back over the harbour. In summer Padstow is very busy, so consider visiting in May, June or September for a quieter experience without missing the best of the weather.

Best for: Foodies, cyclists, families, beach lovers

Don’t miss: The Camel Trail, the ferry to Rock, Harlyn Bay beach, a lobster at one of the harbour restaurants, the Prideaux Place estate

Explore Cornwall

Where to Stay Near Padstow

The Padstow area has some of Cornwall’s finest holiday cottages — particularly around Rock, Trebetherick and Constantine Bay. Cornwall Hideaways specialise in this area and have some exceptional properties.

Search Cornwall Hideaways

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 St Andrews — Fife, Scotland

St Andrews Fife Scotland

St Andrews is not your typical seaside town — but it’s one of the most fascinating and beautiful places on the British coast. Home to Scotland’s oldest university (and famously where Prince William and Catherine met), the ruins of a magnificent cathedral, a stunning castle perched on the clifftops and the most famous golf course in the world — the Old Course — St Andrews has a unique and rather magical atmosphere.

The East Sands and West Sands beaches are both wonderful — West Sands was famously the setting for the opening sequence of Chariots of Fire. The town itself is beautiful, compact and full of excellent cafés, restaurants and independent shops. A brilliant and slightly unexpected seaside destination that most people love far more than they expected.

Best for: Golf enthusiasts, history lovers, couples, anyone who loves beautiful towns

Don’t miss: The Old Course, St Andrews Cathedral ruins, the castle, a walk on West Sands beach, the British Golf Museum

Explore Lothian & Fife Scotland

Where to Stay Near St Andrews

St Andrews has a good range of hotels and there are excellent cottages in the surrounding Fife countryside. LateRooms is a good starting point for comparing hotels in the town.

Search St Andrews Hotels

🌊 Lyme Regis — Dorset

Lyme Regis Dorset Jurassic Coast

Lyme Regis sits right on the Jurassic Coast — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — and has been one of England’s most beloved seaside towns for centuries. Jane Austen visited and set part of Persuasion here, and the famous Cobb harbour wall is one of the most iconic views on the English coast.

What makes Lyme Regis really special is fossil hunting. The cliffs along this stretch of the Jurassic Coast are regularly giving up extraordinary fossils — ammonites, belemnites and occasionally much rarer finds. It’s something the whole family can do together on the beach with no equipment needed, and it’s genuinely exciting when you find something. The town itself is lovely — good restaurants, pretty streets and a beautiful beach.

Best for: Families, fossil hunters, history lovers, walkers

Don’t miss: Fossil hunting on the beach, the Cobb harbour wall, the Jurassic Coast, the Lyme Regis Museum, a walk along the coastal path

Explore Dorset

Where to Stay Near Lyme Regis

The Dorset and East Devon coast has some brilliant holiday cottages — particularly good for families given the fossil hunting and beaches. Sykes and HolidayCottages.co.uk both have excellent properties in the area.

Search Dorset Cottages — Sykes

Tips for the Perfect UK Seaside Break

Go mid-week if you can — UK seaside towns get very busy on summer weekends, especially in school holiday periods. Visiting mid-week means quieter beaches, shorter queues at restaurants and a much more relaxed experience overall.

Book accommodation early — the most popular seaside towns fill up months in advance in summer. If you have specific dates in mind, get your cottage or hotel booked as soon as possible.

Pack for all weathers — even in summer the British coast can surprise you. A light waterproof and an extra layer are always worth having in your bag, even on a forecast-sunny day.

Explore beyond the main town — the best discoveries are often just a mile or two along the coast from the most popular spots. A coastal walk from Whitby to Robin Hood’s Bay, from St Ives to Zennor or from Tenby along the Pembrokeshire Coast Path will reward you with views and experiences you’ll never forget.

Support independent businesses — UK seaside towns have brilliant independent restaurants, cafés, shops and galleries. Choosing them over chains keeps these communities thriving and makes for a much more authentic and memorable experience.


Plan your seaside break:   Holiday Cottages  •  Hotels  •  Last Minute Breaks  •  Holiday Parks

More destination guides:   Back to the Blog  •  Cornwall  •  North Yorkshire  •  South Wales

Categories: Destination guides  •  Published: 16/06/2026
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