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9 of the best affordable villas in Spain

9 of the best affordable villas in Spain

Times5 hours ago
With glorious weather, knockout beaches, and world-beating food and drink it's no surprise that Spain ranks high for most Brits. The Balearic island of Mallorca or the beaches of the Costa Brava are perfect not only for seaside lazing but more active pursuits such as windsurfing, while Galicia in the northwest has forested valleys for hikes and standout sites such as the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, visited by those walking the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage trail. The southernmost region of Andalusia has a bit of everything, encompassing the sand and sea of Marbella and Malaga, the heritage of Granada and its Alhambra Palace, and the culture and vibrancy of Seville.
In each area, you'll find villas with sleek contemporary furnishings and villas retaining traditional rustic styling, ranging in size to suit both couples and larger gatherings. Best of all, such self-catering accommodation can be far cheaper than a hotel. Ranging from as little as £30 to just over £100 per person per night, depending on when you travel, here's our selection of top-quality villas in Spain at the more affordable end of the scale.
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POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 7
In six acres of land, bracketed by wheat fields and olive groves, this is a pad perfect for those who value privacy. There are traditional touches of the region throughout — a terracotta-tiled roof, cool, whitewashed walls inside — and plenty of space for relaxing in the evenings with a huge lawn and built-in barbecue. There's a good-sized pool with an outdoor shower, and it's less than an hour's drive to the airport, making it a top pick for families; you'll also find a cot and a high chair inside.
• Best holiday villas in Spain
POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 10
This striking villa, with its floor-to-ceiling glass, infinity pool and floating staircase, combines contemporary style with good old-fashioned wow factor in its location, surrounded as it is by the Tramuntana mountains and with views of the Bay of Pollensa. Villa Magnolia is filled with natural light and has comfortable sofas, a good-sized kitchen, five bedrooms (two en suite) and a dining room that can seat ten. Outside, there's a barbecue area and covered terrace, and the characterful cobbled town of Pollensa is just over two miles away. Mallorca offers many opportunities for cycling, horse-riding and water sports, making this property an excellent choice for active families.
• Best villas in Mallorca
POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 6
One of a handful of three-bedroom properties in a small complex with a 24-hour reception, this whitewashed villa is simply styled but ticks all the important boxes, with its private saltwater pool and superb location just 500 metres from the white sand of Platja del Riuet. Patio doors lead onto a poolside terrace for alfresco drinks and meals, and there's a lawned garden for the kids to muck about in. You also have access to a larger communal pool if you wish. The medieval hamlet of Sant Marti d'Empuries is nearby, and there's a shuttle service to/from Girona-Costa Brava airport (about 45 miles away) for a fee.
• Discover our full guide to Spain
POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 8
You'll get a real taste of Spanish living in this six-bedroom villa in the traditional town of Jimena de la Frontera in Cadiz. Laps in the private pool come with a view of the Ronda mountains and there are Moorish influences throughout. Best of all, there's plenty of room for everyone to stretch out; it's built over three levels and there's a giant entertainment space in the basement complete with an air hockey table and a projector for film nights.
POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 16
Casa do Conde Villa is a landmark in the Galician town of O Grove, originally constructed by a local duchess and with something castle-like about its stone-built exterior. Inside, there's lots of style in the sweeping polished staircase and simply furnished bedrooms (five doubles and three twins, all en suite), while the living areas open to a lovely covered outdoor terrace for languid lunches or cocktails before dinner. The grounds feature lawns, palm trees and a swimming pool, while the district of O Grove is renowned for its beaches and pretty sea views. The town has all the restaurants and shops you'll need, which means a car is a bonus rather than a necessity. Outside, pretty grounds encircle the house with gently sloping lawns, graceful palm trees and the colourful blooms of flowering plants to provide a delightful oasis for outdoor living. Guests could be forgiven for forgetting this is a town house, yet a 200m stroll reveals the nearest sandy beaches and the first of the many shops and restaurants. This is a great choice for family groups or friends who want comfort and convenience.
POOL | Sleeps 6
This contemporary Galician villa offers a lot of slickness for an affordable price tag. There's a cleverly positioned swimming pool wrapping around a corner of the property, and a handful of atmospheric terraces, including one on the top floor that makes the very best of the coastal vantage point above the sandy bay at Aldan. The star factor? That's the floor-to-ceiling windows surrounding the main living space, which bring in bags of natural light. Sleeping six, with two doubles (one en suite) and a twin, the property is a good choice for families with older children, but note that it's built over several levels and is unsuitable for toddlers. The village of Hio, which has a bar offering traditional Galician food, is a very short walk away, while the beach at Praia de Vilariño is under a mile away. As for excursions, it's well worth considering a boat trip to the Cies Islands, an archipelago nature reserve with wonderfully clear waters.
POOL | Sleeps 2
This beautiful one-bedroom cottage has all the character and charm you could wish for, with stripped stone walls, wood-panelled ceilings and a large bedroom beneath a steep-pitched roof. Outside are lovely lawns, a swimming pool, stone table and benches for dining beneath the shade of a fir tree, and stirring views across forested hills and green meadows. It's quite a spot for a cocktail or a coffee. The owner is a carpenter who has made the very most of his talents in renovating the property, retaining its traditional features while bringing modern comforts to the open-plan kitchen and living area. Sitting on the edge of the hamlet of Moreira, the cottage is a 15-minute drive from a sheltered beach, restaurant and cafés on the Rias Baixas coastline, while the village of O Viso is less than two miles away, with its excellent bakery, grocery and café. This is the place for a couple who want to get away from it all and spend some quality time in a breathtaking hillside setting.
POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 28
This is a big-hitter for that special celebratory get together in sunny climes — a vast manor house containing 14 en suite double bedrooms just 25 minutes by car from Barcelona airport. Masia Victoria dates to the 15th century and has been sensitively renovated to preserve stone arches and wood-beamed ceilings while incorporating air-conditioning, an infinity swimming pool and other modern comforts and luxuries. There's a sizeable dining room and a range of choices for relaxing with a cocktail, among them a sprawling patio and various terraces. If you fancy venturing out, the little town of Sant Pere de Ribes is a stone's throw away, and Sitges and the coast close by too.
POOL | FAMILY-FRIENDLY | Sleeps 10
With space for eight adults and a pair of kids, this stone-built five-bedroom villa has all you'd want from a traditional finca — and, with panoramic rustic views and well-kept grassy grounds surrounded by fruit trees, its location scores points too. Despite its out of the way position, the villa is a walk from some high-class dining at the restaurant of the Son Brull hotel, while the towns of Pollensa and Puerto Pollensa are a short drive away. There's plenty to keep the children entertained, with a private pool and table-tennis table, and sporty grown-ups can head for a round of golf at Pollensa Golf Club. This is the perfect spot for a relaxing break with family or friends that won't cost the earth.
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• Best all-inclusive hotels in Spain• Best beaches in Spain
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TSA ends shoes-off policy for US airport security screening
TSA ends shoes-off policy for US airport security screening

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time25 minutes ago

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TSA ends shoes-off policy for US airport security screening

ARLINGTON, Virginia, July 8 (Reuters) - The Transportation Security Administration will no longer require travelers to remove their shoes during security checks at U.S. airports, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced on Tuesday, ending an unpopular policy. TSA had been requiring most U.S. air travelers to remove their shoes during screening for nearly two decades. The new policy began nationwide implementation on Tuesday. "We expect this change will drastically decrease passenger wait times at our TSA checkpoints, leading to a more pleasant and efficient passenger experience," Noem said in a statement. TSA began making passengers remove their shoes to screen for explosives in August 2006. The policy was implemented nearly five years after the 9/11 attacks and when Richard Reid, who is known as the "shoe bomber," used matches in an attempt to ignite explosive devices hidden in his shoes on a flight from Paris to Miami. More than 1 billion passengers flew through U.S. airports in fiscal 2023 on over 10 million flights, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. "We are very confident that we can continue to provide hospitality to folks and for American travelers and for those visiting our country, while maintaining the same standard of security for passengers and for our homeland," Noem said at a news conference at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia. Noem highlighted advancements in security technology and processes as reasons for the removal of the policy but noted that some individuals may be asked to remove their shoes "if we think there's additional layers of screening that is necessary." In 2013, TSA launched the PreCheck Trusted Traveler program, whose members are not required to remove their shoes. Children under 12 and adults 75 years or older are exempt from removing their shoes. Noem did not think the new policy would degrade the PreCheck program. "I believe PreCheck will still be something that many travelers will want to utilize, because when they have TSA PreCheck, they won't have to take off their belt or their coat or remove things out of their bag such as laptops or compliant liquids," Noem said. In a statement, the Department of Homeland Security said other aspects of TSA's security process would remain unchanged for most other travelers. "For example, passengers (must) still clear identity verification, Secure Flight vetting, and other processes," the department said.

Revealed: the UK's 50 best beaches for 2025
Revealed: the UK's 50 best beaches for 2025

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Revealed: the UK's 50 best beaches for 2025

Welcome to the 17th edition of The Times and Sunday Times Best Beaches Guide, bringing you surf, sand and sunshine since 2008. This year I went clockwise, visiting 756 beaches and 51 resorts over the course of a 4,858-mile circumnavigation of British and Northern Irish shores. Memorable moments include the sun emerging from the Irish Sea on the Antrim coast; cooking my breakfast above the exquisite, and empty, Achininver beach in the Highlands; the mesmerising blue of the Atlantic at Pedn Vounder in Cornwall; the moon rising through the mists over Pevensey marshes; and a walk after closing time back to my van along the starlit sands of Embleton Bay. That I completed this tour of inspection under mainly blue skies made choosing the top 50 — ten of which are new entries — even harder. If it feels like I've moved away from easily-accessed urban shores to include more rural beaches, that's because the glitter seems tarnished in too many of our resort towns. • How we picked the 2025 beach of the year I've seen businesses struggling with rising costs, councils cutting budgets and water quality falling as infrastructure has failed to keep pace with population growth. That's not true of all town beaches though: Bude, Frinton on Sea, Roker, Saundersfoot and Skegness made the top 50, and others including Cromer, Felixstowe, Torquay and Mumbles came close. The truth remains, though, that our coast is still the most beautiful and most varied on earth, and there's much to discover beyond the most obvious spots. So pack a picnic and the factor 50 and make 2025 the summer of the beach that's a little harder to reach. You can spot the first-timers as they drive down past the golf club and onto Portstewart Strand. They pause. They look at all the locals' cars parked on the sand, with picnic tables set up in their lee, and slowly their confusion turns to delight. Yes, you can drive onto the beach, and will you look at the size of it? Backed by dunes, it would run all the way to Magilligan Point, were it not for the salmon-rich River Bann cutting it in two, about two miles to the west. Surfers, paddleboarders, kayakers and especially wild swimmers come to play here, while others come simply to stare at the sea: some sitting in their cars, others on the cocktail deck of Harry's Shack ( quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Best things to do in Northern Ireland The Glens of Antrim were once so remote that it was quicker to get from here to Glasgow than to Belfast. That changed in the 1830s, when the engineer William Bald proposed blasting out the Antrim Coast Road, thus creating one of the world's most beautiful seaside drives. It was an instant hit with Victorian tourists, who considered Cushendall the 'prettiest village in Ireland'. In her 1887 travelogue, An Unknown Country, the author Dinah Mulock Craik says that had Cushendall been located further south 'it would soon have become a fashionable health resort, full of genteel villas … splendid hotels, and every kind of elegant frivolity'. It still hasn't, but the views from the beach — sand and shingle backed by clipped lawns — are quality: good | Loos, accessible, café • The UK beaches loved by Caitlin Moran, Alan Titchmarsh and more Ballycastle's sands, stretching for three quarters of a mile, might look like a straightforward proposition, but history lies deep here. Rathlin Island, six miles off the coast, was known to both Pliny and Ptolomy in ancient times, and the Lammas Fair — involving the delicacies of dulce (seaweed) and yellowman (ultra-sweet honeycomb) — held here on the last Monday and Tuesday of August, has its roots in the pre-Christian mythology of Lugh, the Celtic sun god. The tragic heroine of the Irish legend Deirdre of the Sorrows landed here upon her forced return from Scotland, and the statue on the seafront represents the Children of Lir — cursed by their stepmother to spend 900 years as swans. (Their last flight was to Rathlin.) All that might explain the wonder you feel when you're in Ballycastle. That, and the smoked fish chowder at Morton's chippy on the quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • 400 years of the the great British beach holiday in pictures At Ballintoy Harbour, lying at the bottom of a steep and winding road from the B15, a string of spiked islets poke out of the Atlantic like drowned mountains. As you swim or paddle around those rocks in the sunlight, it's scary to imagine how that might go on a stormy night. On the stone harbour wall, with its tearoom and cavernous backdrop, you're safe on solid ground. Walk west from here and you'll cross rabbit-trimmed lawns between the crags, passing a rock shaped like a giant human skull and another like an elephant to reach the north-facing wave catcher of Whitepark Bay. The expansive pale sands are lovely for loafing but the swimming is safer at quality: not rated | Loos, dog-friendly, café • Discover our full guide to Northern Ireland If you take the narrow-gauge railway from Bushmills to Giant's Causeway you'll cross the whisky-coloured River Bush and run along the back of Runkerry beach, which lies over the footbridge east of the Portballintrae car park. The grey pile at the northern end is Runkerry House, built in 1885 by Edward Macnaghten, the MP for Antrim. His daughter Florence is famous for eliciting a promise from a drunken fisherman that he would give up the booze forever if she swam the treacherous mile from Blackrock to Portballintrae — an achievement commemorated in the annual Lady Florence swim. Don't copy her: Runkerry has the strongest waves in Northern Ireland, so if you want a dip, try the sheltered Salmon Rock beach, just below the car park, which is accessible and has water rated excellent. Water quality: not rated | Loos, dog-friendly • Northern Ireland's top hotels With views past Harlech to Eryri National Park (Snowdonia) and across Cardigan Bay to the Llyn, the 450-acre Shell Island has one of Europe's biggest campsites, with 300 acres of fields where the pitches range from the convenient to the wild and from beachside to woodland, with sea views available even in high season. At the northern end, around the harbour, the shore is rocky — turning to flat, sugar-soft sand as you head south. The beachcombing is astonishing: perfect scallops, fragile tusks and razors, unblemished turitellas and, most prized by conchologists, tiny cowries. Day visits are £10 per car; camping pitches are £13 per person in high season and note that the island is cut off for two hours a day on the high tides, so check the tables before turning up ( quality: not rated | Loos, dog-friendly, café Glamorgan's Heritage Coast runs for 14 miles from Aberthaw in the east to Porthcawl in the west. If you've sped past en route to the Gower or Pembrokeshire you've missed a stretch of the Welsh coast that bears comparison with geological wonders such as the Giant's Causeway in Co Antrim and Lulworth Cove in Dorset — but without the crowds. At Dunraven Bay (also known as Southerndown beach) you'll find a millefeuille of carboniferous limestone and blue lias — layers of limestone and shale — overhanging a beach paved flatter than your patio. It's an otherworldly beach, as good for fossil hunting as it is for simply admiring the views across the Bristol Channel, and if it seems vaguely familiar, that's because it's played the part of several planets in Doctor quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Best hotels in Wales By my reckoning pitch SE1 at the Three Cliffs Bay Holiday Park on the Gower peninsula is the best in the nation: 50 yards from the ablutions, flat, protected from the prevailing wind, and blessed with the best beach view in the country. From here you'll have an uninterrupted drone's-eye view of the magnificence of Three Cliffs Bay, with the wide waters of the Pennard Pill snaking across the sands to the left, the crags of Penmaen Burrows, where the lost village of Stedwarlango is thought to be buried, on the right and the dragon-tooth spikes of the Three Cliffs in front. I've timed the walk from the campsite to the beach and it's 16 minutes. If you're coming from the car park on the A4118, it's 22 minutes — look for the footpath across the road from Shepherds general store (SE1 pitch from £52; quality: not rated | Dog-friendly Saundersfoot is a beach that rewards explorers. The northern end, where you'll see faces in the surreally contorted rocks, is home to the Lan Y Mor restaurant, serving local fish, meat and veggie dishes (mains from £18; From here the sands drift past the Chemist Inn — serving Tenby Harbwr ales — to Ocean Square, with its beach bar and seafood deli. There it runs up against the harbour arm, from where you can join sea safaris, voyages to Caldey Island or mackerel fishing trips, and where, cut into the decking, there's what I believe to be the UK's only purpose-built crabbing facility. Keep going around the harbour to MamGu Welsh Cakes — neither scone, biscuit nor bun but with elements of all three — below which you'll discover Glen beach: a dog-friendly pocket of sand that the crowds never quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café St Patrick — thought by some to have been a Welshman — set off in AD432 to convert Ireland from this sacred mile of sand northwest of St David's. Whether he had to push his boat through the surf that thumps this shore is not recorded, but a chapel was dedicated to him 50 yards up the coastal path on the site of a 6th-century cemetery, just north of the car park. While there's little to see now, the sensitive might feel the stirring spiritual connection that the Welsh call hwyl. The beach is a perfect ten, but if you're in search of solitude there are better options nearby. The sandy cove of Porthselau is a 25-minute walk along the cliffs to the south, and a 20-minute hike north brings you to Porthmelgan: rocky at high tide, sandy at quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, café • What to do in Wales You'll find Mwnt — eventually — and you'll be glad you persisted along narrow lanes threaded through Cardigan's patchwork of cow-filled pastures. An ancient pilgrim site at the edge of the Kingdom of Deheubarth, this straight-sided sandy cove was invaded in January 1155 by over-optimistic Flemish settlers who were so completely defeated by the locals that until the 18th century the Welsh would celebrate the victory at a festival known as Sul Coch y Mwnt, or Red Sunday. It's all very peaceful now, with an easy downhill path that follows a brook past a waterfall to a west-facing suntrap. For the best views climb the conical hill to the north called Foel y Mwnt — and watch the quality: excellent | Loos, café If you have yet to discover the Llyn peninsula, what joys await. It's home to Britain's best campsite (Bert's Kitchen Garden in Trefor); arguably our best small brewery (Cwrw Llyn in Nefyn); and Wales's most famous pub (Ty Coch, accessible only on foot, on the beach at Porthdinllaen). Here you'll also screech along the UK's most musical beach (Porthor — aka Whistling Sands — where the grains are so fine they squeak underfoot), and find an Italianate village that belongs in the Cinque Terre (Portmeirion). This coast is like Cornwall in the 1930s. Aberdaron is the southernmost of the Llyn's beaches: a bend of sand a mile wide sheltered by the Mynydd Mawr peninsula, crossed by the River Daron and overlooked by the dining terrace of the delightful Gwesty Ty Newydd hotel. The left-hand end of the beach, the only part where dogs are welcome, is the quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, café • Discover our full guide to Wales If you're in search of a fairytale beach, Llanddwyn, on the southwestern corner of Anglesey, is the one. After driving through the dark depths of the Newborough Forest you'll come to a three-mile beach. To your right, you'll see Llandwyn Island with two white towers, two stone crosses and a ruined church. The former are old lighthouses; the latter are dedicated to St Dwynwen, a 5th-century princess who pledged her life to God here on Ynys Llanddwyn after suffering a broken heart. She is now Wales's patron saint of lovers — honoured on her feast day of January 25 — and there's an awful lot to love about her island: six sandy coves and views of Eryri and the Llyn, seen as though across an enchanted lake. There's often a food truck in the car park called Y Pantri quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly, café Bude is not only blessed with good looks but the people who live here have a genuine love for their three local beaches. The #2minutebeachclean campaign began here and there's a citizen-led Climate Partnership. The town has also joined Keep Britain Tidy's bid to halt the tide of cheap imported foam body boards that end up broken and scattered across British beaches by renting proper boards for £2 a day. With its newly refurbished tidal pool, beach huts, fishing, surfing, castle heritage centre and harbourside dining, Summerleaze beach is the star attraction but do check out Crooklets, north of the cricket club, for the rock pools, and Northcott Mouth, home of gourmet café and gig venue Sip + Sea at the charming Rustic Tea quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • The UK's best saltwater and tidal pools If you're driving a camper van this summer it's probably best to skip this bit: Lannacombe, like so many of Britain's most beautiful beaches, is accessible only after what for many would be a harrowing journey of steep slopes and narrow lanes. The brave, however, will descend along a fairytale valley west of Start Point to find a tiny, perfectly formed cove of rock and sand, crossed by a stream — although there's only enough room for about 15 cars to park. If that's too crowded, there's an even smaller cove — Harris's beach — around the rocks to your left, and five minutes along the coast path to the right, Ivy quality: not rated | Dog-friendly • Cornwall v Devon: which is better? There's a basic but lovely campsite perched on the hill above Bantham at Higher Aunemouth Farm (pitches from £15; and the short walk down to the beach is like something from a kids' picture book. The path runs along the deep valley of the River Avon, with views of Burgh Island and its art deco hotel. It leads past the Sloop Inn, where the kitchen is open until 9pm, then through the dunes to the broad sands of Bantham. Rarely as crowded as Bigbury-on-Sea, across the mouth of the Avon, it's nevertheless a popular spot with surfers, kiters, dog walkers, sandcastle builders — and of course those who appreciate outstanding natural beauty. There's a watersports school and the Gastrobus sells pizzas and burgers. Because Bantham is a privately managed estate, the place is quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Most luxurious hotels in Devon There are prettier beaches in Cornwall. Come to think of it, there are prettier beaches in Falmouth, too, but this perfectly acceptable triangle of sand has an irresistible USP in the Beach House Falmouth restaurant. You find high-end joints like this in every obvious ocean viewpoint in Europe but not here in the UK, where often the best you can hope for is a clifftop kebab van that shuts at 4pm. There are exceptions — not least the other Beach House in Oxwich on the Gower Peninsula and Lan-Y-Mor in Saundersfoot — but Tamara Costin's Swanpool lookout sets the standard with beers from the local brand Verdant Brewing, a short but punchy cocktail list and a menu that, except for a couple of beef and veggie options, is all fish. Order the Falmouth rock oysters or the catch of the day (mains from £26; quality: good | Loos, accessible, café • Best hotels in Cornwall In the spring of 1897 Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson found themselves in Poldhu Bay where, 'from the windows of our little whitewashed house we looked down on the whole sinister semicircle of Mounts Bay'. Their holiday was interrupted by a bizarre triple murder, as told in the short story The Adventure of the Devil's Foot, so the pair never got time to investigate Poldhu Cove. That was an elementary error: this beach has terrific rockpooling with sand dunes at the back and a stream running down the middle. There's a beach café, a surf school, fab sunsets and Woodley's Cottage, a whitewashed holiday rental overlooking Mount's Bay, which might not be Holmes and Watson's hideout but has to be the prime suspect (from £595; quality: excellent | Loos, café • Great affordable hotels in Cornwall Porthcurno on a sunny day, with its sparkling sands, wildflower-garlanded cliffs and ludicrously blue water might be the most beautiful beach you've ever seen, but there is an even prettier one just next door. It's called Pedn Vounder, and all you need to get there are knees that are up to the steep descent on a zig-zagging footpath. It once had a reputation as a nest of naked dope-smoking hippies but these days it's quite the family beach with a carpet of golden sand that, seen from the South West Coast Path above, exerts a siren-like pull. There's no lifeguard, it's a strenuous climb back out and the beach vanishes at high water, so if the tide is coming in, settle for Porthcurno beach instead. It'll do at a quality: not rated | Dog-friendly There is a selection box of safe, sandy, family-friendly beaches surrounding Trevose Head, just west of Padstow. They range from Porthcothan in the south — prettier than Mawgan Porth but less fashionable — to the caves of Treyarnon; the wide sands and rockpools of Constantine; and Long Cove, hidden beneath Mother Ivey's Bay Holiday Park, all the way round to Trevone with its tidal pool. Harlyn, though, might be the best of the bunch, with a stream for damming, gentle swells for novice surfers and sheltered sands. The beach's pasty satisfaction score collapsed when the old Harlyn Inn was demolished to make way for holiday lets in 2021, but now the Beach Box Café and Big Pans bar — both in the car park — have restored my quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café Every year I pull over on the B3276 above Watergate Bay and try to find a reason not to include this Cornish giant in our list. But, irritatingly, it's the complete package: two miles of sand running from Griffin's Point in the north down to Whipsiderry and Porth Island in the south with flat expanses, rocky outcrops, easy surf and deep blue seas. It's owned and managed by the eponymous hotel: a white elephant built in 1900 to serve a railway that never came. Now, with three restaurants, a spa, watersports academy and its own epic stretch of coast, it's one of the nation's leading seaside hotels. You don't have to be staying there to use the beach, but you'll probably wish you were (B&B doubles from £255; quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • The best of Cornwall Woolly is the Novak Djokovic of British seaside resorts: getting on a bit, but still capable of taking the crown any time they like. Except this year. The privately owned beach is the same three-mile stretch of flawless sand, raked early every morning at the village end. The surf is still as gentle as an ageing labrador, they still sell cappuccino and croissants from a stand on the sand, and Stacey and Sumith Kankanamge still serve Sri Lankan curries at the Barricane Beach Café every night from 5pm-7pm for a takeaway on the sands. The only problem, says Sue Black, the beach manager, is that the redesign and expansion of the Beachcomber Café has hit a snag or two and won't be open until at least February. Water quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café Seacliff, west of Dunbar, is a private beach with a £5 entrance fee for cars, but it's worth the price of the ticket for the sheer cinematic drama. Hidden at the western end is the smallest harbour in the British Isles. About the size of a hotel pool, it was carved out of the sandstone in 1890 by Andrew Laidlay, the laird of the manor, using a steam engine and compressor. Then there's the burnt-out shell of Seacliff House, hidden in the woods, and, across Oxroad Bay, the gothic skeleton of Tantallon Castle, destroyed in 1651 after a 12-day bombardment by Oliver Cromwell's artillery. Meanwhile, Bass Rock, home to the world's largest gannet colony, floats offshore like a Bond villain's lair. Who knows what fresh intrigue awaits the curious visitor?Water quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly • Scotland's best hotels I met a local called Ian as I was walking across the Rhu peninsula, just south of Arisaig. He showed me a basalt rock scored with faint symbols. It was a blue stone, possibly neolithic, offering magical protection from evil. 'Don't tell anyone where it is,' he said. Did the same apply to Rhu Point, I asked: a cove with views west to Eigg and south to Ardnamurchan where black rock, white sand and turquoise water offer another type of magic? 'Aye, why not?' he replied. After I included the beach in our guide in 2023, I explained, I received a complaint from someone who said I had spoilt his secret beach. 'Englishman, was he?' Ian guessed. 'They have a habit of thinking they own places that aren't theirs.' You'll find Rhu Point a mile and a half from the layby at the old pier building on the Rhu quality: not rated | Dog-friendly I wouldn't go as far as saying that Achmelvich beach — three miles northwest of Lochinver — has been spoiled but the new facilities that opened here at Easter underline the ever-increasing popularity of one of TikTok's favourite locations on the busy North Coast 500 (NC500) road trip. There's now a 70-space car park, showers, bike racks and lavatories that must be made of pure gold, given the staggering £1.1 million cost of the project. But while Achmelvich is crowded, few seem to make the trek less than half a mile over the headland to the even more beautiful Vesteys beach. Make the effort, and you'll find glittering white sand, sea so clear that kayaking feels like flying and safe snorkelling in kelp beds where you may see edible crabs, sunstars and quality: not rated | Dog-friendly At Achininver I watched a ewe break away from the flock sunbathing on this gorgeously remote bay to lead her newborn lamb down to the shore. The sand glittered in the sunshine, the stream was like black tea, and the sea between the headlands went from Caribbean blue to jade green. Mother and child stood and stared at the bay until the lamb trotted back towards the flock. The ewe watched the waves for a moment longer, then turned to follow. I think I saw her sigh. Getting here, five miles down a single-track road off the A838 at the Kyle of Tongue, will almost certainly involve a long reverse or two to let locals pass, and, sadly for camper vanners, there's nowhere to park up for the night. Anyway, come nightfall, the midges will shred the flesh from your quality: not rated | Dog-friendly • Most beautiful places in Scotland Here's a beach much better suited to NC500 camper vans. There's a big parking spot just off the A836 from where a short walk over dunes leads to a wide curve of ochre sand. The River Halladale meets the sea on the right and on the high ground to the left, the Melvich Bay Caravan Park offers vans hard standing pitches, electrical hook-ups and marvellous sunrises over the bay (£35 a night; An easy but poignant walk takes you west around the bay to Portskerra Harbour, with its memorial to 26 local fishermen who perished in storms within sight of where you stand. A little further on you'll see the Beri Geo rock, where a ship called the Snow Admiral was wrecked in 1842. Four graves — thought to be those of the captain and his family, including at least two children — are on the clifftop; the other ten are in the quality: not rated | Dog-friendly No one comes to the longest shingle beach in Scotland with a bucket and spade and a deckchair. Binoculars, though, are essential. Here, as the name suggests, is where the River Spey ends its 107-mile journey from the Central Highlands and throughout the summer and autumn it's teeming with salmon. That attracts ospreys, which arrive here from West Africa in April and spend the season performing thrilling high-speed dives as they hunt along the mouth of the river. I came on the offchance, and didn't even have the time to uncap my binos before the action began less than 100 metres from the car park. I thought the cries of wonder from an American tour group were for the ospreys but they weren't. A pod of dolphins was grabbing the salmon before the raptors got quality: not rated | Loos, dog-friendly, café • Discover our full guide to Scotland The best view of Cullen is from the footpath on the viaduct that carried the rail line between Portsoy and Elgin until 1968. From here you can see a stream called the Burn of Deskford as it winds across the golden beach to the sea; the old fishing community of Seatown of Cullen, with its brightly painted Airbnbs and second homes; and Logie Head, where the Giant's Steps walk rewards the brave with even more dizzying views than the viaduct. Beneath the Three Kings rock pinnacles on the beach, so the story goes, lie a Scottish, a Norwegian and a Danish king, and beyond them there's a surf school, paddleboard hire and more than a mile of quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café On a foggy day, the towering red granite, emerald cliffs and salt-bleached driftwood washed up on the three-mile sands of St Cyrus make you think of the Pacific Northwest. On a sunny day, you could even be in Queensland — and you're likely to be entirely alone, except for the wildlife. Common and grey seals hang out at the mouth of the River Esk at the southern end. Hoofprints in the sand suggested that at least two roe deer had been on the beach the morning I visited, and a beachgoer showed me phone footage of eight dolphins performing acrobatics off the northern end. Should've been here yesterday, as everyone always quality: not rated | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café I'm done with Whitby, which is fine: my absence will never be noticed in the ever-increasing crowds in a town where a staggering 44 per cent of houses are second homes. Whitby's charm has been its downfall — depressingly, even the once-fabulous fish and chips have gone downhill — so I'm off three miles up the A174 to Sandsend. It may not prove to be far enough as its neighbour reaches saturation point but for the time being its unadorned beach, bisected by East Row Beck, gives space to sit, stare and breathe in the beauty of the Yorkshire coast. And the crab and chips at the Fish Cottage beats anything in Whitby (£11.95; quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Where to stay in Yorkshire Finding a beach anywhere in the northwest that combines beauty with clean bathing water isn't easy. Finding one with all of the above and a £900,000 café partly designed by a Turner prizewinning artist sounds like mission impossible but Silecroft, ten minutes' drive from Millom, pulls it off. It's a shingle bank at high tide but low water reveals sands so flat and apparently endless that you yearn for a horse to go galloping across it. It's worth wandering north for half a mile or so to fully appreciate the elemental magic and wildness of a beach where the fells meet the sea. My visit was outside café opening hours but I'm told the quiches, like the sculptor Martin Boyce's sail-inspired shutters, are a masterpiece. Water quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly, café Down a lane four miles south of Berwick-Upon-Tweed, Cocklawburn has all the features of your standard Northumbrian beach — vast sands, limestone reefs (or 'skerrs' as they're known in Northumberland), rockpools and ruins — but its bizarre geology makes it stand out. At low tide you'll see hundreds of bulbous 'concretions', like fossilised dinosaur eggs, resulting from chemical reactions 300 million years ago when the rocks were still submerged mud. The corrugated seabed is so uniform you would think a knuckle-dragging giant must have done it, rather than sand abrasion as scientists would have you believe. There's easy fossil hunting in the siltstones north of the car park. Cocklawburn quality: not rated | Dog-friendly Here's the plan. Park at Craster, have a kipper in a bun from the Pipers Pitch food truck, walk through the village and drop down past the harbour, following the coast north towards the clifftop ruins of Dunstanburgh Castle. The wildflowers in the meadow are a haven for pollinators — which in turn attract dozens of low-flying swifts and swallows. From Dunstanburgh you'll see the bay curving away to the Emblestone, a reef beloved of surfers, and the sandy beach at St Mary's Haven and the Ship Inn at Low Newton-by-the-Sea. You've walked a mile and a half already and it's only the same again to the pub. Just quality: not rated | Dog-friendly • The UK's best walking holidays Druridge Bay stretches nearly six sandy miles from the rocky outcrop of Bondi Carrs in the north to Cresswell in the south. The latter is the best end to aim for, with a short walk from the car park up and over the dunes onto a strip of sand that's almost as wide as Bamburgh at low tide. While almost any beach can look attractive in the sunshine, the true test of beauty is how it looks in foul weather. Cresswell passed with flying colours — from black sky to grey sea and dark, rain-pitted sand. Luckily, the Drift Café, across the road, offers tea and cake. Water quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly, café There's a chance that repairs to Roker's pier could be completed by the end of this month after a 20-month closure. The pier took 18 years to build but was shut down by Storm Babet in just one night in 2023. Even so, this austere, lighthouse-tipped curve continues to shelter the southern end of Roker's sands from the cruelty of the North Sea so dramatically described in The Storm — written in 1828 by Sir Cuthbert Sharp, who served as one of the River Wear commissioners. Paddleboarding and kayaking are on offer from Adventure Sunderland ( and there are two chippies, a diner for brunch and an ice cream quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, café In November 1897 an Austrian steamer called Laura carrying a cargo of coke to Trieste in Italy ran aground in fog on Speeton Sands, just south of Reighton. The crew scarpered, leaving Laura at the mercy of the elements. Rusty traces remain on a wonderful beach where the black clay cliffs meet the white chalk of Flamborough Head and the sands are studded with Second World War concrete pillboxes. Park at the end of Sands Road and follow the rough path to the beach. Loos and a café are at Hunmanby, 15 minutes' walk to the quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly, café Yes, that Skegness. The original medieval port disappeared under the sea in a violent storm in 1526, and the 16th-century chronicler John Leland later wrote that 'olde Skegnes is now builded a pore new thing'. Many 21st-century visitors would agree with that assessment but having spent 17 years watching the crumbling of our traditional seaside resorts, I'd argue that Skeggy is the new king of seaside tat. There are donkeys, rollercoasters, wall-to-wall chippies, arcades, a pier and the Embassy Theatre, offering much more than the tide of tribute acts that flood other seaside playhouses ( As for the beach, it's big, soft and golden, with views across the Wash to the Norfolk quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • 100 of the Best Places to Stay in the UK The road from Chapel St Leonards runs along a Saxon sea wall that serves as a reminder of the constant threat of erosion facing this fragile, empty coast. The beach is a beauty, with dunes full of buckthorn, acres of sand and shallow waters, but Anderby Creek has its head in the clouds. At the entrance to the beach is the Cloud Bar: an observation deck with nephologic information boards from where to watch and identify whatever drifts past in the sky. No drinks are on offer, but there's a fab beach café — with a love story. The owners Claire and Jason met as kids when their families came to stay at the caravan park. Years later they met again, got married and bought the café. Water quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly, café The Romans arrived in this swampy part of the north Norfolk coast about 1,900 years ago and built a fort called Branodunum — meaning Crow Fort — to guard the coast. What's left of it (not much) lies off the A149 to the east of the village, but nearby is a glorious beach with expansive tidal flats to the right (stay off them — the sea comes in faster than you can run) and, to the left, the wide creek draining Titchwell Marsh. The dunes offer shelter from all winds except from the north and the sand is perfect for building your own Crow Fort. There are usually seals snoozing around the first bend of the Hun. The narrow Beach Road gets busy in high summer so come early: there's a well-stocked kiosk opposite the car park. Be warned that the road is submerged when high tides exceed 8m — so check the local tide tables ( quality: not rated | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly • Best hotels in Norfolk Sir Berney Brograve, the 18th-century landowner at Waxham, next door to Sea Palling, did not sleep well, according to local legend. First, he had reneged on a bet with the devil, which never ends well. He also lived in dread of smugglers and a French invasion and, lastly, worried constantly that the North Sea would break through the dunes and flood his estate. In 1953, that fear came true, leaving seven dead. To prevent it happening again, nine offshore reefs known as 'shore–parallel breakwaters' were constructed in 1993. They've slowed the inevitable — see storm-ravaged Happisburgh, five miles north for what it looks like if you don't — and created a series of sheltered, sandy lagoons. Behind the dunes, the Mermaid's Catch ( sells lobster and chips, and the best cup of tea in Norfolk is served, so the proprietors claim, at the Sandy Hills Snack quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Best dog-friendly hotels in Norfolk It's been one thing after another for Southwold in recent months. First the promenade north of the pier collapsed in December 2024 and took three months to repair. Then the Tiptree Tea Room closed down, blaming 'challenging times' — and a TikToker upset the locals by encouraging more Londoners to visit this 'underrated' resort. But Southwold can cope with disaster: the Great Fire of 1659 destroyed most of the town and in 1934 a storm ripped the head off the pier. The pier got patched up and the beach to the south, with the millionaire beach huts and the lighthouse behind, is as pretty as a postcard. But it gets crowded, so drive down Ferry Road towards the mouth of the River Blyth and you'll find the Denes beach. It's far more quality: excellent | Loos, dog-friendly, café Once upon a time you went to Clacton to live it up and Frinton to die. Harsh, but true. People called the place 'God's waiting room,' but because Frinton didn't depend on tourism for its upkeep, this clifftop seaside town paid its own bills and thus avoided the slump that has hit its once-flashier neighbour. There's one pub — Shepherd Neame's Lock and Barrel — but no arcades, no funfairs and no souvenir shops. Instead you'll find a curving concrete prom with beach huts and a peaceful beach sectioned by wooden groynes. I noticed novice kite surfers learning the ropes on the wide clifftop green during my visit. It seems that Frinton is taking quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café You get four gorgeous beaches along the shores of Milford on Sea: the village where the New Forest meets Christchurch Bay. The dramatic choice is to follow the shingle bank: a great wall of gravel running a mile and a half southeast to Hurst Castle, built by Henry VIII to defend the Solent. Heading back to the village, you'll find the art deco Lighthouse restaurant and the Needles Eye Café . The Isle of Wight certainly dominates the view, even if the Needles look more like worn-down molars. The imposing White House, set in six acres on the seafront, resembles an ocean liner yet was described by the coalmining family who built it in 1903 as 'a modest beach hut'. Actual beach huts at Hordle Cliff West come into view as you head west. The best beach is at Taddiford Gap, off the B3058 to Barton on Sea. A short walk along a footpath brings you to a grassy cliff and a quiet stretch of shingle with the best views of the quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Best seaside hotels in the UK The resort was a ruin when I first visited 17 years ago, but the Londoners who made Margate in the 18th century are resurrecting it in the 21st. It's now a town with four Michelin-listed restaurants and a theme park called Dreamland which has Tom Jones and Olly Murs gigs on the bill this summer, with Richard Hawley on the way in October. The beach, with that massive tidal pool, is impressive whatever the weather, and of course there are all the trappings of the traditional seaside, from donkeys and deckchairs to arcades and chippies. Don't miss the sunsets, beautifully enhanced by London's pollution, and the astonishing Shell Grotto: a tunnel of mysterious origins, discovered in 1835, which is decorated with 4.6 million quality: excellent | Lifeguards, loos, accessible, café • Great hotels in Kent It's hard to find anywhere truly remote on our overcrowded south coast but Normans Bay, between Bexhill and Eastbourne, is as close as you'll get, down a lane off the A259 that feels like a journey back in time. There's an edgy, Dickensian feel to this wild shingle bank, shelving steeply to a sea suited for fishing not swimming. At dusk it feels as though the ghosts of the smugglers who once fought pitched battles with the revenue men outside the Star Inn pub might still be at quality: excellent | Dog-friendly Birling Gap is the Sussex beauty spot with the busy National Trust car park, stepping down to a crowded shingle beach with views of the Seven Sisters. Too crowded? Then try Newhaven West, 11 miles down the coast. It's Birling Gap's introverted twin: a beach seemingly visited only by locals on the far side of Newhaven's River Ouse. To get there follow Fort Road through the marina, past the Hope Inn and the harbour to where the road ends. There you'll find white cliffs and grassy platforms stepping down to a shingle beach with views left to the cliffs. It's a terrific spot for storm-watching when there's a westerly screaming up the Channel. Watch out for the rabbits and some very friendly quality: not rated | Dog-friendly • Where to stay in East Sussex Large parts of Selsey Bill recall an age before anybody thought the seaside was a special place to live. Here, the seafront is a concrete prom with modest homes backed up against a shingle beach with a mess of dinghies hauled up above the high water mark. Walking its entire length I passed Gibbet Field, where the bodies of two of the estimated 20,000 smugglers operating here in the 18th century were hung in chains to deter others. It didn't work. For nearly two more miles, the shingle continues to West Sands — a pebbly misnomer. But for a peaceful day on an almost entirely uncommercial beach, Selsey fits the quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café First featured in Best UK Beaches 2024, SoBo, as the cool kids call it, is in a residential area in Bournemouth's east end. Here, the local restaurateur Rich Slater has transformed a neglected stretch of sand into something reminiscent of the laid-back Los Angeles hotspot, Hermosa Beach. Sadly the nimbys didn't like the café in the double-decker bus, the art classes, fundraising and yoga sessions, although Slater's licence has been extended until autumn next year. The plan now is to win over the doubters by improving the adjacent lavatories — and installing a sauna. 'This will really help us take our wellness community to the next level,' he told quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, dog-friendly, café • Family friendly British escapes With its neat lawns and gentle hills Burton Bradstock's shingle beach seems as genteel as those who come for the grilled sole in the Hive Beach Café (mains from £19.50; hivebeachcafé. But for all its honey-coloured beauty, Hive is a bit of a beast. The beach slopes steeply into the Channel and if you get too close there's a risk of being floored by the swell. The layer-cake cliffs are prone to collapse. But the bit in between is one of the most soporific beaches in the country, so lie on a blanket, close your eyes and see how long you can listen to the sigh and hiss of waves breaking on millions of tiny stones before you drop quality: excellent | Loos, accessible, café Chris Haslam toured the UK in a Volkswagen California campervan ( he was also a guest of Stena Line, which has one-way fares Cairnryan-Belfast from £20pp (

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