Bedrooms with Outdoor Access
- Salcombe, England
Just a stone’s throw from the chic seaside town of Salcombe in Devon, dog-friendly Soar Mill Cove Hotel & Spa offers warm and welcoming hospitality in a picturesque coastal setting.
£155Price per night from
- Southampton, England
Originally built in 1906, New Place Hotel is a superb dog-friendly destination located in the heart of the Hampshire countryside.
- Broadway, England
Renowned for luxury, the dog-friendly Lygon Arms in Worcestershire is a delightful 16th-century former coaching inn set in three acres of picturesque grounds within the pretty village of Broadway.
- Bath, England
Ideally located just outside of Bath, Somerset. Homewood Hotel & Spa is a luxurious dog friendly destination. Nestled within the 10-acres of beautiful gardens and grounds
- Bury Saint Edmunds, England
Home to the Hervey Family for 200 years, dog-friendly The Ickworth in Suffolk is an incredibly luxurious hotel that is a great holiday base for couples and families.
- Bradford on Avon, England
Dog-friendly Widbrook Grange in Wiltshire is an idyllic country farmhouse retreat located on the outskirts of Bradford on Avon.
£79Price per night from
- Keswick, England
Set on the shores of the beautiful Bassenthwaite Lake, dog-friendly Armathwaite Hall Hotel in the Lake District boasts a truly idyllic location.
- Tewkesbury, England
For the ultimate Cotswolds doggie vacation, Tewkesbury Park Hotel is the pawfect location! Sitting in green glory, this gorgeous family-owned hotel is surrounded by the rolling Gloucestershire countryside.
- Weymouth, England
Dog-friendly Moonfleet Manor in Dorset is a luxury family-friendly hotel overlooking Chesil Beach on the Jurassic Coast in the west of the county – the perfect place for families with pets.
- Midhurst, England
A quintessentially English hotel and spa retains its heritage yet also provides guests with every contemporary luxury. Fantastically dog-friendly, set in the historic town of Midhurst and is one of the oldest coaching inns still in existence in the UK, dating back to 1430.