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Corsewall Lighthouse Hotel
Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland
Find safe harbour in the UK’s best lighthouse hotels and self-catered stays. We’ve picked out those with panoramic sea views, remote island locations and one that makes a great pit stop on the North Coast 500
13 April, 2023
The frayed edge of the UK is dotted with more than 60 lighthouses, found right from Lizard Point in Cornwall to Muckle Flugga, Britain's second most northerly island. (If you're in the mood for a laugh, google Berry Head Lighthouse, a squat, five-metre-tall affair in Brixham, Devon.)
After generations spent warning ships away from our most rocky shores, some lighthouses - those that have been either decommissioned or automated - and their adjoining keeper's cottages have been reborn as self-catering accommodation or bed-and-breakfast joints. Ever fancied spending the night in a lighthouse? We've picked out those with the best sea views, remote island locations and the design-led rooms where you can feel good about coming into harbour.
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Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland
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St Mawes, Cornwall
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Beachy Head, East Sussex
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Winterton-on-Sea, Norfolk
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Newport, Wales
Four guestrooms are arranged around a wishing well in this 19th-century lighthouse at the mouth of the River Usk, where the water completes its journey from the Black Mountains to the Bristol Channel. Relaxation is the raison d'être here: book in for on-site reflexology, a Swedish massage, hydrotherapy treatments or life coaching, or spot cows and wild horses from the roof garden's hot tub. Whovians take note: there's a Dalek and a TARDIS here too.
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Lundy Island, Devon
Set 20km off the North Devon coast, the secluded granite outcrop of Lundy is often veiled in mist, meaning that many ships have been wrecked on its jagged shores. And what do shipwrecks mean? Lighthouses. There are three of them on the island's relatively small 1,000 acres. The Old Light (abandoned in 1897) is our favourite, split into two north-facing Lower and Upper self-catering apartments, sleeping four and five people respectively. Don't have a head for heights? Book the pocket-sized granite keeper's store nearby. Sleeps one.
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Strathy, Scotland
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County Down, Northern Ireland
At a vertiginous 40m, this black-and-yellow-striped lighthouse is one of the tallest on the entire Irish coast. It was used as a marker on a test run for the Titanic in 1912, before its light was automated in the 80s. Now maintained by the Commissioners of Irish Lights, its two homely keeper's cottages - Ketch and Sloop - make a great base for exploring the north-east. Hike by Strangford Lough or head into Belfast, where lighthouse fanatics can also admire at The Great Light.