Printable destination guide

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Boutique hotels in Bath

City break, Bath, United Kingdom

Self-catering properties in Bath

Bath Overview

United Kingdom

Cityscape
Regency romance
City life
English elegance

Bath provides the perfect English getaway. This is a genteel city soaked in history, which has kept its stiff upper lip but learned how to relax with a cocktail, too.

Nestled in the verdant calm of the Avon valley, and untroubled by its noisily artful neighbour, Bristol, Bath offers beautiful Regency buildings, fabulous countryside views, great food and cultural riches – everywhere you look. Whether it's Jane Austen and refined dining you crave, or a soak in a spa and a glass of something spoiling later on, Bath is a place of pleasures both historic and modern. And, just a short meander out of town, you've the rolling fields, dramatic valleys and pretty villages of Somerset to explore.

Beautifully Bath

For a real Jane Austen experience, take an afternoon to wander round the Royal Victoria Park and the Royal Crescent. The design, architecture and atmosphere are about as English as it’s possible to be.

Local knowledge

Taxis
Taxis cannot be flagged in the street, so ask your hotel to book them for you. There are usually plenty of taxis outside the train station.

Tipping culture
Discretionary, but around 15 per cent is appreciated in restaurants.

Packing tips
Mrs Smith finds it hard to resist taking an empire-line dress and a bonnet to Bath, to get the full Austen effect. The less whimsical among you might simply want to take an umbrella to fend off that pesky English rain (and perhaps to double as a pretty parasol).

Recommended reads
Anything by Jane Austen, Bath’s most famous resident. Try Northanger Abbey, with the promising passage: 'They arrived in Bath. Catherine was all eager delight; her eyes were here, there, everywhere, as they approached its fine and striking environs, and afterwards drove through those streets which conducted them to the hotel. She was come to be happy, and she felt happy already.' Ahh!

Cuisine
Good old-fashioned English fare abounds (with tea, scones and cheddar cheese taking centre-stage), but there’s plenty of modern European influence, too; Bath boasts several Michelin-starred eateries. There's also a real focus on local, seasonal produce and on ingredients sourced from England's south-west.

Currency
Pounds sterling (£).

Dialling codes
Country code for the UK: +44. Bath: (0)1225.

Do go/don't go
The Gulf Stream makes this area a bit more temperate than most of England, but your best bet for a dry stay is still to visit between June and September. Winter can be captivating, with snow dusting the streets; there are some great Christmas markets, too.


Bath Hotels

£ $

Our round-up of the hippest hideaways and romantic boutique hotels in Bath


Royal Crescent Hotel

Bath, United Kingdom

Style
Georgian perfection

Setting
Atmospheric Bath

With perfect neo-classical proportions, cobblestone streets, a fantastic spa and views of the hills, Royal Crescent Hotel is the epitome of English elegance.

Book now

Queensberry Hotel

Bath, United Kingdom

Style
Quartet of Georgian townhouses

Setting
Heart of historic Bath

Born from the combination of four 18th-century houses built in inimitable Bath Stone, the comfortable and contemporary Queensberry Hotels perfectly placed to explore the historic spa city.

Book now

The Wheatsheaf

Northeast Somerset, United Kingdom

Style
Gastro-hub with rooms

Setting
Somerset’s farmland fields

The really big draw at boutique gastropub the Wheatsheaf is the phenomenal cooking; you'll lurch from meal to meal in a delirium of pastoral astonishment. When you're not eating (the times will be few), Bath and Somerset are on your doorstep

Book now



Getting there

City break, Bath, United Kingdom

Planes, trains, automobiles, or maybe even helicopter – we tell you the best way to go.

Planes
The nearest airport is Bristol International, about half an hour’s drive from Bath.
Trains
Trains leave from London Paddington for Bath Spa every half hour or so, and take about 90 mins. The city is fairly well connected with links to destinations across the country; see www.thetrainline.com for routes and fares.
Automobiles
From London, take the M4, then follow signposts for Bath, starting at junction 18. The drive will take two or three hours, depending on traffic. To the west, Bristol is around 30 minutes away by car. For car hire, go to www.hertz.co.uk. Smith cardholders get a 10 per cent discount; quote '635230' when you reserve the car.

Boutique hotels in Bath

City break, Bath, United Kingdom

Self-catering properties in Bath

Bath Activities

Highlights the best Bath has to offer, from art and culture to fun-packed activities; we've even found the most inspiring place to enjoy the views from.

Worth getting out of bed for

Bath itinerary
More…

Viewpoint
For the best views of the city, go hot-air ballooning. With Bailey Balloons (+44 (0)1275 375300; www.baileyballoons.co.uk), you can take off from Royal Victoria Park, cruise over Bath, and land at the Cadbury’s chocolate factory in nearby Keynsham.

Arts and culture
The Roman Baths (+44 (0)1225 477785; www.romanbaths.co.uk) are the city’s most famous landmark, and a World Heritage site: a beautiful Roman temple and bathhouses built around the only hot spring in Britain, still flowing with natural hot water. Jane Austen is Bath’s other great cultural icon. The Austen Centre at Queen Square (+44 (0)1225 443000; www.janeausten.co.uk) is pretty diverting and has a great shop. The best thing about it, though, is the Regency tearoom, with great rooftops views and some particularly good cakes.

Something for nothing
Walk west out of Bath along the Kennet and Avon Canal and enjoy the most picturesque towpaths in the country, or go and soak up the calm and grandeur of Bath’s magnificent 15th-century Abbey.

Shopping
There’s great shopping to be done in Bath, and the city is relatively unscarred by chain stores. Walcot Street is full of independent little shops offering clothes, books and antiques; on Saturdays, there’s a great fleamarket, too. Along Milsom Street you‘ll find Jolly’s, one of the UK’s oldest department stores, plus Jaeger, Hobbs and self-explanatory Vintage to Vogue. At the top of the street is Shires Yard, with more boutiques and the Alessi Gallery.

Daytripper
The Avon Valley Railway (0117 932 5538; www.avonvalleyrailway.org), with its restored 1860s station and locomotive-driving opportunities, isn't just for the enthusiast: passengers can use the six-mile return train ride as a starting point for picnics, countryside walks and boat trips, too.

Perfect picnic
Head to the Parade Gardens for some river-side mooching. £1 will get you entry, a stripy deckchair and a patch of grass.

And...
The Thermae Bath Spa (+44 (0)1225 331234; www.thermaebathspa.com) has a natural hot spa pool on a rooftop looking over Bath and the surrounding countryside. You can get treatments here – including aromatherapy cocoons and Moroccan mud wraps as well as shiatsu and reiki – or you can just laze about enjoying the waters and the views.

Diary

March Bath Literature Festival, with recent guests including Alexander McCall Smith, Clare Short and Jacqueline Wilson (www.bathlitfest.org.uk).
July/August
The Roman Baths in the Abbey churchyard are open late for candlelit walks.
October The Bath Film Festival offers a feast of cinema in venues around the city, with previews of new arthouse films, as well as lots of classics (www.bathfilmfestival.org.uk).


Boutique hotels in Bath

City break, Bath, United Kingdom

Self-catering properties in Bath

Bath
Eating, drinking and dancing

We've tracked down the best cafés for people-watching, the bars with the coolest cocktails, the most accomplished restaurants and the liveliest local nightlife in Bath.

Cafés

(+44 (0)1225 464999)

The House of Minerva

The only licensed chocolate shop in the UK, this wonderful Bath establishment is the place to go if you want to accompany handmade truffles – whipped up in front of you – with a glass or two of champagne. It’s worth the trip just to experience Philippe and Thierry, the eccentric resident master chocolatiers from Belgium (www.chocolatemaster.co.uk).

15 Abbey Church Yard, 14 Cheap Street, Bath BA1 1LY

(+44 (0)1225 314418)

Chandos Deli

An award-winning Mediterranean deli stocked with fantastic cheeses, handmade cakes, antipasti, oils and olives. Tasting is heartily encouraged, so pull up a chair at the counter and munch through charcuterie- and fromage-filled sandwiches (www.chandosdeli.com).

12 George Street, Bath BA1 2EH

(+44 (0)1225 444477)

The Pump Room

When in Bath, an afternoon visit to the Pump Room in the Roman Baths is obligatory. To complete the Jane Austen experience of live strings, chandeliers, foxgloves and imperial columns, order the three tiers of afternoon tea for two. (Bookings are only taken Monday–Friday).

Roman Baths, Stall Street, Bath BA1 1LZ

(+44 (0)1225 480666)

Juice Kitchen

If you’re struggling to find the time to fit in your five-a-day while on your Somerset break, head for this smoothie bar on Bath’s George Street, for super-healthy breakfasts, soups and speciality teas. Proof that wheatgrass shots and melon frappés do exist outside of Islington (www.juicekitchen.co.uk).

3 George Street, Bath BA1 2EH

(+44 (0)1225 444403)

Blackstones’ Kitchen

This gourmet takeaway is the best place in Bath for soups and coffees – make sure you accompany them with one of Blackstones’ famous pecan brownies. The sister restaurant opposite does a mean sloe gin and mint crush cocktail (www.blackstonefood.co.uk).

10a Queen Street, Bath BA1 1HE

(+44 (0)1225 480532)

Riverside Café

A great water-view spot, ideal for lunch or a coffee overlooking the river.

17 Argyle Street (below Pulteney Bridge), Bath BA2 4BQ

(+44 (0)1225 446060)

Bar Chocolat

Next to Bang & Olufsen, this all-things-in-chocolate-form café is open 09h–18h (11h–17h Sundays). White chocolate ice-cream, hot chocolate, chocolate gâteaux, pain au chocolat… you get the picture.

3 Argyle Street, Bath BA2 4BA

Restaurants

(+44 (0)1225 447928)

Olive Tree

Situated in a Bath townhouse, the Queensberry Hotel is a 29-room boutique property that oozes Regency elegance. Its restaurant, Olive Tree, is an equally stylish combination of crisp white linen and plush chocolate leather. The unpretentious modern, Med-tinged English cuisine it serves up – pot-roasted guinea fowl, pan-fried Cornish sea bass – is very good and reasonably priced.

Queensberry Hotel, Russel Street, Bath BA1 2QF

(+44 (0)1225 444403)

Blackstones Restaurant

A Georgian townhouse that’s been turned into a five-roomed restaurant offering seasonal British food sourced from suppliers in Somerset and surrounding counties. Choose between the frisée salad with Wiltshire bacon, croutons and poached egg, and seared Cornish scallops with crème fraîche, rocket and home-made chilli jam (www.blackstonefood.co.uk).

2–3 Queen Street, Bath, Somerset BA1 1HE

(+44 (0)1225 787960)

Cavendish Restaurant

Part of the gorgeous Georgian Dukes Hotel, with a restored Palladian exterior, the Cavendish Restaurant is hotly tipped by locals, and offers seasonal British menus – all expertly prepared by chef Richard Allen. Ask for a table in its secluded patio garden on warmer days (www.dukesbath.co.uk).

Dukes Hotel, Great Pulteney Street, Bath BA2 4DN

(+44 (0)1225 461199)

Browns Restaurant & Bar

For a mod-Med menu and views across 'green Bath' beyond Pulteney Bridge, book a table at relaxed Browns. Afternoon tea is served 14h–17h.

Orange Grove, Bath BA1 1LP

(+44 (0)1225 425242)

The Hole in the Wall

A former Georgian coal cellar, this vaulted restaurant sets the benchmark for Modern British food in Bath. Informal, low-key and with an extensive wine list – some 35 by the glass – it’s a great spot for lunch. In winter, ask for a table near the fire.

16 George Street, Bath BA1 2EH

(+44 (0)1225 331922)

The Bath Priory

Michelin-starred for almost a decade, this restaurant is definitely worth booking for its accomplished French-tilted Mediterranean cuisine. Fresh, clean and precise, dishes rely on the freshest seasonal produce available, with many ingredients sourced from its own organic kitchen garden. The elegant dining room overlooks the hotel’s pretty grounds, so try to request a table at one of the windows if you’re there for lunch. No denim or trainers.

The Bath Priory Hotel, Weston Road, Bath BA1 2XT

(+44 (0)1225 460818)

Martini Ristorante

A warm and inviting Italian restaurant near Bath Spa train station, Martini has been a local favourite for many years. Chef Luigi is known as much for his ice-cream and impeccable selection of fine cheeses as his delicious risottos, stone-baked pizzas and home-made pasta dishes (www.martinirestaurantbath.com).

8–9 George Street, Bath BA1 2EH

(+44 (0)1225 314812)

Woods

Popular with locals, this bistro is informal and intimate, serving simple, good-value Anglo-French dishes.

9–13 Alfred Street, Bath BA1 2QX

(+44 (0)1225 310064)

Bistro Papillon

A classic checked-tablecloth bistro, serving delicious French and Mediterranean favourites from an open kitchen.

2 Margaret's Buildings, Brock Street, Bath BA1 2LP

(+44 (0)1225 442265)

Vaults Restaurant & Bar

Underneath the Theatre Royal (www.theatreroyal.org.uk), this cave-like nook has won awards for its matinee lunches and pre-show dinners. It’s more than just a place to eat before the theatre, though: pop in for a piece of afternoon amaretti chocolate cake, or for a supper of steamed mussels.

Theatre Royal, Sawclose, Bath BA1 1EY

(+44 (0)1225 423417)

Beaujolais

Relaxed, light-filled bistro and bar with a contemporary touch, good local food, and changing seasonal menus on offer from breakfast to dinner. There’s even a secret garden for summer dining en plein air (www.beaujolaisbath.co.uk).

5 Chapel Row, off Queen Square, Bath BA1 1HN

Bars and clubs

(+44 (0)1225 333939)

Central Wine Bar

This excellent bar has some dangerously comfortable sofas; get there early, lay claim to the one that looks cosiest, and settle in for an evening of delicious, devilish drinking. Downstairs is wine-focused, upstairs is more about the shaken and stirred. During the day, there are also paninis, salads and lashings of tagliatelle.

10 Upper Borough Walls, Bath BA1 1RG

(+44 (0)1225 444770)

The Raincheck Bar

With a touch of Manhattan to its art deco interior and fabulous cocktails, this bar is a chic late-night venue; it's popular with the post-theatre crowd.

34 Monmouth Street, Bath BA1 2AN

(+44 (0)1225 404445)

Moles Club

Housed in a cellar, this well-regarded venue is right at the centre of Somerset’s live music scene. Its indie discos are an essential stop-off for anyone who wants to relive days gone by, dancing to ‘Fool’s Gold’ with a plastic pint glass in their hand. Great fun (www.moles.co.uk).

14 George Street, Bath BA1 2EN

(+44 (0)1225 425045)

The Raven of Bath

This adorable little pub, a family-run freehouse, is full of rambling bookshelves, odd stools and mismatched chairs. It’s as messy and sweet as the endearing real-ale regulars who make a show of holding their pints up to the light (www.theravenofbath.co.uk).

7 Queen Street, Bath BA1 1HE

(+44 (0)1225 462276)

Bonghy-Bo

Named after a line of Edward Lear's nonsense verse and concealed in a courtyard off Bath’s main street, this is one of the city’s best-kept secrets – a good place to order lunchtime noodles at the oriental-themed bar, or sip an evening glass of wine under the heated canopies.

2–3 Barton Court, Upper Borough Walls, Bath BA1 1RZ

(+44 (0)1225 428889)

The Salamander

A little real-ales pub with wood-panelled booths at the back – just perfect for fish and chips or a lunchtime steak sandwich. Can get pretty packed on weekend evenings, although the occasional Irish music sessions are good fun.

3 John Street, Queens Square, Bath BA1 2JL



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