Need to know
Rooms
36.
Check–Out
11am; earliest check-in, 3pm.
More details
Rates include a continental breakfast; or you can pay extra for a cooked breakfast. Guests staying on a dinner, bed and breakfast rate are given a dinner allowance of £40 a person per night, excluding drinks. Access to the spa is excluded from rates.
Also
The Coach House is wheelchair-accessible and one bedroom has been adapted for mobility-impaired guests.
At the hotel
200 acres of grounds, treatment rooms, bikes to borrow, free WiFi. In rooms: Roberts Radios, flatscreen TV, mini fridge with free bottled water, tray of tea-making treats and Nespresso coffee machine, Noble Isle toiletries, bathrobes, hairdryer.
Our favourite rooms
All have their own charm, character and exposed timber beams – most have freestanding roll-top baths and king-sized beds. The Hayloft rooms are up a narrow old stone staircase and have fabulous views over the courtyard and paddock. The Garden Rooms have their own mini outdoor seating areas. The ground-floor Tack Room is the most spacious. Taking inspiration from the blue-and-white pottery found in the nearby woods, it has a plush linen sofa opposite your own wood-burning stove.
Spa
The Forest Spa, with its treatment huts, heated pool and thermal facilities is a delightful spot for a holistic time out. Organic Voya and Aromatherapy Associates products are used in a range of signature mud masks, bespoke massages and facials, alongside bathing rituals and forest therapy massages. There are special pregnancy-safe treatments for mums-to-be, too. Be sure to book in advance, the spa doesn't take walk-ins and access to the facilities, including the pool, is extra.
Packing tips
Stout boots and waterproofs – you’re going to want to go walking, and the weather can be changeable. Don't worry about Wellies, you can borrow a pair of Barbours, but you may want to bring some Tupperware in which to bring back all those delicious Yorkshire cheeses.
Also
Middleton Lodge Estate was built in 1780 for a local mining clan and has remained a family home ever since, acquired by the Allisons in 1980. It’s a textbook example of a Georgian estate, which owners James and Rebecca spent nearly a decade restoring.
Pet‐friendly
Dogs are allowed in the Coach House’s Comfy rooms, for £30 a night. Dogs (except guide dogs) aren’t allowed in the hotel’s main areas, lounge, restaurant, walled garden or orchard. They must be kept on their lead and away from the other animals on-site. See more pet-friendly hotels in North Yorkshire.
Children
Children are welcome. Dairy Family Room sleeps four; cots (free for under-twos) and extra beds (£30 a night for under-15s) can be added to the Coach House Comfy, Dairy and Tack Rooms. Highchairs, monitors and kids’ menus are available on request.
Sustainability efforts
If the food isn’t grown on the estate itself, it’s locally sourced, seasonal and free-range. All the heat on the estate comes from their wood chip boiler, which uses renewable biomass to heat all the water for baths, showers, under-floor heating and radiators. Waste is recycled as compost for the gardens, and their own borehole produces mineral water for the estate (rain in the Yorkshire Dales is filtered through miles of limestone before being drawn up here). Recently, the estate added electric car charging units and the Coach House has just embarked on a new electrical kitchen.