New Forest, United Kingdom

New Park Manor

Price per night from$360.04

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (GBP265.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Relaxed but well-manor-ed

Setting

Woodland wonderland

Historic charm and natural beauty abound at New Park Manor. There’s no country house stuffiness or stiffness in sight though: this is a relaxed, no-rules residence where children, dogs and grown-ups alike can stay and play in the heart of the New Forest. Entertainment unfolds across the pony-grazed grounds, kids’ den, and cinema, with woodland-inspired rooms, pools and hot tubs to retreat to for some rural R&R.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

An adults-only Somadome session or pre-dinner cocktail each

Facilities

Photos New Park Manor facilities

Need to know

Rooms

25, including four suites.

Check–Out

11am, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm.

More details

Rates include a Continental buffet breakfast with à la carte options such as made-to-order eggs and pancakes.

Also

This historic, Grade-II listed building is sadly not suitable for wheelchair users.

At the hotel

Expansive grounds, outdoor play area, cinema, games room, library, snug and lounge, charged laundry service and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: TV, Nespresso coffee machine, tea-making kit, bathrobes, slippers and Bramley bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Named after local trees and animals, the rooms and suites at New Park Manor are brimming with whimsical, nature-nodding details. Muntjac, in the newest wing of the hotel, offers ample space to stay and play, with soaring ceilings, exposed beams, and an elevated terrace overlooking the New Forest treeline. Couples should bed down in the main house, opting for a Cosy Room or Classic Room; we also love the King Charles Deluxe Room for its regal four-poster and panoramic forest views.

Poolside

Fairweather swimmers can make use of the heated outdoor pool from May to September, with its shimmering, riverbed-inspired tiling and green-striped parasols popping out above the encircling hedgerows. Indoors, the all-season 16-metre spa pool is framed by full-height windows, offering verdant vistas over the forest and deer-dotted gardens.

Spa

Whether you’re planning some downtime away from the little ones, or a family wellness day, the spa at New Park Manor is a light-filled space with a sauna, steam room, and adventure showers off the main indoor pool. You and your Smith can unwind on the adults-only outdoor terrace with steamy dips in two sunken hot tubs, and try a 20-minute meditation session in the Somadome, a technology-enabled pod which combines LED colour, light and magnetic therapy with binaural beats. Equal parts sci-fi and serene. Organic seaweed-based treatments by Ishga from Scotland’s Hebridean Islands include massages, facials, wraps and scrubs, as well as junior experiences for adult-accompanied guests as young as three. Mani-pedis, mum-to-be massages, and treatments adapted for cancer patients are also available.

Packing tips

Swimwear is a must if you’re planning to max out the spa facilities, along with all your country pursuit clobber.

Also

Keep your eyes peeled for the pair of white deer which join the grazing herd. Local legend has it that sightings will bring you good luck.

Pet‐friendly

Dogs are welcome to stay in all rooms (except Cosy Rooms) for £25 a night, which includes a bed, bowl, ball and treats. There’s a dog-friendly room service menu and afternoon tea in the lounge. See more pet-friendly hotels in New Forest.

Children

The more, the merrier at this family-focused manor, where little Smiths can frolic across the wildlife-filled grounds and child-curated indoor spaces. To get the best configuration for your family, it's best to contact Smith24.

Best for

All ages, especially during the school holidays when extra kid-focused activities are on offer.

Recommended rooms

Under-12s stay for free when sharing your room, and all but the Cosy and Classic Rooms can sleep at least two children. The One Bedroom Suites' bunk beds are a tween sleepover dream, and you can Bambi-spot from the Two Bedroom Deer Park Suite's terrace..

Crèche

Daily two-hour sessions (between 9.30am and 2.30pm) at the Ofsted-registered Four Bears Den are included in the room rate, you’ll just need to pre-book. Designed to feel like an enchanted forest with toadstool murals, mini chairs with bunny ears, and a woodland-green palette, the crèche welcomes little Smiths from three-months-old to eight years. It’s jam-packed with toys and games, as well as sandpits and an outdoor play area with swings and a zip line.

Activities

Arts and crafts, scavenger hunts, marshmallow-toasting, mocktail-making, and nature walks, the list really does go on. Gather for nightly storytime with milk and cookies, or in the screening room for family-friendly films and popcorn. Older kids can hang out in the games room playing table tennis and retro arcade-style games, or indulge in a junior spa treatment, like a little Ishga facial or massage.

Swimming pool

Both the indoor and outdoor pools are child-friendly, with floats and waterproof toys on request.

Meals

Dine as a family in the Vinery restaurant, with plenty of colouring books, crayons, and games to keep little ones busy until their organic, vegan purée, Pom-Bears-accompanied sandwich, and build-your-own ice-cream sundae arrives. The kids’ menu will please even the fussiest of eaters, with Bugaboo highchairs available on request. There’s also an afternoon tea for children, covering finger sandwiches, cupcakes, and veggie crudités.

Babysitting

Babysitters can be booked via the Four Bears Den for £25 an hour (for a minimum of two hours).

No need to pack

Smart baby monitors and listening devices are supplied for free.

Also

You can borrow Bugaboo pushchairs, potties, and Yoto audio players for bedtime stories. There’s also a milk butler service if your baby bottles need to be sterilised and milk warmed up.

Sustainability efforts

Since the 18th century, the New Park estate has implemented sustainable farming practices, alongside reforesting large swathes of countryside. A dedicated plantation of trees was used for Royal Navy shipbuilding, and a hay farm established to sustain local deer through severe winters. There are several onsite charging points for electric vehicles, and bathrooms are stocked with eco-friendly, biodegradable Bramley products.

Food and Drink

Photos New Park Manor food and drink

Top Table

Ask for a table in the window for a front-row seat to the bucolic estate.

Dress Code

It’s all very dressed-down during the day (wellies often still on, Barbour jackets slung across the shoulders), but some smarter cashmere wouldn’t go amiss at supper.

Hotel restaurant

The Vinery is a relaxed, all-day dining spot set within a garden-wrapped glasshouse, with deliberately mis-matched tables and conservatory-style chairs spilling onto an outdoor terrace. It’s a family- and dog-friendly affair, where afternoon tea and Sunday lunch is served between seasonally-changing British classics for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Fishfinger sandwiches, wild woodland pizzas, and butterscotch-drenched sticky toffee puddings are just a few of the crowd-pleasers on offer. The Stag feels slightly more formal (welcoming adults and over-16s) with its dark wood panelling and glitzy chandeliers, but there are sumptuous armchairs to kick back in and nature books to peruse between courses which soften the atmosphere.

Hotel bar

Cosy up by the fire in the Stag for an evening tipple over a game of chess, or take some jugs of Pimms onto the terrace when the sun’s out. The wine list is extensive yet thoughtfully curated, featuring a few bottles from Hambledon, a Hampshire-based vineyard nearby.

Last orders

Breakfast is from 7.30am to 10am, lunch from noon to 2pm, afternoon tea from 2pm to 4.30pm, and dinner from 5pm to 8.45pm (in the Vinery) and 6pm to 9pm (in the Stag).

Room service

In-room dining is available during kitchen opening hours (ideal for flexible family mealtimes).

Location

Photos New Park Manor location
Address
New Park Manor
Lyndhurst Road
Brockenhurst
SO42 7QH
United Kingdom

In the leafy heart of Hampshire’s New Forest, New Park Manor lies between the picturesque towns of Lyndhurst and Brockenhurst, around two hours’ drive from London.

Planes

Bournemouth and Southampton are the closest airports, both around 30 minutes’ drive from the hotel. International arrivals will need to come into London Heathrow or Gatwick, which are 90 minutes and two hours by car respectively.

Trains

It’s 90 minutes by rail from London Waterloo to Brockenhurst, which is a five-minute drive from the hotel.

Automobiles

You’ll no doubt want to explore the New Forest on foot, by bicycle, or even horseback, but a set of wheels will put the entire national park within easy reach (and there’s ample free parking at the hotel).

Other

Ask for the hotel’s helipad co-ordinations in advance if you’re planning to arrive by air.

Worth getting out of bed for

Ever since William the Conqueror established his hunting grounds near Lyndhurst, this historic village has been considered the heart of the New Forest (and it’s just a five-minute drive, or hour’s amble from New Park Manor). Before hitting the woodland trails for hiking, cycling, horse-riding, or a picnic, pop into the New Forest Heritage Centre which hosts nature-inspired exhibitions and workshops. You’ll likely see fallow deer roaming the hotel’s grounds, but for a closer look, there’s a viewing platform at Bolderwood Deer Sanctuary overlooking a wildflower meadow (time your visit for the daily feeding times with the forest rangers). Tiring out little Smiths is easy when you’ve got Peppa Pig World, Exbury Gardens (with a steam railway), Longdown Activity Farm, Marwell Zoo, and New Forest Water Park on your doorstep; Beaulieu Estate is just 20 minutes’ drive away, home to the National Motor Museum, the Montagu family home, and mediaeval abbey. Further afield, there’s Barton-on-Sea and Highcliffe Beach for sandcastle-building and blustery coastal walks.

Local restaurants

For traditional pub grub and a cask-ale-stocked bar, head to the Huntsman in Brockenhurst. There’s a pop-up burger shack in the garden on weekends, and a sell-out Sunday roast to book ahead for. Also in Brockenhurst is Smith stablemate the Pig, with its greenhouse restaurant, outdoor wood-fired oven, and seasonally-changing menu featuring foraged and homegrown produce. In Lyndhurst, stop for a few pints and pie of the day in the Oak Inn, a quaint tavern that can be reached on foot from the hotel (it’s around an hour’s walk through the forest).

Local cafés

There are tearooms aplenty along Lyndhurst’s pretty highstreet, but we’ll plump for the homemade scones and toasted teacakes at Peggy May’s café, which are all freshly baked each morning.

Reviews

Photos New Park Manor reviews
Martin Dickie

Anonymous review

By Martin Dickie, Wistful wordsmith

Toddlers don’t discriminate. If they’re going to grab a stranger’s ponytail or throw yoghurt out the window, they’ll just as happily do it at home as they will on public transport, at Claridge’s, or during the speech at your sister’s wedding. 

The assumption for many parents is that the only place such behaviour would be tolerated (other than your own tired-looking living room) would be a tired-looking resort populated by tired-looking mums and dads congregating around a tired-looking buffet. But there is a refreshingly new kind of hotel where little ones can perform acts of tyranny without you praying the earth would swallow you — and them — up.

On the surface, New Park Manor, one of five similarly styled stays in the South of England (run by the aptly named Luxury Family Hotels group, whose collection also includes Fowey Hall), is a very handsome hotel set on a leafy green estate in the heart of the New Forest. It has a stylish dark-wood lounge and bar, a light-filled conservatory restaurant hung with post-modern art, a parasol-lined outdoor pool, and agreeably comfortable rooms with pops of colour and (in some) parquet flooring. So far, so grown-up.

But look closer and you’ll see the clever ergonomic highchairs stowed neatly in the corner; the nicely styled blackboard with the programme of activities; the mix of sofas, rattan seating and dining-table chairs to accommodate any kind of family configuration. There are parents just like you, all dealing with toddlers pouring soup on the floor or screaming inexplicably at nothing, somehow taking place in a convivial atmosphere of calm and consideration.

We arrived with a hungry, crying one-year-old and were welcomed cheerily by a team of staff who smoothly checked us in, provided said child with New Park Manor paper and crayons, and delivered us cocktails and Caesar salads as if it were the easiest thing in the world.

To our left, through a cleverly positioned swing door, we discovered a playroom with table-tennis tables, arcade machines, play mats and box upon box of toys and games. It is here, every day at 5pm, that a member of staff delivers story time on bean bags to an any-aged audience. It’s where kids’ films are screened in the afternoons and evenings, too.

Just up the hall, inordinately thoughtful childcarers receive children at the Four Bears Den crèche, for two free hours each day. And next door to this, just as conveniently, is the spa. A proper spa, with a sauna and steam room, lap pool, indoor and outdoor Jacuzzis, and string of treatment rooms. We felt guilty leaving our child next door… for all of 20 seconds. Given our recent sleep pattern, to call this simple rest and relaxation wouldn’t do it justice — our treatments were restorative on a much deeper level.

Later on, having successfully gotten our child off to sleep in the travel cot (conveniently assembled in our room), and feeling rosy-cheeked, we decided to have a more intimate dinner for two in the main dining room. This was made possible by the video monitors, also already in situ, that were provided by staff, meaning we could enjoy our slow-cooked lamb ragù and chimichurri monkfish safe in the knowledge we’d be alerted to any disturbances. An uninterrupted night’s sleep followed, our first in weeks. 

In the morning, we joined other families at breakfast and found ourselves staring across the room with beaming smiles that, unspoken, said things like: ‘We can’t believe our luck’ and ‘Does this place really exist?’ We daren’t say it out loud in case some sort of spell is broken, and this parallel universe, where parenting is a lark, collapses in on itself.

New Park Manor isn’t just about ditching the kids in the crèche and disappearing off to the spa, either. There are family activities on select days, such as flower-pot painting and biscuit decorating. And we had an equally lovely time roaming around the grounds before a day out at Exbury Gardens, with its steam railway.

On our return, staff were just as smiling, genuinely pleased to see us, despite immediately having to deal with a jar of dog treats that had been upturned and spread about the floor. It got me thinking as we checked out: being well-organised and well-kempt are two things that can easily drop down the parenthood priority list. Considering this hotel’s raison d’être is family holidays, New Park Manor is exceptionally good at both.

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Price per night from $360.04