Margate, United Kingdom

No. 42 by Guesthouse, Margate

Price per night from$154.32

Price information

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

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (GBP124.17), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Queenly Victorian

Setting

Plenty of front

Revitalised Victorian hotel No 42 by Guesthouse, Margate has been a front-row witness to the south-east coast’s cultural sea change, set close to both the Turner Contemporary and Dreamland; and now it’s time for its own tide to turn, as the Guesthouse group ushers in a new era of beachfront hospitality. The intricate iron balconies, dainty cornicing and stained-glass windows keep its former-life charms alive; but there’s no resting on nostalgia – DJs will man sunset sessions on the roof terrace, chefs fire up Kentish produce on a robata grill and a spa updates taking the waters for the 21st century. 

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

A glass of sparkling wine for each guest

Facilities

Photos No. 42 by Guesthouse, Margate facilities

Need to know

Rooms

21, including some with sea-view balconies.

Check–Out

11am, but flexible, subject to availability. Earliest check-in, 3pm. Let the hotel know when your train will arrive and someone will pedal out on a cargo bike to whisk your bags to your room.

Prices

Double rooms from £149.00, including tax at 20 per cent.

More details

Some rates include a Continental, full-English or à la carte breakfast, otherwise it’s £20 a guest.

Also

One guest room is wheelchair-accessible and has been specially adapted, and there’s a lift to all floors.

At the hotel

Spa, roof terrace, vinyl library, pantry with free snacks and drinks, charged laundry service, free WiFi. In rooms: smart TV with streaming capabilities, tea- and coffee-making kit, and a high-powered hairdryer.

Our favourite rooms

No disrespect to the repurposed Woolworths building on Margate’s High Street, which the back of the hotel overlooks, but it’s not what you came here to see. No, the gold-sand, blue-sea views out the front are far more soul-stirring. And booking a room with a balcony ensures you squeeze every drop of rare British sunshine out of your stay (or every drop of British rain depending on how hardy you are).

Spa

It’s rare for converted Victorians to have enough room for a spa, but No 42 has three treatment spaces at the lowest level in the building, including one big enough for couples. Clinical massage therapy is a speciality, and all products used are vegan, organic and sustainably- and ethically-sourced.

Packing tips

Bring those buckets and spades – the sand is just across the road – and strap on some skates to swoosh your stuff in Dreamland’s roller room. And, haul in some vinyl from local music shop (and coffeehouse and hairdressers) Cliffs to spin on your room’s record player and bulk up the stash you’re provided with.

Also

For midnight snacks, or just anytime snacks, raid the hotel’s generously filled pantry, stuffed with soft drinks, crisps, sweets and cakes.

Pet‐friendly

Dogs can stay in the Large Guest Room or Large Guest Room with Sea View for £25 a night. See more pet-friendly hotels in Margate.

Children

Well it would be mean to hit the seaside and leave the little ones at home. Kids are welcome to stay (in connecting rooms) and they’ll get bedtime-story books, freedom to raid the pantry and their own menu in the restaurant.

Best for

Juniors, tweens and teens.

Recommended rooms

Keep in mind that extra beds can't be added to rooms, so kids will need to sleep in an adjoining one.

Activities

There’s time-old entertainment in sandcastle building on the beach and paddling in the sea (or swimming in the tidal pool). Dreamland is a surefire winner, with its arcade machines and gentle to go-faster rides, the Turner Contemporary will engage young aesthetes and hold daily-friendly workshops, and the Margate Caves and Shell Grotto are fun curiosities.

Meals

There’s a dedicated kids’ menu in the restaurant. And children can eat their fill of the snacks and sweets in the hotel’s free help-yourself pantry.

No need to pack

Bring any essential kit, rainy-day tech and favourite toys.

Also

The hotel has story books they can loan out for bedtime.

Food and Drink

Photos No. 42 by Guesthouse, Margate food and drink

Top Table

Get an eyeful of those emotive Turner skies from the roof terrace. Balcony tables at the Pearly Cow enjoy the same seafront vistas, only two floors down.

Dress Code

No 42 might be Victorian but there’s no starched stiffness here – in fact the look is as go-with-the-flow as the tide.

Hotel restaurant

There are two dining spots, one decadent, the other a little more health-focused. The Pearly Cow – set in a Twenties-inspired, pillared dining room of nickel-top tables, potted palms and flashes of eau-de-nil – focuses on wildness and freshness in its robata-grill cookery. Surf or turf dishes run the gamut from appetisers such as Whistable oysters, pastrami-cured salmon and tuna crudo, to made-for-sharing spectacles such as whole monkfish tail, côte de boeuf, and a shellfish-laden seafood platter. Breakfast can be as light as a prix-fixe Continental to à la carte plates featuring sweet brown-butter waffles, eggs Benedict or Royale, or the hotel's hearty take on a Full English. Ground-floor, street-facing café Field Trip, at the entrance to the hotel's spa, serves more casual but wholesome fare, such as salads, sandwiches, smoothies and teas.  

Hotel bar

You’ll have two bars from which to kick off or end your night, or even stay at for the whole shebang: the inviting No 42 Lounge, where there’s a replica of Dreamland’s Ferris wheel, ample gins, local ales and meads; and the crowning glory of the hotel’s rooftop, which has fabulous panoramic sea views, sunsets toasted with cocktails and, occasionally, live music.

Last orders

Breakfast is from 7am, lunch from noon and dinner from 6pm. The lounge stays open till 11pm.

Room service

There's no room service at No 42, but a (help-yourself) pantry on the second floor is stocked with pastries, sweets, crisps, chocolate and water (sparkling or filtered).

Location

Photos No. 42 by Guesthouse, Margate location
Address
No. 42 by Guesthouse, Margate
42 High Street
Margate
CT9 1DS
United Kingdom

No 42, Margate is smack, bang by the sea, on Margate’s lively, shop-and-restaurant-lined Marine Drive.

Planes

Southend Airport, a 90-minute drive away, is the closest international hub; it’s billed as London for some budget airlines that fly there (and the train links are pretty reasonable; take note if you're driving, there are tolls at Dartford), but the nearest more-official London-serving airports are London City or Gatwick, both also a 90-minute drive.

Trains

Trains run to Margate from London Victoria and London Bridge, but the Southeastern line the stop is on runs down to Ramsgate, so you could coast along the English Riviera (ahem). The station is just a 10-minute walk away from the hotel.

Automobiles

You don’t need a car in Margate, but if you’re road-tripping along the coast, you can stash your wheels in the hotel car park for £20 a night. Please note, there are only 10 spaces available.

Other

A ferry runs between Calais and Dover, which takes around 90 minutes; from there, Margate is a 40-minute drive.

Worth getting out of bed for

Marine Drive is Marg’s main promenading drag, so close to the golden-sand coast that a zealous fish could maybe make the leap from the bay to your window (this is very unlikely though). The star of many an old time-y postcard, and hazily visible in the back of several Turner paintings, it flicks around into the Harbour Arm passing by local superstar the Turner Contemporary on the way. The gallery helped to pump life back into the town and it’s been thoughtfully designed to show off sea vistas. Its exhibitions are always engaging and visually arresting. More folk art in style is the Shell Lady at the end of the harbour, a statue in the style of whimsical gift shops, allegedly made in tribute to Sophie Booth – Turner’s lover and landlady (Turner’s kind of a big deal here). But wait, there’s more shell-based fun to be had at the curious Shell Grotto, an actually remarkable subterranean feat of decoupage, which was supposedly discovered in the 19th century when the homeowner above was digging a duck pond – but like the walls and ceilings here, the legends around it may be heavily embellished. Take a refreshing dip in the tidal pool, or hire a boat for a jaunt along the Kentish Riviera, and embrace the kitsch at revived amusement park Dreamland. If you like its tongue-in-chic stylings, then you might find a retro neon sign, awning or even a spinning teacup at the likes of Junk Deluxe, Fez (on the High Street) or other vintage emporia (we also like Paraphernalia and Whistle Dixie (on King Street) for one-of-a-kind clothes and homewares). The OG outpost of home-grown skincare brand Haeckels is a must-visit, not just for seaweed-enriched creams, but to indulge in its spa treatments and get a gut-health consultation. At this point, you should pick up fish and chips from always-busy Peter’s Fish Factory (on the seafront), or a gelato from Lulu's (we like the kefir and passionfruit, Bronte pistachio or refreshing raspberry and mint sorbet) and sit in reflective poetic silence at the Nayland Rock Shelter, where TS Eliot came up with part three of The Waste Land. Or end your day on a cheerier – if weirder – note by catching some avant-garde music at the Tom Thumb Theatre or partaking in joyfully silly pop quizzes and pole-dancing sessions, or watching drag kings and queens do their thing at Camp bar, up in Cliftonville.

Local restaurants

Cuisine takes a sea-fare-ing turn in Margate, where fresh catches are both deep-fried and fine-dining – we recommend booking ahead, because some of these places are small in size but giant in reputation. Mori Mori has beautiful bento boxes, a punchy ramen with a soy and nashi pear broth base, and izakaya plates – we like the bao sandos, okonomiyaki and white-crab onigiri. Angela’s makes for an elegant date-night spot (even if demolishing cider-drunk mussels, ray in peppercorn sauce and garlicky lobster puts that end-of-the-night kiss on hold). Buoy and Oyster is a touch more traditional – you could just pick away at the seafood bar’s Bloody Mary prawns and ’nduja-piqued scallops, or try something more unique: the mussel carbonara or South Indian monkfish curry. On the Harbour Arm, Sargasso is a DFL (its chefs used to work at East London’s Brawn) that’s fully settled in and embraced by locals; each of its plates deserves a little squee of joy (at the time of going to press, its parmesan puffs are off the menu, but if you see them, order several plates), with the likes of mackerel with monk’s beard and a shot of blood orange, or clams marinating in sherry, though even simple plates such as egg mayo and anchovy or oysters with hot sausage will have you swooping in like a seagull. And, Bottega Caruso is a surprisingly authentic Italian where fresh pasta is crafted each morning using imported Italian aged-grain flour and the chefs have made ingredient connections across Kent. Nibble at very-small-batch parmesan with persimmon, borrow a paisan’s sense of nostalgia for the family-recipe ricotta dumplings and squeeze in the tiramisu, which is slugged with aged rum.  

Local cafés

Mannings seafood stall (by the Turner Contemporary) may be a van dishing out whelks that you eat with a toothpick, but a selection of champagne and oysters adds some ooh là là. Fort’s Cafe showcases very special coffee roasters, serves delicious brunch-y, eggy things and focaccia with meatballs (or even more intriguing fillings), and some daring flavour combos – anchovies and strawberry anyone? And the Old Kent Market was once a cinema, but now it’s a pizzeria, bakery, Greek restaurant, roastery, sweet shop and various bars (including one set in a bus) in its new food-hall guise. Wildes can be both the cause of and solution to your hangover, with both a classic-reviving cocktail menu of Sherry Cobblers and Snowball Royales, and a brunch menu offering brioche buns filled with truffled scrambled eggs and tarragon mushrooms on sourdough. 

Local bars

The Lifeboat is less spit and sawdust than it used to be (they’ve quite literally swept the sawdust away), but it still feels like the kind of boozer you might hear a few salty yarns in. In winter, the old stone hearth is lit, in summer the rickety long tables out front make for sociable pints, and we recommend taste-testing the Jenga-stacked boxes of fruity ciders. The Harbour Arms Bar is set on the, um, Harbour Arm, and for a micro-pub it has an impressive selection of local brews. Daisy is a cocktail bar with all the cheeky fun of a ribald vintage postcard. A machine pumps out teeny frozen Martinys, tequila shots come with a green-juice chaser to balance things out, and the Five go to Mexico is dubbed ‘the kind of margarita the Man From Del Monte would get in if he was having a big one’. Top up the tequila at Mariachi, where cocktails are by turns smoked, spicy, fruity and undeniably sexy. Pair with deep-fried Babybels from the bar-snacks menu. And you don’t need the constitution of an early-2000s Pete Doherty to have a rock-and-roll night at the gothic-style Arcady Lounge in the Libertines-owned Albion Rooms hotel.

Reviews

Photos No. 42 by Guesthouse, Margate reviews

Anonymous review

Every hotel featured is visited personally by members of our team, given the Smith seal of approval, and then anonymously reviewed. As soon as our reviewers have returned from this reimagined Victorian beachfront hotel along the Kentish Riviera and unpacked their Margo in Margate prints from the Turner Contemporary shop and vintage funfair ephemera, a full account of their 99-with-a-Flake break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust, here's a quick peek inside No 42 by Gueshouse Margate…

Exhibiting more bounce back than a tautly inflated beach ball is Margate’s speciality. And if hip DFL chefs setting up shop on the Harbour Arm, indie-band darlings pivoting to hotelier-dom and homegrown Haeckels skincare gaining global renown aren’t enough signs it’s back in the purple patch of its Victorian heyday, the Guesthouse hotel group refreshing an iconic hotel of that era – now No 42 by Guesthouse, Margate – proves it surely as the tide keeps rolling back in. Nostalgic warm and fuzzies are kept in place with a prime beachfront location, the restored brick façade with its frilly iron balconies, elegant stained glass in its sea-view restaurant, record-players in rooms, and a pantry filled with retro snacks (that’s free to raid, FYI). But there are signs of the new times too: DJ sets for rooftop sundowners, a spa that’s more revitalising than taking the waters, and a kitchen with a hyper-local mindset and fired-up robata grill. A joyful, by-the-seaside stay poised for Margate’s next move. 

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Price per night from $154.32