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The 10 best beaches in Northern Ireland

The 10 best beaches in Northern Ireland

Telegraph7 days ago
Though the coastline of Northern Ireland is relatively short, it's peppered with some beautiful beaches, from tiny, pebbled coves to wide stretches of golden sands. And there's plenty to do beyond simply spreading a towel on the beach – you can try your hand at surfing, take a sauna on the sand or even stumble upon a herd of neighbourhood cows.
And at some, you'll find top-notch seafood restaurants just off the shore, so you can tuck into the catch of the day with the scent of the ocean in the air.
All our recommendations below have been hand selected and tested by our resident destination expert to help you discover the best things to do in Northern Ireland. Find out more below, or for further inspiration, explore our guides to Northern Ireland's best hotels, things to do, restaurants and nightlife.
Benone Strand
A sweeping stretch of golden sand, this beach has some of the best views in Northern Ireland – on a clear day you can see Donegal's Inishowen just over the water, and if you look up at the cliffs behind you'll see the historic dome of Mussenden Temple. It's a good spot for beginner surfing, too.
Insider tip: The HotBox Sauna is right on the sand, so you can build up a sweat before you leap into the sea.
Area: County Londonderry
How to get there: Free parking at the beach entrance.
Whitepark Bay
This gentle curve of white sand isn't for everyone – it's a steep walk from the car park, and the rips mean you can't swim in the sea there. But that just adds to its secluded, remote feel. You might also spot cows wandering on the sand, which belong to a nearby farmer.
Insider tip: This is prime birdwatching territory, so bring your binoculars.
Area: County Antrim
How to get there: There's free, but limited, parking.
Portstewart Strand
With picturesque sand dunes, gentle waves for bodyboarding and an exceptional restaurant right on the sand, Portstewart ticks loads of boxes on a beach wish list. It's a great spot for a walk, whether you stick to the sands or explore the trails in the dunes and the nearby Bann Estuary.
Insider tip: Book a table at Harry's Shack, an excellent seafood restaurant overlooking the beach.
Area: County Londonderry
How to get there: Park at the National Trust car park on the beach.
Helen's Bay
It's hard to believe this tree-lined beach is barely 20 minutes from Belfast, but Helen's Bay is a little slice of coastal bliss just up the road from the capital. It's fairly small, so sunbathing spots fill up quickly, but the clear waters and lush grasses behind more than make up for that.
Insider tip: If it's busy, walk 20 minutes along the coast to Crawfordsburn Beach, which is usually quieter.
Area: County Down
How to get there: Helen's Bay train station is a 10-minute walk away.
Tyrella Beach
This Blue Flag beach is a great spot if you like to keep active – there's a lifeguard in summer months, it's good for kayaking and you can ride horses, but only in the evening during summer. There are great views of the Mourne Mountains, too.
Insider tip: The sand dunes are protected and are the habitat of rare lizards, so be careful when you're walking.
Area: County Down
How to get there: The main car park is free outside of the summer months.
Murlough National Nature Reserve
Just outside the Victorian seaside town of Newcastle, Murlough is home to undulating sand dunes, with lush green grass on one side and the sea on the other. When the tide is out, the beach is glorious, with a view of Slieve Donard at the end.
Insider tip: The onward walk to Newcastle is beautiful, but look out for high tide, which can cut you off.
Area: County Down
How to get there: Parking is limited, so walk from Newcastle if it's full.
Whiterocks Beach
This cliff-lined beach (hence the name) is particularly striking, with rocky outcrops reaching out onto the sands featuring caves, arches and formations, and the remains of Dunluce Castle on the clifftop. It's a popular spot for water sports, from surfing and kayaking to snorkelling and diving around the caves.
Insider tip: Walk the almost three-mile Whiterocks Coastal Path above, for great views over the beach.
Area: County Antrim
How to get there: Free parking.
Cushendun Beach
There's an old school sense of charm to this village, with white buildings lining the harbour and a peaceful little beach. Keep your eyes peeled for the neighbourhood seals, who can sometimes be seen on the shore.
Insider tip: If you're a Game of Thrones fan, visit the Cushendun Caves at the other side of the harbour – it's where Melisandre birthed a shadow demon.
Area: County Antrim
How to get there: There's a car park behind the beach.
Ballygally Beach
This wide sandy beach is popular with families, due to the excellent sand castle potential and the playground near the main car park. It's good for swimming or paddling, and there are pretty rock pools at low tide.
Insider tip: Ballygally Castle Hotel is right on the beach, if you're looking for a place to stay or a bite to eat.
Area: County Antrim
How to get there: The main car park is just over the road.
Coney Island
It might not be the most visually stunning in Northern Ireland, but there's a definite charm to Coney Island – after all, Van Morrison named a song after it. Not technically an island, this headland between Ardglass and Killough is lined with houses (many of which are holiday rentals) and is wonderfully peaceful.
Insider tip: Be sure to select the Co Down Coney Island in your GPS, as there's another in the west of Ireland and one in Lough Neagh, too.
Area: County Down
How to get there: There's street parking.
How we choose
Every beach in this curated list has been expertly chosen by our destination expert, to provide you with their insider perspective. We cover a range of areas and styles, from popular city beaches to lesser known corners – to best suit every type of traveller. We update this list regularly to keep up with the latest openings and provide up to date recommendations.
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About our expert
Nicola Brady
I'm originally from Sussex, and I went on holiday to Ireland 16 years ago and never came back. While I'm now based in Dublin, I spent a decade living on the Northern Irish border and still visit regularly.
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I've visited Portugal for 20 years — these are its best beachfront hotels
I've visited Portugal for 20 years — these are its best beachfront hotels

Times

time6 hours ago

  • Times

I've visited Portugal for 20 years — these are its best beachfront hotels

Portugal has always had at least one eye on the ocean — it's the prow of Europe, facing squarely into the Atlantic, and the sea has shaped everything from its history to its cuisine. It's also been a driver for tourism; Brits have flocked to the Algarve since the 1960s, drawn by the golden stretches of sand that characterise the sun-drenched south coast. The region is more diverse than many give it credit for. In the 20 years I've been visiting I've simply avoided the overdeveloped Albufeira and spent many happy holidays on the glorious barrier island beaches to the east and cliff-sheltered coves to the west. While the Algarve's shoreline is still the biggest crowd-pleaser — meaning most of my choices for the country's best beachfront hotels are found in this region — other coasts have begun to beguile tourists too, from the dune-backed beaches around Comporta to the surf-lashed sands north of Lisbon. Portugal also excels at urban beaches, with Porto's Foz do Douro suburb and Lisbon's coastal neighbour Cascais offering elegant, metropolitan versions of the seaside. There's a great variety of hotels near these beaches too. Eco-retreats, sleek boutiques and owner-managed passion projects with character, like Monte da Bemposta, where guests can go for beach rides on the farmstay's horses, are just as easy to find as large properties with multiple restaurants and sports facilities. Families are very well catered for, but more than a third of the hotels on my list are quieter spots more suited to grown-up guests. • Read our full guide to Portugal As you'll see from the prices, Portugal offers exceptional value for money, and not only when it comes to accommodation. You'll find Michelin stars in the dining mix, but more rustic food is similarly delicious. In Portimao, Maria do Mar pays homage to Portugal's historic maritime industry by serving only canned fish — the delicate and tasty dishes will convert sceptics — and in the thriving fishing ports of Olhao and Sesimbra you'll dine well and cheaply on freshly grilled sardines near the docks. My favourite spot for a seaside feast is Culatra Island, a sparsely populated sand-spit where oysters and clams are farmed, travelling mere metres before they're served. Pair your meal with a glass of Portugal's excellent and well-priced white wine — perhaps an arinto, often grown near the sea, or as the Portuguese say, 'where you can hear the crabs sing'. Do remember, because the Portuguese coast is on the Atlantic not the Mediterranean, water temperatures are fresh even in the middle of summer, and not all beaches will be suitable for swimming. The wild waves of the west coast in particular should be respected. This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue A ten-minute walk through fragrant pine forest brings guests at this warm and understated hotel to a long stretch of soft, blond sand lapped by shallow, safe-to-swim waters. If the Octant Praia Verde were in the central Algarve the beach would be heaving in summer, but here in the east it never feels too crowded. With simple but attractive contemporary interiors, the curving, steel-framed building is softened with wooden accents that mirror the sylvan setting. Families love the tree-lined saltwater pool, the suites with kitchenettes and sofa beds, the wood-fired pizzas in the restaurant and the complimentary summer activity programme for kids, featuring fun from biscuit-baking to pyjama parties. This year's extension takes the room count to 80 and has added a B&B doubles from £125 ( Fly to Faro • Read our full guide to the Algarve Neighbouring the Octant, this newcomer offers the same gorgeous beach but with extra bells and whistles. Luxe villas and apartments done out in tasteful, sun-bleached tones are scattered among pines, cork oaks and wind-blown dunes. Then there are two sleek pools, a kids' club, a sports centre with a football pitch, tennis and padel courts, yoga classes and spa treatments. The restaurant, bar and beach club share design DNA — lots of rattan and greenery. Borrow bikes to cycle the shorefront trails, rent water sports equipment on the beach, or let the concierge loose and explore the region in style with a scenic gyrocopter flight or a day charter of a B&B doubles from £297 ( Fly to Faro You won't find hotels built on the sandy barrier islands that stretch along the coast between Cacela Velha and Faro. This village-style property on the mainland close to pretty Tavira, converted from tuna fishermen's summertime quarters, is as close as it gets. There's a small lagoon beach in walking distance and a ferry transfer from its private pier will buzz you over to car-free Ilha da Tavira, where the sand stretches for seven miles. Houses, workshops and warehouses form the 161 cosy rooms, and the school is now the kids' club. A museum documents the fishing industry's history, but the main attraction is nature; within the Ria Formosa Natural Park, coastal walks and rich birdlife are on the B&B doubles from £90 ( Fly to Faro A wooden walkway leads from the hotel grounds right to the sands of Praia da Falesia. Backed by apricot-toned cliffs, this vast beach has retained an unspoilt feel despite sitting in the heart of a developed area. It stretches for five miles, and crowds thin out if you walk a few minutes beyond the main access points. The low-slung hotel buildings overlook an expansive, cabana-lined pool complex, and while the restaurants and lobby are quite trendily designed with oversize furniture, impressionistic murals and low-lighting, the 311 rooms are more calmly decorated. The spa is a highlight, and the hotel offers a series of retreats hosted by fitness B&B doubles from £150 ( Fly to Faro This sprawling and self-contained upmarket haven spreads across 178 acres of prime clifftop above Falesia beach, with one of its 15 restaurants and bars set right on the sand. With 684 rooms, suites and villas it's a veritable village. You'll find every facility you might think of — a kids' club with a pool, pirate ship and bouncy castle; a nine-hole golf course; the now de rigueur tennis and padel courts; a football academy; a spa and extensive gym — and plenty you probably haven't, from cookery lessons and a games arcade to an escape room and a treetop-high rope course, new this B&B doubles from £184 ( Fly to Faro Once you've checked in at this oasis-like ultra-luxury boutique in the tranquil resort of Gale you'll forget how close you are to Albufeira — it's a 15-minute drive away, but hidden behind the headland. The 13 large, individually decorated rooms and suites all have sea views, and some have private pools, hot tubs or their own area of garden. The palm-shaded, flower-fragranced grounds contain a heated pool and are front-on to the sandy, rock-framed cove, where the hotel's beach shack serves sushi on the shore. The main restaurant, all dainty plates, white tablecloths and ocean views, has retained two Michelin stars since 1999, and hotel guests have priority booking. There's a minimum stay of two B&B doubles from £893 ( Fly to Faro Early birds catch the worm, and this midsize hotel bagged one of the Algarve's best locations back in 1966, right above the cliff-sheltered, butter-yellow sands of Praia da Cova Redonda. A recent refurb means its retro curves feel trendy, not tired, and the connection to the sea is strong, with five saltwater swimming pools scattered through the grounds and a thalassotherapy focus at the spa. When you're not basking at the beach, there's racket sports and cooking classes, plus a kids' club and bi-weekly organic barbecues alongside four restaurants. Choose from serene suites or multi-bedroom residences, perfect for B&B doubles from £224 ( Fly to Faro • 16 of the best family hotels in the Algarve It's two-for-one on beaches at this tranquil, traditionally styled hotel on the stretch of coastline between Alporchinos and Carvoeira. A path from the grounds leads to Albandeira beach, a little gem with clear water (bring a snorkel) and a famous rock arch. During low tide a natural tunnel connects to a second, 'secret' beach, Praia da Estaquinha — but keep an eye on the time or you'll be swimming back. Recently renovated rooms and suites are sleeker than the slightly dated apartments, but the gardens and pools are beautiful, and the restaurant serves Portuguese favourites such as prawns with rice and B&B doubles from £94 ( Fly to Faro A belle époque mansion with a palm-fringed pool anchors this lively resort, a refined, adults-only haven overlooking Praia da Rocha, one of the western Algarve's largest beaches. High ceilings, chequerboard marble floors, intricate azulejo tile scenes and stained-glass windows give a real sense of grandeur, which won't be dispelled by the smart spa by L'Occitane, or the Michelin-starred restaurant that serves tasting menus featuring local produce and a vast selection of Portuguese wines. Choose between 18 rooms in historic buildings or another 20 in a modern B&B doubles from £284 ( Fly to Faro Clifftop hotels — so common in Portugal — excel at views, but for parents of young children the hike up and down to the beach can be a pain. This smart (if a tad soulless) low-rise property on the eastern outskirts of Lagos has easy and flat access to the wide, sandy Meia Praia, plus an all-inclusive package, a kids' club running in the summer months, a children's pool and junior suites with sofa beds. Alongside the main buffet and poolside snack bar is an à la carte option that features Portuguese classics. 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Tots up to teens are comprehensively catered for: the kids' club accepts those from six months old; playgrounds, petanque and mini-golf are dotted around the grounds; tennis and football academies run in the holidays alongside swimming lessons; plus there's a BMX pump track, a games room and a water sports centre on the beach with windsurfing, kayaking and stand-up paddleboarding. The six restaurants all have kids' menus, and accommodation is in rooms, apartments and Room-only doubles from £124 ( Fly to Faro • 13 of the best beaches in the Algarve The wind and waves at the Algarve's westernmost town make it surfer central and this airy, minimalist but nevertheless child-friendly hotel has its own surf centre to get them started. It's a lovely spot even if you don't want to catch waves, with exceptional sea and sunset views and a large if rather windswept pool. The restaurant focuses on dishes from the wood-fired oven, the bar has a wide selection of gins and the spa features a sauna and indoor heated pool. The small town beach is right outside the door but the larger, dune-backed Praia Martinhal and cliff-sheltered Praia da Mareta are both ten minutes away on foot. There are 144 rooms and suites, the latter with balconies and B&B doubles from £79 ( Fly to Faro While the southern edge of the Algarve is covered with hotels, the wild west coast has strict building regulations which keep its clifftops virgin. One of the closest to the shoreline is this converted quinta, where the traditional terracotta tiles and whitewashed walls have been broken up by expanses of glass and the decor exudes a kind of upmarket monastic calm. Breakfast is served in the airy cantina, and outside you'll find a heated pool, firepit, woodburning sauna and yoga deck. Complimentary bikes mean you can cycle to Odeceixe beach, a horseshoe of sand bordered by the Seixe river and the B&B doubles from £157 ( Fly to Faro With its cork oaks, olive trees and vineyards, the Alentejo region is noted for its rural farm stays, so there are fewer accommodation options on the coast. This best-of-both-worlds hotel in the heart of the regional nature park has farm animals to feed and its own vegetable garden, but it's also a five-minute walk to the wild, surf-bashed Praia da Ilha do Pessegueiro, which faces a small islet that's home to a ruined fortress. Explore on foot, two wheels or four hooves — the hotel can organise bikes and horseriding. The bedrooms, in the low, whitewashed, terracotta-roofed houses that are signature to the region, have bohemian charm and meals focus on local produce. There's a shared pool and padel courts on site. Book early for school holidays — it's understandably popular with B&B doubles from £95 ( Fly to Lisbon Development restrictions mean that if you want to stay right by the sea in the fashionable coastal village of Comporta, you'll need to book a villa because there are no hotels. But with its own beach club on the idyllic, dune-backed Praia do Carvalhal stretch, accessed via a complimentary 10-minute shuttle service, this famously chic hotel still brings the sand within easy reach. The main property is set in a country estate, with a pool surrounded by pine trees, a firepit and spa. Dining is refined and uses locally sourced ingredients — Iberian pork with a jus and local scarlet prawns made into a bisque, for example. Much of the accommodation is in modernist wooden cabanas, some with private plunge pools, and others overlooking an eco-friendly bio-pool populated by a community of particularly vocal B&B doubles from £166 ( Fly to Lisbon • 10 of the most beautiful places in Portugal (and how to see them) Protruding like a long, ET-style finger at the top of the Alentejo coast, the Troia peninsula isn't as well known to UK tourists as nearby Comporta, but the beaches are similarly stellar. The golden sands are protected by sunken sandbars out to sea, keeping the Atlantic's waves in check. The northern tip is busy with day trippers; central Sol Troia, where this hotel is, is sleepier and high-end. Spacious grounds host apartments and villas, many with private pools, and there are sports courts, restaurants, an on-site shop and bike rental, making it easy to go out exploring up and down the peninsula. You'll find one of Portugal's best golf courses at Troia, extensive Roman ruins, and may spot dolphins in the Sado Room-only doubles from £206, two-night minimum stay ( Fly to Lisbon You won't find many other Brits on the glorious sandy bay of Praia da California, set at the base of the Serra da Arrabida hills, but it's wildly popular with the Portuguese, who come for the beach and the excellent seafood served in the family-run restaurants that line the mural-adorned streets just behind it. Less than an hour south of Lisbon, it's a good value alternative to better-known Cascais, and this hotel's 84 warm, bright rooms and suites all have balconies and sea views, as does the infinity B&B doubles from £120 ( Fly to Lisbon Want to feel like one of the aristocrats who summered in Cascais in its 19th-century heyday? 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It's just nine miles from Sintra's historic centre, so you can combine the seaside with B&B doubles from £72 ( Fly to Lisbon This street art-covered aparthotel hits all the hip notes you'd expect in the cool surf town of Ericeira, with 36 bright and breezy apartments from studio up to four bedrooms, and activities from yoga classes to rock climbing. The property is a hop, skip and a jump from the somewhat sheltered Praia do Sul, the most popular beach close by. The hotel's Jangada restaurant is a buzzy spot with an open kitchen, and the whole place is family-friendly, with a multi-tiered pool area, playground and games room. There's a kids' club for the little ones; teens will prefer to test their mettle on the hotel's skate B&B doubles from £124 ( Fly to Lisbon Take a gentle stroll across protected dunes from this ultra-stylish eco hotel and you'll be on Praia da Mexilhoeira, an unspoilt stretch of fine white sand characteristic of the underdeveloped Silver Coast, as this part is called. Rooms and villas combine driftwood chic with touches of Moroccan and Scandinavian influence, all encased within a contemporary glass and wood shell. Local, seasonal food is served in the restaurant (there's a special table for two in a dome in the vegetable garden), the spa has a wood-fired hot tub, and alongside the trendy, industrial-style bar, drinks are served around a firepit under the B&B doubles from £228 ( Fly to Lisbon Hardly your classic beach hotel, this turreted 19th-century mansion and its cutting-edge modern extension is nevertheless almost kissing the sand at Foz do Douro, Porto's shoreside suburb. 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On sandy, breezy Cabedelo beach, the hotel has the largest water sports centre in Portugal, with surfing, windsurfing, kitesurfing and wingfoiling, plus there's a 'wake park' on the nearby Lima River with wakeboarding, efoiling and stand-up paddleboarding. When you've had enough of the beach, there's a bike centre with rentals and guided road, mountain and gravel bike tours, and a pump track for extra B&B doubles from £120 ( Fly to Porto Have you got a great Portuguese beach hotel recommendation? Let us know in the comments below

My stay at Ireland's first whiskey hotel
My stay at Ireland's first whiskey hotel

Times

time7 hours ago

  • Times

My stay at Ireland's first whiskey hotel

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The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

Fiji's best wave was once forbidden to locals, now the country has its first pro-surfer

Cloudbreak, near the island of Tavarua in western Fiji, is one of the best waves in the world. For decades, the long, hollow left-hand reef break has drawn surfers from around the globe; later this year, the men's and women's World Surf League (WSL) champions will be crowned at Cloudbreak. But until 2010, local surfers were forbidden from surfing the wave due to an exclusivity deal with a nearby surf resort. That year, Fiji's cabinet made a decision, 'to liberalise access to any surfing area'. Cloudbreak was exclusive no more. A decade and a half later, in no small part thanks to that cabinet decision, Fiji has its first professional surfer. 'I'm so lucky,' says James Kusitino, who recently signed a team rider deal with surfwear brand Former. 'It opened in 2010, and I was born in 2009. Cloudbreak is the best wave in the world.' Kusitino has been in the water since he was a baby. His middle name – Wainisomu – means 'drinking water' in English. Whenever Kusitino was distressed as a baby, his parents would put him in a tub of water and he would stop crying. 'I have a passion for the ocean,' he says. The Fijian started surfing as a four-year-old and he was charging Cloudbreak – a famously challenging wave – before reaching double digits. Kusitino still recalls his first competition at Cloudbreak, aged eight or nine. 'It was huge, it was massive,' he says. 'I remember seeing the biggest barrel in my life – I was so scared.' Today, Kusitino surfs almost constantly and he has dropped out of school to pursue the sport. Kusitino's mother tells the Guardian that evenings are the best time to contact her son, 'as he's usually out surfing.' Kusitino is not the Pacific nation's first high-level surfer; Tevita Gukilau competed in the WSL event at Cloudbreak as a wildcard, while Che Slatter – Kusitino's mentor – is another local standout. But the 16-year-old's team rider deal with Former elevates him as the future of Fijian surfing, the first local with sufficient sponsor backing to pursue the sport full-time. 'I'm so proud to be the first professional surfer in Fiji,' he says. 'There could have been 50 pro surfers from Fiji, but because they locked up the wave – we didn't get to surf Cloudbreak with all these people. I think there would have been already some professional surfers if Cloudbreak was open [in the past].' Former signed Kusitino after one of its co-founders, South African-Australian free surfer Craig Anderson, spotted him on recent trips to Cloudbreak. 'Every time he's blown me away,' Anderson said. 'His raw talent and unique approach in waves of consequence are like nothing I've seen before. In the water, he's completely in his own world. To me, James is the most gifted 16-year-old surfer on the planet.' With the brand's support, Kusitino has big plans. 'I want to do a few comps,' he says. 'I want to do the Eddie [the Eddie Aikau Big Wave Invitational – a prestigious event in Hawaii]. I'm going to Teahupo'o [a famously heavy wave in Tahiti] this year, put in my time there,' In late August, the world's best surfers will come to Cloudbreak to decide the WSL championships, in the last edition of the 'final five' format. Changes to the competition structure mean that from next year onwards, the Fiji Pro will again feature local trials and a wildcard spot in the main draw. Kusitino is undaunted by the prospect of surfing against the world's best, perhaps as soon as mid-next year. 'I want to beat the number one seed,' Kusitino says. 'And maybe be the first local to win the whole thing.' A decade and a half on from the democratisation of the nation's waves the future seems bright for Fijian surfing. Even at the young age of 16, Kusitino says he already sees young surfers following in his footsteps. 'There are already great locals coming out,' he says. 'I'm happy to see them out there.'

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