
Britain's '10 worst seaside towns' revealed including once-beautiful resort ‘full of poo' & dying area ‘crumbling away'
The 10 most rundown British seaside towns have been named by tourists, in a survey of thousands of holidaymakers.
Which? Travel surveyed feelings about their visits to 120 British seaside towns, aggregating the scores on the quality of beaches, food and drink offerings, tourist attractions and value for money.
The best-reviewed British town, Bamburgh in Northumberland, got rave reviews and scored a solid 86%, averaging five stars across all categories.
Visitors were blown away by the 'spectacular views' of its medieval fortress, Bamburgh Castle, which crowns a rocky outcrop that stretches into the sea; other towns had more lacklustre responses.
But at the bottom of the pile, Wales' oldest town, Bangor, scored a measly 42%, receiving one lonely star for food, tourist attractions and shopping.
In reverse order, these are the 10 most dismal seaside towns according to Which? Travel.
10. Southend-On-Sea, Essex
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Despite being one of the few coastal UK towns boasting an airport, the Essex town managed an overall score of just 53%.
Southend locals described how the spot had become a 'warzone', as gang tensions have fuelled physical and sexual violence between local youths and those travelling down from London.
The raucous antics of the gangs may explain why it was only given one star for its peace and quiet and shopping.
Last July, horrific footage showed hooded thugs wielding machetes fighting near Adventure Island- a scene that would put a dampener on anyone's day out.
On the other hand, the town is due a TOWIE-style makeover to the tune of £10million.
Roslin Beach Hotel plans to add seven bedrooms to its current 27, a spa, a new wedding venue and outdoor restaurant facilities.
The town promises potential with Times writer Cathy Adams, dubbing the spot a 'Slice of Miami', and lots of celebs have been spotted visiting in recent months.
A Lister, Michelle Keegan, spent her first Mother's Day there, and visited with her new baby and husband Mark Wright on Sunday, 20 March.
Gary Barlow, Tyson Fury, Denise van Outen and Frankie Essex have all popped by as well.
9. Fleetwood, Lancashire
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The Lancashire town tried to rebrand itself out of what its own mayor admitted was a 'terrible reputation' by doing up its seafront into a 'slick promenade' with modern infrastructure.
However, survey respondents remained unimpressed, giving it just one star for its tourist attractions and shopping.
On the upside, its low footfall means it's very easy to find a parking space, for which it scored four stars.
Hotel prices are also a steal at £73 a night.
The former fishing village was filleted in the 1970s during an industrial dispute with Iceland, nicknamed the 'cod wars.'
The industry all but evaporated, and almost all the jobs were jettisoned.
Terry Rogers, a former mayor and chairman of Fleetwood Town Council, admits some still have "unwarranted" views of the town's infamous drinking culture.
But he hit back, telling LancashireLive: "Post-COVID, people were so impressed by our beach areas and promenade and how cheap everything is in comparison to other towns, they've come back."
8. Great Yarmouth, Norfolk
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Technically, in joint place with Fleetwood, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk also scored a scant 51%.
To be fair, it scored a respectable three stars for its beaches and tourist attractions, perhaps in part due to its iconic snail ride.
Ex-Reform MP Rupert Lowe even hopped on the fluorescent green ride for a photo-op.
However, it only got one star for peace and quiet.
Designed and built by Horace Cole, the snails have been chugging along the beachfront since 1949.
Sun reader Daryl Smith said: 'If you don't ride the snails when you visit, then you haven't had a proper Great Yarmouth experience.'
The constituency also boasts the boat that brought Willy Wonka to England in the Hollywood blockbuster.
The childish excitement at popping on the free boat may explain why the spot only got one star for peace and quiet.
7. Blackpool, Lancashire
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The famous seaside town clocked just 49%, but have no fear, the hotels are the cheapest of the lot, costing an average of £80 a night.
The enormous, incredibly famous Blackpool Pleasure Beach wasn't enough to impress tourists, with the area's attractions earning just three stars.
However, it was the shopping and the scenery that really floored its score at one star each.
Erosion has been nibbling away at its iconic beach for years, but a new £30million investment plan is in the works, funded by the Environment Agency.
Five new rock groynes, which are long, narrow structures, will maintain the spot.
The quaintly coloured houses still attract tourists, locals say, but the wrong kind of tourists.
Swarms of badly behaved visitors, fuelled by the boom of short-term Airbnb lets, have created a plague of all-night partiers, and even encouraged prostitution, according to locals.
6. Clacton-on-Sea, Essex
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Visit Essex promotes its local Clacton on Sea as a 'bustling but affordable seaside resort,' but a score of 48% calls that into question.
Dubbed the 'worst place to live in the UK', Farage's constituency is one of the poorest spots in the country.
Tourists shot down its 'crumbling' scenery and 'dying' city centre with a shocking one rating.
One even said: "I spend as little time in the town as possible."
This marks a dramatic fall from grace, since it was named Pier of the Year in 2020.
But locals shouldn't lose hope, as it may soon have £20million injected by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government to rejuvenate the town's 'horrible atmosphere.'
The cash is set to be used for a series of projects, including a £3million investment into a leisure centre, seafront art, a community micro venue and improved shopfronts- so watch this space.
5. Skegness, Lincolnshire
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Although Skegness didn't even manage a 50% approval rating, scoring 48%, it is coming up in the world.
In 2023, the town, which has been described as a 'vulgar hellhole' with 'brown sea,' earned the macabre title of the worst seaside town in the country.
However, a new rail upgrade by East Midlands Railway, worth £60million, is predicted to bring a wave of investment into the rundown area.
An astonishing £23million has been pegged to spruce up the 'terrible place.'
Enhancements planned include brand-new seats, tables, as well as modern power and charging facilities.
Regardless, Sun reporter Catherine Lofthouse found the town, as is, 'no-frills fun in the sun.'
4. Bognor Regis, West Sussex
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Ranked the fourth worst seaside town in the country, with an average score of just 47%, the town's pier and shopping were given just one star by Brits.
But some locals poked holes in the survey, after coming bottom of the list in 2019.
Jo Millen, the owner of Bognor ice cream shop Rainbows, told The Guardian: "Which? should just keep advising us about the washing machine that we should buy, rather than grade the negative views about Bognor from people on the internet."
However, Sun journalist Catherine Lofthouse tried out the new £1.8million soft play area and her kids "loved it."
A breaking bad style stash of crystal meth was discovered in its Grade II Picturedrome in 2021- but it does boast a Butlins and a Centre Parc- and even on a bank holiday hotels can cost you just £69.
3. Burnham-on-Sea, Somerset
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Astonishingly, Burnham on Sea also scraped 47%, which although dismal is quite an achievement considering the 'once beautiful town has become plagued with poo.'
More shockingly, although the turd infested waters has literally turned Brown, the hotels are quite spenny at £106 a night.
Despite being slammed with one star for tourist attractions, food and drink, and shopping, it's not that cheap.
Locals weren't surprised at the shockingly low score, citing graffiti, dog poo and a generally rundown feel.
But once again, piles of cash may spell a brighter future, as Unity Beach resort has just undergone a £ 15 million renovation, sporting a new pub and sports bar on site.
The Wonky Donkey pub will serve family meals until late, while the Sports Caf streams live matches, whilst punters can play futuristic virtual reality gaming.
2. Mablethorpe, Lincolnshire
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With a miserly 46%, Maplethorpe's run down fell earnt it the second lowest spot on the list.
Scoring just two stars for value for money, peace and quiet, its seafront, and just one star for food and drink, tourist attractions and shopping, which respondents were not impressed.
Locals were shocked at the result, having received the same score last year.
They cited their 'award-winning beach' and popular seaside cafes, along with their funky Aqua Park.
One praised:' It's lovely, an enormous, clean beach and traditional atmosphere.'
Claire Arnold, Maplethorpe's mayor, argued that the survey was not a 'true reflection of what our town has to offer.'
'We have a beautiful promenade where people can walk from the coastal town of Mablethorpe right over to Sutton and back again, we've got a free public paddling pool, and we've got blue flag beaches."
Sun readers also said the town is home to their favourite "North East Seaside Eats", loving the beach bar in a boat to the pirate-themed fish and chip shop.
1. Bangor, Gwynedd
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At the top of the depressing list was Wales' oldest city, Bangor, voted the worst seaside town for the second year in a row.
At 42%, it got just one-star ratings for food, tourist attractions and shopping, and two stars for everything else.
Labelled 'drab' and 'run down' despite being perched next to the beautiful natural landscape of the Menai Strait, the town doesn't have a huge amount to do.
Its Grade II Victorian pier is not geared for tourism and doesn't have a proper beach.
The closure of Debenhams in 2021 signalled another blow to the struggling town, and the local retail park has hit the high street hard.
Bangor City Council said in a statement to the Local Democracy Reporting Service: "It's disappointing to see Bangor City named as one of the UK's worst seaside towns. Such rankings often fail to capture the full picture and the unique charms that make Bangor City so special."
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Daily Record
40 minutes ago
- Daily Record
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Times
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Times
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The Côte d'Azur has reinvented cool — and it's stylishly affordable
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The library of hardback art books, the butterfly chairs and the alarmingly moreish cocktails all seem to have more impact when placed amid such architectural rigour. The colours, meanwhile, are muted. Think white walls, terracotta table lamps, ochre rugs and lots of cadmium red in the abstract art. Which is just as it should be when nearly every floor-to-ceiling window is a slab of dazzling blue. Almost all of them look straight out to sea. Add two swimming pools into the mix, as well as Michelin-starred food and room rates, including breakfast, that start from £338 a night (which counts as mid-range in these parts), and it's no wonder Les Roches Rouges quickly found its way on to many top ten Côte d'Azur hotel lists. Now Beaumier has gone a step further and invested in a second phase of expansion. Central to this new project has been an extension of the site westwards to incorporate a snack bar (focaccia sandwiches from £12), a place to launch the hotel's paddleboards and kayaks, a yoga studio and an annexe that adds 25 bedrooms, bringing the total to 67. Not surprisingly, on a coast where property prices can easily top those in Paris, it has cost a small fortune. But the money has been well spent. Les Roches Rouges can now extend its sense of ease and comfort along the whole length of this hidden (and nameless) cove. When half of Europe is jostling for elbow room hereabouts, that seems nothing short of miraculous. Inside, the new bedrooms are as zesty as the red tuna ceviche at the hotel's main Estelo restaurant, which they serve with a sidekick of chilli (mains from £27). Designed by the Parisian architecture studio Atelier St Lazare, the rooms have the same sense of restraint as those in the main building, with polished concrete floors, more books and pops of colourful art. They have the same sense of quiet luxury too, courtesy of their lush bed linen and Grown Alchemist soaps and smells. But here the dazzling intensity of sea and sunlight seems to wash in with even greater force. Leave the floor-to-ceiling windows open at night and you worry you'll wake up with the waves breaking over your feet. • The best European cities for art lovers Meanwhile, there's a new chef cooking up a storm in Récif, the top-floor gastronomic restaurant (six-course menus from £126). Previously, Alexandre Baule was at L'Alpaga, a Beaumier property in Megève in the French Alps, whose restaurant won its first Michelin star in 2023. Now he's brought his love of seasonality to the coast and is playing with the way its flavours arrive at different speeds in your mouth. Never more so than with his jelly of pastis and sea water served with a jasmine emulsion, which starts salty but suddenly turns floral across your tongue. But don't set your heart on any particular dish. Thanks to his collaboration with the sustainable St Raphaël fisherman Olivier Bardoux, Baule's menus change daily. It comes as no surprise to learn that, once they get their electronic-wristband room keys, most guests at Les Roches Rouges don't step beyond the front door until it's time to settle the bill. For the most part they're design-conscious couples from London and America in their late twenties or early thirties, and many are honeymooning. But there are empty nesters sprinkled among them too, relishing their hard-won freedom. Usually, all are stretched out on sunloungers by the two pools, equipped with a cocktail and a little light holiday reading. Every now and again, however, one of them walks to the end of the hotel's jetty and dives into the sea. I don't blame them for not exploring. When you've got front-row seats like this, the Med is mesmerising. All the same, it's a crying shame because half a mile up the coast Mother Nature has her own surprise to share. Up there, at Cap Dramont, the mountains of the Massif de l'Esterel break through the coast road's cordon of villas, bars and marinas to plunge their red-rocked feet straight into the sea. I wander over on my final afternoon and as soon as I leave the main forest track, the world turns raw and wild. Overgrown footpaths weave through thickets of laurel, olive trees and pine. Deep channels of seawater sparkle invitingly between the cliffs and, occasionally, I use hands as well as feet to climb. In other words, it is just like Les Roches Rouges — a wake-up call for anyone who, like me, has ever written off the Riviera as samey and soulless. Suddenly, the only thing I don't like about it is having to Newsom was a guest of Les Roches Rouges, which has B&B doubles from £388 ( Fly to Nice Les Roches Rouges isn't the only hotel in Provence and the Côte d'Azur making a fuss of its 20th-century architecture. In Nice, the 35-room Hotel Gounod has been reborn in a shimmering, boudoir style that's the perfect match for its intricate art deco façade (B&B doubles from £138; Keep it in mind if you're visiting the Matisse Méditerranées show at the city's Matisse Museum this summer (until September 8; The exhibition includes loans from MoMA in New York and the Pompidou in Paris. It's part of Nice's Year of the Sea ( that also includes The Midnight Zone, an immersive installation that explores the deepest parts of the ocean. • More top hotels in Nice Meanwhile, inland from St Raphaël, two 19th-century properties are flying the flag for stylish B&B-keeping. Two years ago, the former coaching inn Le Gabriel put the hilltop village of Claviers on the map with its mix of zesty colours, big windows and playful decoration. Its five arty bedrooms and suites start from £190 a night B&B ( Nearby, in Draguignan, the five-suite Château Pimo opened this year with a more subdued colour scheme, but the same eye for detail as well as its own spa (B&B suites from £230; Both lie within striking distance of the spectacular Gorges du Verdon canyon. Further west, Aix-en-Provence's tight historic streets are always gorgeous and atmospheric. But this year the city is also honouring Cézanne, its most famous son, with a blockbuster exhibition at the Musée Granet (June 28 to October 12; as well as the reopening of the Jas de Bouffan, his parents' surprisingly highfalutin' home. The gardens at the recently refurbished Hôtel Le Pigonnet offer a welcome refuge from the gallery-going (B&B doubles from £233; while the town's thriving restaurant scene is strong with plenty of mid-priced menus. In the centre, Les Galinas has just been awarded one of Michelin's coveted Bib Gourmands for affordable, Provençal gastronomy that includes bourride (fish stew) (mains from £18; The newly opened O'père on the outskirts, has a growing reputation for its deeply flavoured sauces (mains from £20; • Great restaurants in Nice Finally, to the north of Aix lies a corner of Provence that's less touristy but no less delightful. The town of Carpentras is one of its stars, thanks to its sprawling Friday market — the perfect place to scoff the divine local nectarines, as soon as you've bought them. But it's also home to spectacular hiking beneath the limestone crags of the Dentelles de Montmirail, and two top-notch wine areas. Head to the villages of Gigondas and Vacqueyras for succulent, fruity reds, and to the new tasting cellar at the Domaine de Coyeux for sweet and fragrant Muscat de Beaumes de Venise ( Ten miles south of Carpentras, in the riverside town of L'Isle Sur La Sorgue, the L'Isle de Leos is a new, five-star MGallery property in a former watermill, decked out in a rich cinnamon-and-chocolate colour scheme. It opens next month with enticing introductory pricing (B&B doubles from £298;