Find your next holiday click here

Beaches Around Doniford Bay

Stunning beaches abound - some with with car parking nearby.

Blue Anchor West Beach

Blue Anchor West Beach

Blue Anchor West Beach - is a sand and shingle beach, This beach stretches for miles with views across to Wales and North Hill at Minehead. Parking is very easy here, with several parking bays along the road edge at the top of the beach. These are free for public use, opposite the cafe/ice cream shop. There are a set of concrete steps with railings from the level of the road to the beach.

Burnham-on-Sea Beach

Burnham-on-Sea Beach

Burnham-on-Sea Beach - a continuous stretch of sand alongside some of Somerset’s classic seaside resorts of Burnham, Berrow and Brean. A lively beach and very popular with families. Burnham-on-Sea is also home to Britain’s shortest pier. Built in 1911 and measuring just over 100 ft (37 m) it is basically just a pier end pavilion, but at the start of the pier.

Doniford Beach

Doniford Beach

Doniford Beach - is a mud and sand beach with plenty of rocks and rock pools. All facilities are close by in the village and a well-hidden car park right by the beach. On the beach you will find plenty of rocks and rock pools containing numerous fossils.

Dunster North West Beach

Dunster North West Beach

Dunster North West Beach - sand and pebble beach is backed by a golf course. 

Weston-Super-Mare - Sand Bay

Weston-Super-Mare - Sand Bay

Weston-Super-Mare - Sand Bay - a large and relatively wild beach with good views across the Bristol Channel. 

Porlock Weir Beach

Porlock Weir Beach

Porlock Weir Beach - is a long pebble and rock beach. popular for having a great swim in the summer months. In winter the beach becomes one of the best surf spots in the area. Outside of the village, the beach is backed by a marshland that contains an abundance of wildlife. Parking is available in the small village of Porlock Weir.

Bossington Beach

Bossington Beach

Bossington Beach – is a huge expanse of pebble beach is backed by farmland and flanked by the hills of the Exmoor Coast. Behind the beach is a unique marshland ecosystem which attracts numerous rare species of bird and insects. There are also plenty of traces of human history ranging from World War II pillboxes on the beach to lime kilns used in agriculture. The beach is owned by the National Trust and the National Trust car park in Bossington village is probably the best place to park and is only half a mile from the beach itself.

Location Of The Holiday Park