Best for toddlers
- West Wittering Beach, West Sussex
- Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk
|
Flights from other UK airports can be arranged upon request on all flight holidays. |
Family beach guide
A family beach day can feel easy or hard before you even leave home. The right beach gives you sand for play, space to spread out, toilets within reach, simple parking, and water that suits your children’s age and confidence.
We put this guide together for parents, grandparents, and carers who want the best beaches in the UK for families, not a list of pretty places with no planning value. We’ve focused on beaches that give you a strong mix of child-friendly sand, family facilities, safer swimming conditions where possible, and practical access. Some suit toddlers. Some work better for older children who want games, paddles, walks, or rock pools.
Beach conditions change with weather, tide, and season. Check local safety signs, tide times, and beach authority updates before you travel.
Use these picks to match the beach to your children’s age, your travel style, and the kind of seaside day you want.
West Wittering gives families a wide sandy beach, clean shoreline, dunes, and room to breathe. Young children can dig, paddle, and run without fighting for space. Parents like the flat setting and the strong day-trip feel.
Toddlers, preschool children, mixed-age family groups
The sand stretches a long way, so children get space for beach games and sandcastle sessions. The setting feels open and easy to manage.
Parking runs on a pre-booking system in busy periods, which helps you plan. Toilets and seasonal facilities help with younger children. The beach suits buggies better than hidden coves, though soft sand still slows wheels.
Summer demand fills up fast. Book parking ahead and arrive early.
Bournemouth works well if you want a classic seaside day with fewer unknowns. You get long sandy stretches, promenade access, nearby food, toilets, and family attractions close by.
School-age children, larger family groups, first beach trips with kids
You can mix beach time with ice cream, arcades, mini attractions, and an easy walk along the front. Older children get plenty of room for games.
Strong access from the promenade, parking nearby, toilets, cafés, and seasonal lifeguards on main sections. Pushchairs handle the promenade with ease.
It gets busy in school holidays. If your child dislikes crowds, go early or visit outside peak weeks.
Woolacombe gives you a huge sandy sweep with room for active children. Families who want bodyboarding, long beach games, and a proper run-around day often choose this stretch.
Older children, tweens, teens
The beach feels big enough for everyone. Children can play football, fly kites, and spend hours in the sand.
Parking, toilets, and seasonal beach services support a full day out. Access stands up well for a major beach, though some routes involve slopes.
The sea needs respect. Stronger surf can suit confident swimmers more than toddlers. Stay within lifeguarded zones.
Wells suits families who want shallow shoreline play, soft sand, and a beach that feels gentle. The colourful beach huts add charm, and the setting works well for a slower family day.
Babies, toddlers, younger children
The sandy beach gives children space to potter, dig, and paddle. Parents often choose it for lower-pressure seaside days.
Parking and toilets make it practical, though you may face a walk from some parking areas to the sand. Pack light if you’re managing toddlers and beach gear.
The walk out can feel long for small legs. A trolley helps.
Tenby North Beach gives you sand, views, and a family resort feel. The beach sits close to the town, so you can switch between beach time and food stops without effort.
Toddlers, younger school-age children, family seaside breaks
Children get a sandy beach with room to play, while adults get simple access to the town. The area works well for a full holiday, not only a single day out.
Toilets, nearby cafés, parking in town, and straightforward access from Tenby. Seasonal lifeguard cover may operate on parts of the local beach offering.
Town-centre beaches can feel crowded in summer. Tide space changes through the day, so check times before you set up.
Camber Sands gives families dunes, open sand, and one of the best sandy beach landscapes in the south east. If your children want classic sand play, this beach earns its place.
Sandcastle days, picnics, active children
The wide sandy area supports long play sessions, kite flying, and walking. You can spread out and still feel part of the seaside buzz.
Parking and toilets support day visitors. Main access points work better than remote stretches if you have a buggy or lots of kit.
Wind can pick up. Bring layers and a windbreak.
Filey often feels calmer than bigger east coast names, and that suits families. The long sandy bay gives you a gentle setting for paddling, walking, and beach games.
Families who want a relaxed beach day, mixed ages
You get space, a traditional seaside feel, and a beach that tends to feel easier to manage than louder resort fronts.
Parking, toilets, and town services nearby. The promenade area and nearby amenities help if you’re travelling with younger children or grandparents.
British weather can shift fast on this coast. Pack extra layers even on warm days.
Blackpool Sands has a sheltered feel and clear water that many families love for paddling and swimming. Despite the name, the beach has coarse shingle rather than classic soft sand, so it suits some families better than others.
School-age children, calm-water paddling, scenic beach days
The water often looks inviting, and the cove-like shape creates a contained feel. Parents often choose it for a cleaner, quieter beach mood.
Parking close to the beach, toilets, seasonal food options, and watersports hire in season.
If your children want deep bucket-and-spade sand play, choose another beach. Beach shoes help with the shingle.
Formby gives families sand, dunes, and a sense of escape close to major urban areas. It works well for a beach-and-walk day, especially if you want more than a short paddle.
Family walks, picnics, older children, low-cost day trips
The beach combines open sand with dune trails and woodland nearby. Children can break up the day with walking and nature spotting.
National Trust management supports parking and visitor information. Paths help at the start, though soft sand and dune routes can challenge buggies.
Tides matter here. Keep clear of risky areas and check local advice before you head out.
Barafundle Bay looks stunning, and families who make the walk often love it. The sheltered cove and clear water give it huge appeal.
Families with older children, scenic beach days, confident walkers
Children get a memorable beach with golden sand and a tucked-away feel that turns a beach visit into an outing.
You need to walk in from the nearest parking area, and the route includes steps. That suits families with older children more than those with prams.
The access rules this beach in or out for many families. If you need easy toilets, instant parking, or buggy access, choose a simpler option.
Compton Bay gives you sand, cliffs, and strong rock pooling appeal. Families often choose it for exploration as much as sunbathing.
Older children, fossil hunting interest, rock pooling
Children can search, scramble, and explore. The beach feels adventurous.
Parking sits above the beach with access down. Facilities can feel more limited than at major resort beaches, so plan ahead with snacks and spare clothes.
Cliffs, tides, and uneven ground demand close supervision.
Luskentyre offers one of the most striking beach settings in the UK. Families who build a wider trip around the Outer Hebrides often add it to their shortlist.
Family holidays, older children, scenic beach walks
The sand and water colours feel special, and children get endless room to roam.
This beach suits a planned holiday more than a quick family day out. Facilities stay limited compared with south coast resort beaches.
Cold water, changeable weather, and travel distance make this a better fit for families treating the beach as part of a bigger trip.
These beaches give you easier sand play, manageable access, and a gentler family rhythm. You still need to check tide times and supervise paddling.
These beaches offer sand, space, nearby facilities, and enough variety to keep children busy for hours.
These picks suit children who want more action, from bodyboarding and beach games to exploring rock pools and dune paths.
Late June to early September gives you the best shot at warmer weather, longer days, and family beach conditions that feel worth the drive. Sea temperatures tend to feel kinder in August and early September than in late spring.
School holidays bring the busiest beaches, fuller car parks, and longer queues for food and toilets. If you can travel outside peak weeks, aim for late June, early July, or early September.
Tides shape your day more than many families expect. Some beaches lose space fast at high tide. Others reveal better rock pools as the tide drops. Check tide times the night before and again on the morning of your trip.
If the forecast looks mixed, pack for a half-beach, half-town day. A promenade beach such as Bournemouth or a town beach such as Tenby gives you cafés and shelter close by.
If you’re building a break around the coast, our planning a UK summer holiday guide can help you sort timing, packing, and family logistics.
For wider family trip prep, read our family travel safety uk.
Choose a beach for toddlers if you want soft sand, short walks, toilets close by, and room to paddle without strong surf. West Wittering, Wells, and Tenby stand out.
Choose a beach for older children if your family wants games, bodyboarding, walking, or exploring. Woolacombe, Formby, and Compton Bay suit that energy.
Choose a low-stress beach if you care more about easy access and facilities than hidden-cove scenery. Bournemouth and Filey make life easier.
Choose a scenic adventure beach if your children enjoy the journey as much as the shore. Barafundle Bay and Luskentyre reward the effort.
West Wittering, Wells-next-the-Sea, and Tenby North Beach suit young children well. They offer sand for play, easier access than remote coves, and a family-friendly day out feel. Check tide times and local safety signs before you go.
Many families look for sandy beaches with shallow entry, lifeguarded swimming zones in season, and clear visibility across the shore. You should still treat any open water with care. Stay close, use beach flags where provided, and avoid beaches with strong surf if your children only want to paddle.
Yes. Camber Sands, West Wittering, Bournemouth, Woolacombe, Filey, and Tenby all give families strong sandy options. If sand play matters most, skip places with coarse shingle such as Blackpool Sands.
Compton Bay works well for families who want rock pooling and shoreline exploring. Some parts of Pembrokeshire also suit this sort of beach day. Take sturdy shoes and watch the tide.
Late June to early September usually gives families the best mix of weather and long daylight. August often brings the warmest sea. Early July and early September can feel easier if you want fewer crowds.
Start with four checks: short walk from parking, toilets nearby, sand for play, and a calmer shoreline for paddling. Then check whether you can reach the beach with a buggy and whether you have food close by.
Many do in summer. Popular beaches can fill their car parks by mid-morning. Some, such as West Wittering, often work better if you plan ahead. If you want a smoother trip, sort parking, tide times, food, and spare clothes before you leave home.
The best beaches in the UK for families give you more than a pretty view. They make the day work for your children, your budget, and your energy. Pick the beach that fits your family, then build the rest of the trip around access, tide times, and how long your children will stay happy on the sand.
If you want more ideas for a UK break, explore our UK family staycation ideas or browse our best summer family destinations UK for more coastal and holiday inspiration.