Seahouses town sits quietly on the Northumberland coast, yet it holds far more charm than most visitors expect on their first visit. I have walked these streets in every season, and each trip reveals something new about this fishing village. This guide pulls together everything worth knowing, from sandy shores to centuries-old history.
The Coast and Beaches Around the Seahouses Town
To the north and south of Seahouses town opens onto sweeping sandy beaches that feel made for families. Kids build sandcastles, fly kites, and chase each other through the dunes playing hide and seek, while braver visitors try body boarding in the surf. I always bring my own dog along for walking the dog, since the whole stretch is genuinely family-friendly.
Scenic Coastal Walking Routes
Beyond the sand, scenic walking routes and cycling routes wind along the Northumberland Coast, which earned its Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty status fairly. The coast path links Beadnell in the south, runs straight through Seahouses, and continues north toward Bamburgh Castle.
Anyone chasing the best beaches in Northumberland should add Beadnell Beach to their list, since it stays dog friendly and has a car park, public loos, and plenty of room for watersports. Further along, the picturesque beaches sit quietly in the shadow of Bamburgh Castle, often nearly empty even in peak season.
The sandy beach here suits a long beach walk with the dog, especially across the miles of open coastline. My own dog, Fozzy, treats this stretch like his personal playground every single visit.
Historic Castles Near Seahouses Town
The Majesty of Bamburgh Castle
A short stroll from the glorious beach in Seahouses brings you to Bamburgh, a quintessentially English village built around a magnificent castle. This iconic castle looks out toward the sea, offering mesmerising views of Holy Island, the birthplace tied to St Cuthbert and the Lindisfarne Gospel, plus the nearby Lindisfarne Priory and Lindisfarne Castle. Within easy reach sit Alnwick, Dunstanburgh, and Warkworth Castles, each adding another layer to the region’s history; serious fans of castles in Northumberland could spend a whole week exploring them.
Exploring the Grand Staterooms
Bamburgh Castle itself remains genuinely stunning, and unlike many ageing fortresses, it stays fully furnished rather than left as a bare ruin. Walking through the staterooms, you notice careful decor and countless historic items, including delicate china sets, suits of armour, old weapons, and even a dungeon below ground.
Outdoor trails wind through the grounds, and the castle hosts special events throughout the year that draw crowds from across the region. Climbing the castle walls rewards you with a view straight down the barrels of old cannons, paired with a sweeping beach view below.
Dogs welcome is the policy here, right down to the tack room cafe, which makes it easy to bring the whole family along.

The Farne Islands Excursions
A Bustling Seabird Sanctuary
The nearby Farne Islands rank among the must-visit spots for anyone interested in wildlife, since the islands host a thriving colony of grey seals, plus thousands of puffins. During breeding season, roughly 150,000 seabirds crowd onto the rocks, making this one of the busiest sea bird sanctuary sites in the British Isles.
The birds stay surprisingly tolerant of visitors, which means photographs come out brilliantly if you bring a decent camera.
Boat Trips from the Harbour
Regular boat trips leave from Seahouses Harbour, giving you a close look at the natural habitat these creatures call home; don’t forget your camera. I personally book through Serenity Tours, and their Grey Seal and Seabird trip lasts about 1.5 hours, which suits kids well since nobody gets restless.
You stay on the island the whole time, yet you still see hundreds or even thousands of seals and seabirds up close. Puffins show up reliably between May-July, making that window the prime puffin-spotting months for anyone planning a trip around the birds.
The boat has space for one wheelchair if booked in advance, and dogs welcome applies here too. I always tell people to wrap up warmly, even in summer, and pack hats and gloves regardless of the forecast.
Spectacular Coastal Wildlife
Diverse Avian Visitors around Seahouses Town
Between the seabirds and the marine mammals patrolling the coast of England, sightings come thick and fast around here. Seahouses town rewards patient watchers with both wildlife and sealife, and the seabird colonies reach their peak during June and July before slowing down.
From August onward, passage migrants pass through on their journey from northern breeding areas toward their winter quarters, and birds settling in for winter start arriving not long after.
You’ll spot Kittiwakes, guillemots, black-headed gulls, shags, and three kinds of terns out on the Farne Islands without much trouble. Over 5,000 pairs of arctic terns nest along Beadnell Bay, while tens of thousands of ducks, geese (including pink-footed geese and barnacle geese), and assorted wading birds arrive from the Arctic Circle to spend winter on this coast.
Along the rocks, purple sandpipers, knots, and turnstones gather in Bamburgh Bay, adding even more variety to the sightings.
Marine Mammals and Cetaceans
When it comes to seals, whales, and dolphins known together as cetaceans timing matters a great deal for good boat trips. Calm sea conditions boost your odds considerably, and from Seahouses Harbour you can often spot the Atlantic grey seal without even boarding a boat. Harbour porpoises stay in Northumberland’s waters all year, while bottlenose dolphins, white-beaked dolphins, minke whales, and basking sharks all turn up occasionally when the calm waters cooperate.
Golfing Opportunities
Links Courses and Family Fun
Golfers visiting Seahouses find an 18-hole course boasting two genuinely prestigious par threes, a rare claim for anywhere in the North of England. Nearby golf courses extend the options further, including Bamburgh Castle Golf Club to the north and Dunstanburgh Golf Course down south. Between the three, a dedicated golfer could easily fill an entire holiday.
For families who’d rather skip the clubs, The Bunker offers outdoor crazy golf alongside an American diner and indoor soft play, perfect for restless kids on a rainy afternoon.
Dining in Seahouses Town
Traditional Pubs and Bistros
The Old Ship Inn, found at NE68 7RD, serves old-fashioned cooking in genuinely big portions, and its beer garden fills up fast on warm summer evenings. The friendly atmosphere keeps people coming back, much like at The Olde Ship Inn, a proper Northumberland Pub packed with locals gathered round a real fire.
The pub’s little rooms feel cosy, and the slightly odd nautical theme somehow works; you can book breakfast, lunch, or dinner, or just settle at the bar, where dogs welcome extends to the outdoor bar area.
Over at St Aidan Bistro on NE68 7SR, the focus stays on local produce, sourced right across Northumberland, with excellent seafood alongside other cuisine. The scrumptious dishes pair beautifully with the seaside views from the window seats.
Fish and Chips to Fine Seafood
For something quicker, Neptune Fish Restaurant at NE68 7SJ does reliable fish and chips, available for takeaway or eat-in, and the staff stay genuinely friendly throughout, which says a lot about hospitality in Northumbria. I personally rate Lewis’ Fish Restaurant, where the reasonable prices and rotating specials include some fabulous prawns worth ordering just for the harbour seats and the view. For something sweeter, Trotters Family Bakers bakes fresh bread, baguettes, bloumers, rolls, and stotties daily, located at NE68 7RQ.
Pizza lovers should try Elan Pizzeria at NE68 7TP, known for artisan dishes made from fresh ingredients, with a welcome BYOB policy (bring your own wine or beers for a small corkage) alongside their own alcohol license, making it ideal for a relaxed family meal with kids.
The Potted Lobster remains my favourite among local seafood restaurants, thanks to its relaxed environment, excellent service, and genuinely locally sourced seafood; it also offers a children’s menu and a dog friendly area.
Dining Options Near Beadnell and Seahouses Town
Over in Beadnell, the pubs and restaurants run slightly pricey, but both Beadnell Towers and The Craster Arms justify the cost through their food quality, ambience, and attentive service, plus children’s menus, a warm welcome, and being dog friendly throughout.
Back in the village centre, The Black Swan operates as a proper Gastro Pub, complete with an inventive cocktail menu featuring seasonal specials crafted by knowledgeable staff. There are board games scattered by the bar, making it the perfect hideout when rain sets in and you just want a seat by the fireplace.
Just a short drive down from Seahouses town to Beadnell, The Landing sits opposite the beach car park, offering both indoor seating and outside seating wrapped around heaters and fire pits, with blankets provided for chillier evenings spent over hot chocolates, other drinks (they hold a license), or their seafood specialty dishes.
Accommodation and Places to Stay
Boutique Cottages and Seaviews
The feature cottage, called Seascape, sleeps 4 and combines a fresh nautical style with sweeping sea views, where dolphins and seals sometimes appear right from the balcony. Its location inside Seahouses town puts everything within easy reach. I also stayed at Harbour Way Cottage, booked through Coast & Country Retreats, a company managing several boutique cottages scattered across Bamburgh and Beadnell.Excellent Value and Practicalities
Their reasonable prices, especially off peak, made our mid-week stay excellent value at roughly £400 one January for 3 nights in a dog-friendly cottage sleeping up to 8 guests across 4 bedrooms.
The property holds a genuinely high standard of finish, sits in a central location, and comes with private parking spaces in a courtyard at the rear of property. Along the busier parts of the Northumberland Coast, parking can turn tricky fast, so this detail mattered more than I expected.
History of Seahouses Town
Parish Growth and Maritime Trade
Back in 1834, the Charity built a parish church at North Sunderland, right on the site of the old Village Pele Tower, carving out a new parish separate from Bamburgh. Through the nineteenth century, the Charity poured money into North Sunderland harbour, answering demand from shipmasters who valued the rare safe haven along this coast.
The Trustees wanted to grow the herring fishery and help local farmers export corn and lime. As harbour development progressed, residential development followed close behind along the coast. These Sea Houses eventually gave the village its lasting place name, even as the older North Sunderland identity stuck around alongside it.
The Heroic Darling Family of Seahouses Town
Several members of the Darling family lived across both Seahouses town and Bamburgh over the generations. The most famous, Grace Darling, put to sea alongside her father from the Longstone Lighthouse to attempt a daring rescue of stranded sailors from the Forfarshire, a ship shipwrecked on the Farne Islands.
Following that heroic rescue, which deeply moved the local communities and boatmen of nearby North Sunderland, the Trustees of Lord Crewe’s Charity opened a public subscription to fund a proper reward for everyone involve
FAQs About Seahouses Town
What is the vibe of the Seahouses Town centre?
It is the vibrant, welcoming hub of Seahouses Town, filled with local community spirit, quaint seaside boutiques, and family-run bakeries.
What kind of food can I find in Seahouses Town?
It is a foodie’s paradise famous for its freshest ocean bounty, specifically golden, crispy battered fish and chips.
What are the dining options?
Seahouses Town offers everything from cosy, historic pubs serving hearty comfort food to artisan pizzerias and bistros with sweeping marine views.
Why is the harbour special?
As the historic soul of Seahouses Town, it is the perfect spot to watch active fishing boats and breathe in the salty air.
What makes the beach worth visiting?
It is an unspoiled, family-friendly haven of sandy dunes right on the edge of Seahouses Town, offering panoramic coastal views of the majestic Bamburgh Castle.
