Glamping in North Wales

Locations

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LUXURY SHEPHERDS HUTS ACROSS THE UK with Unique Hideaways

Cornwall, England
  • Open All Year Round
  • Hot Tub
  • Family Friendly
  • Wi-Fi

Prices from £21

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GLAMPING IN LUXURY TREEHOUSES with Unique Hideaways

Cornwall, England
  • Open All Year Round
  • Dog Friendly
  • Hot Tub
  • Budget
  • Family Friendly
  • Couple Retreats
  • Wi-Fi
  • Coastal
  • Eco Friendly

Prices from £34

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CABINS AND PODS with Unique Hideaways

Cornwall, England
  • Dog Friendly
  • Family Friendly
  • Couple Retreats
  • Wi-Fi
  • Coastal

Prices from £19

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UNIQUE Hideaways Glamping across the UK

Cornwall, England
  • Open All Year Round
  • Dog Friendly
  • Hot Tub
  • Great for Groups
  • Budget
  • Luxury
  • Adult Only Sites
  • Family Friendly
  • Wi-Fi

Prices from £25

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SAFFIR LUXURY ECO CABIN AT TREBERFEDD FARM Ceredigion with Hot Tub

North Wales, Wales
  • Open All Year Round
  • Hot Tub
  • Luxury
  • Unique
  • Family Friendly
  • Eco Friendly

Prices from £125

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AERONA TREBERFEDD LUXURY ECO CABIN Ceredigion with Hot Tub

North Wales, Wales
  • Open All Year Round
  • Hot Tub
  • Luxury
  • Unique
  • Family Friendly
  • Couple Retreats
  • Eco Friendly

Prices from £65

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Popular North Wales glamping

Popular North Wales glamping locations

Why North Wales Is One of the UK’s Best Glamping Destinations

North Wales has been drawing visitors for centuries, and it’s not difficult to understand why. The region contains Snowdonia National Park — now also known by its Welsh name, Eryri — one of the most spectacular national parks in Britain and home to Snowdon, the highest mountain in Wales and England. Beyond the mountains, the Llŷn Peninsula stretches into the Irish Sea like a finger of outstanding natural beauty, the Isle of Anglesey offers wild coastal landscapes and sandy beaches, and the Clwydian Range rolls across the north east of the region with superb walking and cycling country.

Layered over all of this natural drama is a rich cultural and historic identity. North Wales is deeply, proudly Welsh — the language is spoken widely, the castles are among the most impressive in Europe, and the food and drink scene draws on some exceptional local produce. A glamping holiday in North Wales isn’t just a break in beautiful countryside. It’s an immersion in one of Britain’s most distinctive and rewarding regions.

Glamping Accommodation in North Wales

Glamping holidays in North Wales come in a wonderfully wide range of styles, and the quality of accommodation across the region has risen significantly in recent years. Whatever your preference, you’ll find a North Wales glamping option to match.

Shepherd’s huts are among the most popular choices — beautifully fitted out with wood-burning stoves, proper double beds and private outdoor spaces, and often positioned in locations of breathtaking remoteness. Glamping pods offer a more compact and often more affordable option, typically with en suite facilities and the kind of thoughtful equipping that makes them feel far more than just a box in a field.

Safari tents and bell tents suit families and groups particularly well, providing generous indoor space alongside the outdoor connection that makes glamping so appealing. Woodland cabins and treehouses are increasingly popular for couples looking for something genuinely special, tucked into the trees with fire pits, hot tubs, and a sense of seclusion that’s hard to find elsewhere.

Many North Wales glamping sites are set on working farms, within woodland, beside rivers, or high on hillsides with views across Snowdonia — meaning the setting itself is often as much of a draw as the accommodation. Hot tubs, fire pits, fully equipped kitchens and private outdoor dining spaces have become standard features at the best sites, ensuring that comfort and quality match the extraordinary landscapes around them.

Snowdonia: The Crown Jewel of Glamping Holidays in North Wales

No article on glamping holidays in North Wales could begin anywhere other than Snowdonia. The national park covers over 2,000 square kilometres of mountains, lakes, forests and valleys, and it provides the most iconic backdrop for glamping in the whole of Wales.

At its heart stands Snowdon (Yr Wyddfa) — at 1,085 metres, the highest peak in Wales and England. Walking to the summit is one of the great British outdoor experiences, and doing so from a glamping base in the park, returning to a warm shepherd’s hut and a hot tub at the end of the day, elevates the whole experience considerably. For those who prefer their mountain views from below, the Snowdon Mountain Railway — running between Llanberis and the summit — offers a spectacular alternative that’s suitable for all ages.

The slate landscape around Blaenau Ffestiniog, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, deserves particular attention. The dramatic quarry terrain here has spawned some of the most exhilarating adventure activities in the UK, including mountain biking at Antur Stiniog and underground adventures at Llechwedd — all within easy reach of several excellent glamping sites.

Read about some of glamping sites in Snowdonia

The Llŷn Peninsula and Anglesey: Coastal Glamping at Its Finest

For glamping holidays in North Wales with a coastal dimension, the Llŷn Peninsula and the Isle of Anglesey are outstanding destinations. The Llŷn is one of Wales’s most unspoilt corners — an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty stretching 30 miles into the Irish Sea, with quiet beaches, traditional fishing villages, and a pace of life that feels genuinely unhurried. Abersoch is the peninsula’s most popular resort, with excellent sailing and a beautiful bay, while the more remote beaches further west offer solitude that’s increasingly rare on any British coastline.

Anglesey, connected to the mainland by road and rail across the Menai Strait, has a wild and varied coastline stretching over 125 miles — much of it designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The beaches here are among the finest in Wales: Rhosneigr, Lligwy Bay and the vast sands of Newborough all reward a visit, and glamping on Anglesey puts you within reach of all of them. The island also holds a strong sense of Welsh identity, with the famous long-named village of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch providing the obligatory photo opportunity.

Read more about some of glampsites in Anglesey

Adventure Activities: North Wales Is the UK’s Adventure Capital

One of the things that truly sets glamping holidays in North Wales apart from other UK destinations is the sheer range and quality of adventure activities on offer. North Wales has rightfully earned a reputation as the adventure capital of the UK, and there is genuinely something for every level of thrill-seeker.

Zip World operates several sites across the region, including the famous Penrhyn Quarry zipwire — one of the fastest in the world — and underground adventures in the slate caverns of Blaenau Ffestiniog. Surf Snowdonia in the Conwy Valley offers inland surfing on a remarkable artificial wave that’s accessible to complete beginners and experienced surfers alike. Mountain biking trails range from gentle forest routes to world-class downhill tracks, and the walking options — from Snowdon summit routes to coastal path sections — are virtually inexhaustible.

For those who prefer a gentler pace, the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and Canal — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — offers one of the most memorable and scenic boat journeys in Britain, gliding along what is often called “the canal in the sky” above the Dee Valley.

Historic Towns and Cultural Highlights

Glamping holidays in North Wales offer easy access to some of the most historically rich towns in Britain. Caernarfon is dominated by its magnificent 13th-century castle — a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the most impressive fortifications in Europe — while the town itself has a strong Welsh character and a good selection of independent shops and cafés. Conwy, similarly, offers a remarkably well-preserved medieval walled town and castle, compact enough to explore on foot in a couple of hours.

Llandudno — the largest resort town in Wales — retains much of its Victorian elegance and offers a classic British seaside experience: a Grade I listed pier, the Great Orme headland accessible by historic tramway, and a broad promenade that invites an evening stroll. It’s an easy and enjoyable day out from almost any North Wales glamping base.

For something entirely unique, Portmeirion — the extraordinary Italianate village on the Dwyryd Estuary — is one of the most unusual and photogenic places in the whole of Britain. Built by architect Sir Clough Williams-Ellis between 1925 and 1975, it has to be seen to be properly believed.

Glamping in North Wales: Perfect for Every Type of Visitor

Families will find North Wales glamping sites particularly well set up for an active, varied break. The combination of adventure activities, beaches, wildlife, steam railways and accessible mountain walking makes it one of the most genuinely rewarding family destinations in the UK. Many sites offer family-sized accommodation with outdoor space, fire pits and the freedom to roam that children thrive in.

Couples seeking a romantic escape will find no shortage of secluded, beautifully appointed glamping options — private woodland cabins, hillside shepherd’s huts with mountain views, and coastal pods with hot tubs overlooking the sea. The dramatic scenery provides a backdrop that makes any break feel special.

Groups benefit from the wide range of activities and the increasing availability of multi-unit glamping sites where everyone can stay together. Whether you’re planning a celebration, a reunion, or simply a long-overdue gathering of friends, North Wales has the space and the setting to make it memorable.

Dog owners are exceptionally well catered for across the region. Many North Wales glamping sites actively welcome dogs, and the walking country — from mountain trails to coastal paths — is as good for four-legged guests as it is for their owners.

When to Book a Glamping Holiday in North Wales

North Wales rewards visitors in every season, and glamping here is increasingly a year-round proposition. Summer brings the longest days, the warmest weather, and the best conditions for outdoor activities and beach time — but it also brings the most visitors, particularly to Snowdonia. Booking well in advance for peak summer is essential.

Spring and autumn are arguably the finest seasons for a glamping holiday in North Wales. The light is extraordinary, the landscapes are at their most dramatic, and the crowds are significantly thinner. Many glamping sites in the region now offer well-insulated, heating-equipped accommodation that makes an autumn or winter break not just possible but genuinely wonderful — there is something particularly magical about a storm rolling in over Snowdonia from the warmth of a shepherd’s hut with a wood burner blazing.

Essential Experiences on a North Wales Glamping Holiday

There is more to see and do in North Wales than any single trip can cover, but these experiences should be at the top of every glamping visitor’s list:

Climbing or taking the railway to the summit of Snowdon — the defining North Wales experience, and one that delivers every time regardless of how many times you’ve done it.

Exploring the castles of Caernarfon and Conwy — two of the finest medieval fortifications in Europe, both UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and both within easy reach of most glamping bases.

A day on the Llŷn Peninsula — drive to the tip, walk a coastal path, find a quiet beach, and eat fresh seafood at a harbourside café.

Zip World or Surf Snowdonia — for a genuine adrenaline hit in a landscape that already feels pretty extraordinary.

Portmeirion — strange, beautiful, and completely unlike anywhere else in Britain.

The Pontcysyllte Aqueduct — a boat trip on the canal in the sky that never fails to impress, particularly if you’re slightly nervous of heights.

A slow evening at your glamping site — fire lit, hot tub on, mountain view in front of you, and absolutely nowhere to be. This, ultimately, is what glamping holidays in North Wales are all about.

Glamping holidays in North Wales offer a combination that is genuinely hard to find elsewhere in the UK: world-class landscapes, an extraordinary range of things to do, rich cultural depth, and accommodation that has risen to match the quality of its setting. It is a destination that earns its reputation on every visit — and one that has a way of bringing people back, year after year, to see what they missed the time before.


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