Walking Holidays from around the United Kingdom and Ireland

Walking Holidays In England

All our walking holidays in England have been researched thoroughly and the routes have been tested by many experienced walkers. Everything has been taken care of for you so you can relax and follow the documentation and enjoy the walk in hand. Every walking holiday in England we offer has been well throughout to maximize the walk.

Please select the appropriate walk you are interested in for further details. If you need anymore information on how exactly our walking holidays work then please see the what’s included section.


The Cotswolds

The Cotswold Walks

A gorgeous area of gentle hills and impossibly pretty limestone villages with good links to London. Easy walking in classic English countryside.


Bodiam Castle in Sussex

Sussex, Essex & Kent Walks

Neighbouring counties near London featuring historic towns like Canterbury, and some of the finest coastal walking in England


The Lakes District

The Lake District Walks

A stunning region of lakes and mountains associated with the poet Wordsworth among others. Moderate walking in some of England's greatest wild scenery


Jane Austen

Jane Austen Walk

This is a two day three night walking break in the beautiful Hampshire countryside that was the inspiration for the works of Jane Austen, author of Pride & Prejudice, Sense & Sensibility and many others. 


Jane Austen

Clarendon Way

Named after the site of Clarendon Palace, a former Norman royal hunting lodge, the Clarendon Way links two of the great cathedral cities of England – Salisbury and Winchester, in this three-night, two-walking-day break


North Downs Way/ Path to Canterbury

Our route runs over a section of the North Downs Way, coinciding with some of the places that Chaucer's pilgrims visited and parts of the Pilgrim Way marked on maps. Overall, this is a gentle walk, with beautiful views below you across the 'Garden of England'


Derbyshire & the Peak District

The Peak District is the often inexplicably overlooked area of northern upland England, with the grandeur of the Lake District and the charm
of the Cotswolds. Marvellous scenery, myriad pretty villages and some of the finest houses in Britain, including the magnificent Chatsworth House.


Cornwall Walks

We offer two of the most interesting and scenic parts of the Southwest Coastal Path, featuring the Lizard Peninsula (the most southerly point of the British mainland) and St. Michael's Mount; and
the section from St. Ives to Penzance.  


Coast to Coast

'The brainchild of Alfred Wainwright, the well-known writer and hill-walker, the Coast to Coast Walk crosses three National Parks, undoubtedly some of England's finest scenery. Starting beside the Irish Sea, you have wonderful walking through the mountains of the Lake District, across the Pennines and down Swaledale. The North York Moors await you and beyond them the east coast  


East Anglia 

East Anglia is the area of England in the east that includes Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridgshire and Lincolnshire. Generally easy walking, with some important historical highlights, magnificent churches, and evocative coastal scenery. This is the England that John Constable, one of Europe's greatest painters, recorded in his classic landscape works

East Anglia


Hadrian's Wall

Hadrian's Wall is a stone and turf fortification built by the Ancient Romans across what is now northern England. Begun in AD 122, during the rule of emperor Hadrian, it was the middle of three such fortifications built across Great Britain, the first being from the River Clyde to the River Forth under Agricola and the last the Antonine Wall.

Hadrian's Wall


The Dorset of Thomas Hardy

Dorchester was the inspiration for Casterbridge in Hardy's novel 'The Mayor of Casterbridge' and remains a handsome town of 19th and 18th century houses.

Includes Cerne Abbas, overlooked by the famous – or, for some, infamous – Cerne Abbas Giant.

The Dorset of Thomas Hardy