Highlands End Holiday Park

“Clifftop holiday park with first-class family facilities and stunning sea views” - AA Inspector
BRIDPORT, DORSET

Our Inspector's view
A well-screened site with magnificent cliff-top views over the Channel and the Dorset coast, adjacent to National Trust land and overlooking Lyme Bay. The pitches are mostly sheltered by hedging and are well spaced on hardstandings. The excellent facilities include a stylish bar and restaurant, indoor pool, leisure centre and The Cowshed Café, a very good coffee shop with a stunning view, and a soft-play area for children. There is a mixture of statics and tourers, but the tourers enjoy the best cliff-top positions, including gravel hardstanding pitches overlooking Lyme Bay. Ten luxury lodges and wooden pods, that sleep four, are available for hire.
Awards, accolades & Welcome Schemes
Awards and ratings may only apply to specific accommodation units at this location.
Facilities – at a glance
Dogs allowed
Electrical hook up
Entertainment
Glamping
Indoor pool
Features
- Indoor Pool
- Tennis
- Gym
- Game Room
- Playground
- Licensed Bar
- Entertainment
- Sports field
- Launderette
- Ice pack facility
- Cafe/Restaurant
- Fast food/takeaway
- Picnic Area
- Shop onsite
- Wifi available
- Motorvan service point
- Calor Gas
- Camping Gaz
- Battery Charging
- Toilet fluid
- Total Touring Pitches: 195
- Total Static Pitches: 160
- Caravan Pitches Available
- Motorhome Pitches Available
- Tent Pitches Available
Also in the area
About the area
Discover Dorset
Dorset means rugged varied coastlines and high chalk downlands. Squeezed in among the cliffs and set amid some of Britain’s most beautiful scenery is a chain of picturesque villages and seaside towns. Along the coast you’ll find the Lulworth Ranges, which run from Kimmeridge Bay in the east to Lulworth Cove in the west. Together with a stretch of East Devon, this is Britain’s Jurassic Coast, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, noted for its layers of shale and numerous fossils embedded in the rock. Among the best-known natural landmarks on this stretch of the Dorset coast is Durdle Door, a rocky arch that has been shaped and sculpted to perfection by the elements. The whole area has the unmistakable stamp of prehistory.
Away from Dorset’s magical coastline lies a landscape with a very different character and atmosphere, but one that is no less appealing. Here, winding, hedge-lined country lanes lead beneath lush, green hilltops to snug, sleepy villages hidden from view and the wider world. The people of Dorset are justifiably proud of the achievements of Thomas Hardy, its most famous son, and much of the county is immortalised in his writing.
Dining nearby
Restaurants and Pubs
Nearby experiences
Recommended things to do
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