Pen-y-Dyffryn Country Hotel

“Come for the food but stay for the cosy fires and excellent service” - AA Inspector

LOCATION

OSWESTRY, SHROPSHIRE

Official Rating
Inspected by
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Awards
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Our Inspector's view

Peacefully situated in five acres of grounds, this charming old house dates back to around 1840, when it was built as a rectory. The tastefully appointed public rooms have real fires, lit in colder weather, and the accommodation includes several mini-cottages, each with its own patio. Many guests are attracted to this hotel for the excellent food and attentive, friendly service.

Awards, accolades & Welcome Schemes

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Breakfast Award
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2-Rosette restaurant
Pen-y-Dyffryn Country Hotel
Rhydycroesau, OSWESTRY, SHROPSHIRE, SY10 7JD

Features

Rooms
  • En-suite rooms annex: 4
  • En-suite rooms: 12
  • Family rooms: 1
  • Bedrooms Ground: 1
  • Satellite TV available
  • Free TV
  • Broadband available
  • WiFi available
Children
  • Laundry facilities
  • Ironing facilities
Leisure
  • Private fishing
  • New Year entertainment programme
Facilities
  • Outdoor parking spaces: 18
Accessibility
  • Accessible bedrooms: 1
  • Walk-in showers
  • Steps for wheelchair: 2
Prices and payment
  • Single room, minimum price: £72
  • Double room, minimum price: £164

About the area

Discover Shropshire

Perhaps nowhere else in England will you find a county so deeply rural and with so much variety as Shropshire. Choose a clear day, climb to the top of The Wrekin, and look down on that ‘land of lost content’ so wistfully evoked by A E Housman. Peer through your binoculars and trace the course of Britain’s longest river as the Severn sweeps through the county, from the Breidden Hills to Wyre Forest, slicing Shropshire in two. To the north is a patchwork of dairy fields, hedgerows, copses and crops, broken at intervals by rugged sandstone ridges such as Grinshill or Nesscliffe, and dissected by a complex network of canals.

Spilling over the border into neighbouring Cheshire and North Wales is the unique meres and mosses country, with serenely smooth lakes glinting silver, interspersed with russet-tinged expanses of alder-fringed peat bog, where only the cry of the curlew disturbs the silence. South of the Severn lies the Shropshire Hills AONB. It’s only when you walk Wenlock Edge that you fully discover what a magical place it is – glorious woods and unexpectedly steep slopes plunge to innumerable secret valleys, meadows, streams and farmhouses, all tucked away, invisible from the outside world. 

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