The Cliffs Hotel

“Family-friendly hotel with impressive children’s club” - AA Inspector

LOCATION

BLACKPOOL, LANCASHIRE

Official Rating
Inspected by
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Awards
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Our Inspector's view

The Cliffs Hotel is a large and extremely popular promenade hotel which is within easy reach of the town centre and has direct access to the tramway from across the road. The well-equipped bedrooms, including spacious family rooms, vary in size. Public areas offer an all-day café-bar, a smart restaurant and a suite of games rooms where children of all ages are entertained. A modern gym and leisure pool complete the experience catering well for the needs of the modern guest.

The Cliffs Hotel
Queens Promenade, BLACKPOOL, FY2 9SG

Features

Rooms
  • En-suite rooms: 163
  • Family rooms: 47
  • Free TV
  • WiFi available
Children
  • Children welcome
  • Children's play area
  • Ironing facilities
  • Cots provided
  • High chairs
  • Children's portions or menu
Leisure
  • Indoor Pool
  • Gym available
  • Weekly Entertainment
  • Christmas entertainment programme
  • New Year entertainment programme
Facilities
  • Lift available
  • Night porter available
  • Outdoor parking spaces: 20
Accessibility
  • Accessible bedrooms: 8
  • Walk-in showers
Prices and payment
  • Single room, minimum price: £35
  • Double room, minimum price: £69
Opening times
  • Open all year

About the area

Discover Lancashire

Lancashire was at the centre of the British cotton industry in the 19th century, which lead to the urbanization of great tracts of the area. The cotton boom came and went, but the industrial profile remains. Lancashire’s resorts, Blackpool, Southport and Morecambe Bay, were originally developed to meet the leisure needs of the cotton mill town workers. Blackpool is the biggest and brashest, celebrated for it tower, miles of promenade, and the coloured light ‘illuminations’. Amusements are taken very seriously here, day and night, and visitors can be entertained in a thousand different ways.

The former county town, Lancaster, boasts one of the younger English universities, dating from 1964. Other towns built up to accommodate the mill-workers with back-to-back terraced houses, are Burnley, Blackburn, Rochdale and Accrington. To get out of town, you can head for the Pennines, the ‘backbone of England’, a series of hills stretching from the Peak District National Park to the Scottish borders. To the north of the country is the Forest of Bowland, which despite its name is fairly open country, high up, with great views.

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