Studland beach and heath
"Easy walking through a significant nature reserve over beach and heath"
Walk directions
From the car park go past the Discovery Centre to the sea. Turn left and walk up the beach for about 2 miles (3.2km). Marram-covered dunes hide the heath on your left, but you have views to the Isle of Wight, and the golden cliffs of Bournemouth curve away ahead. Continue round the tip of the sand bar into Shell Bay. Poole opens out ahead – more precisely, the spit of Sandbanks, with the Haven Hotel facing you across the harbour mouth. There are good views of the nature reserve Brownsea Island.
Turn inland at South Haven Point, joining the road by the phone box. Pass the boatyard and toll booth, then bear right at a barrier (‘Emergency Exit’) on a track leading down to some houseboats. Turn left along the inner shore of Poole Harbour. After Bramble Bush Bay and a row of concrete blocks in the sea, bear left on any path to rejoin the nearby road. Cross and then follow the verge until the end of some woods on your left, when you can pick up the broad, muddy track on the heath alongside the road. After 0.5 miles (800m) the track and road bend left. Where the track bends sharply right to meet the road, stay ahead on the footpath for another 100yds (90m) to a fingerpost at the roadside.
Cross the road into the right-hand one of two tracks, marked ‘Greenlands Farm’. At a junction near Greenlands Farm bear left and, as it bends right, keep ahead through a gate on to the heath. A green track leads along an old hedge-line, past a large shed on the left, and 175yds (160m) later reaches a fingerpost.
Go through the gate ahead and turn half left (southeast), aiming for a distant fingerpost. Bear slightly left, as indicated (‘Studland’) by the fingerpost, soon joining a flinty track. It crosses the moorland rise, passing the Agglestone away to your right. Blue bridleway arrows mark the way down into some woods. Keep left at a fork just before the woods, then bear right over a footbridge and up through a gate into a lane. Pass a house, then turn left (blue markers) into a field. Head diagonally right into a green lane leading to the road. Turn left past the Knoll House Hotel, then right to return to the car park.
Additional information
Terrain
- Sandy beach, muddy heathland tracks, verges
Landscape
- Sandy Studland Bay, heath and views over Poole Harbour
Dog friendliness
- Dogs on leads are allowed on the beach from May to September
Parking
- Knoll Beach car park, by Discovery Centre just off B3351
Toilets en route
- By Discovery Centre and near ferry toll station
About the walk
The glorious sands in Studland Bay are justly famous, attracting over one million visitors a year, so you’ll need to get up early to have the beach to yourself. You’re unlikely to be alone for long, and local horse-riders are often the first to arrive. As you progress up the beach, getting warmer,... you can shed your clothes with impunity, for the upper stretch is the less familiar form of nature reserve, opening its arms to naturists. Even on a winter’s morning you’ll spot brave souls sunbathing naked in the shelter of the marram-covered dunes. Offshore you’ll see big, sleek motor boats letting rip as they emerge from the constraints of Poole Harbour. Watch out, too, for the orange and blue of the Poole lifeboat on manoeuvres, and the yellow and black pilot boat nipping out to lead in the tankers. Jet-skiers zip around the more sedate sailing yachts, all dodging the small fishing boats. It’s a perfect seaside harmony, complete with wheeling gulls. Studland’s sand is pale gold and fine-ground, trodden by thousands of feet, piled into hundreds of satisfying sandcastles and smoothed daily by the sea. The shells underfoot become more numerous as you approach the tip of the sand bar. It’s a wonderful opportunity for some shell-spotting. Behind the beach lies the rugged heath, part of the same nature reserve, which is in the care of the National Trust. The Trust is reclaiming heath that had become farmland, clearing scrub and maintaining controlled grazing to prevent it all reverting to woodland. Some of the heath is still recovering after a disastrous fire in 2009. You might spot a rare Dartford warbler here – with its pinky-brown colouring and long tail, it’s a distinctive little bird. All six of Britain’s reptile species – common lizard, sand lizard, smooth snake, adder, grass snake and slow worm – live on the heath. Be patient and you might see one soaking up the sunshine in a quiet corner. Trapped between the dunes and the heath is a freshwater lake known as the Little Sea. Hides allow you to watch the dizzying variety of coastal and freshwater birds which congregate here.
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Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
About the area
Dorset is made up of rugged coastlines, high chalk downlands and a chain of picturesque villages and seaside towns that make up 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. Hidden gems of Dorset can be found down winding, country lanes that lead to snug villages hidden from view.
Nearby places to stay
View all (8)
Self-Catering
Mimosa Cottage
★★★
"Amazing location and with a pretty garden for the guests to enjoy...."
- Private garden
- Washing machine
- Sky or freeview
- En suite
Self-Catering
Mimosa Cottage
★★★
"Amazing location and with a pretty garden for the guests to enjoy...."
- Total units: 1
- Private garden
- Washing machine
- Sky or freeview
Hotel
THE PIG-on the beach
★★★
"Fabulously creative accommodation set in splendid gardens...."
- Family rooms: 0
- Free TV
- WiFi available
Nearby places to stay
Mimosa Cottage
Mimosa Cottage is a delightful detached bungalow in very good order with spacious living accommodation for eight people. It is comfortably furnished and centrally heated and so is suita...
★★★ Rating
Mimosa Cottage
Mimosa Cottage is a delightful detached bungalow in very good order with spacious living accommodation for eight people. It is comfortably furnished and centrally heated and so is suita...
★★★ Rating
THE PIG-on the beach
THE PIG on the Beach is a former summer house set in beautiful grounds in a dramatic coastal location. The grounds feature hotel livestock, including pigs and chickens, and there's a wa...
★★★ Rating
Ulwell Holiday Park
Sitting under the Purbeck Hills and surrounded by scenic walks, this park is only two miles from the beach. It is family-run and caters well for families and couples, and offers a newly...
★★★★★ Rating
Burnbake Forest Lodges
Burnbake Forest Lodges in Dorset’s beautiful Isle of Purbeck is situated between Corfe Castle and Studland on the Jurassic Coast, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The luxury lodges provide...
★★★★ Rating
Flat 8 Sandringham Court
This homely, two-bedroom, ground-floor flat sleeps four and is furnished to a very high standard with many personal touches and also offers undercover, allocated parking space. Situated...
★★★★ Rating
8 Sandringham Court
This homely, two-bedroom, ground-floor flat sleeps four and is furnished to a very high standard with many personal touches and also offers undercover, allocated parking space. Situated...
★★★★ Rating
Belvedere Lodge
Belvedere Lodge is a Georgian Grade II listed 2 bedroomed ground floor apartment with a romantic cottage feel and dramatic sea views over Swanage Pier. The beach is a short stroll away,...
★★★★ Rating




