Isle of Wight Coastal Path: Ventnor to Shanklin
Walk along the seafront at Ventnor, passing the fisheries. Continue ahead through a car park, and go past the barrier gate at the end, onto the sea wall. Follow this past the holiday chalets on Wheelers Bay, and continue for about 1 mile around the point to Bonchurch Bay, a small waterside village.
Once past the Bonchurch Pottery, turn left, inland. Climb steps and a steeply sloping path up through trees to reach the Old Church of St Boniface. Turn right here, and stay on the path to the right of the gate. Descend steps and turn left along a gravel road. At the top keep straight ahead.
Go through a gate and keep left on the main path, which now enters the Landslip, a lush area of dense foliage caused by unstable ground slowly but inexorably making its way towards the sea. The route through here is steep, uneven and muddy, with erosion making it one of the most challenging sections of the entire coastal route – though steps, rails and duckboards all help. Follow the path up steps, and ignore the footpath off to the left (V65d). Keep ahead on the undulating route, parallel to the coast, passing a turning to the Devil’s Chimney. Continue, to pass a rustic stone wishing seat on the left. After another very step climb, turn left at the junction with the V65 footpath and start to descend. Go down steps and along a wall to a gate.
Turn left along a drive, and where it curves left, keep ahead on the easy track, past the entrance to Luccombe Chine House. Stay on this track to emerge by a wooden house. Go ahead through a gate and onto a drive. Continue on this gently undulating path to emerge at a lane, by a National Trust sign.
Bear left, and then keep ahead along the road. This meets houses and begins to descend. Turn right into Popham Road, and then go through gardens down steep steps towards the beach. Turn left, walking on the sea wall above the beach (following the coastal path sign) for approximately 200m, until you reach the main esplanade at Shanklin Chine. Continue along the pavement of the esplanade, passing in front of numerous beach huts, shops and hotels and the low building of the Shanklin Sandown Rowing Club. Pass a tall, white tower structure on your left, rising up the height of the cliff. This is a lift which carries passengers up and down the 45m-cliffs which run along much of the esplanade. The current structure, built in the late 1950s, replaces one originally put in place in 1891 to service the growing number of tourists. The walk ends at the junction of Hope Road and Delphi Road.
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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.
Nearby places to stay
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- Rooms 7
- Free TV
- DVD Player
- Wifi
- Family rooms: 9
- Free TV
- WiFi available
- Lift available




