Tywyn
Travel Guide
Visit Tywyn

St George's Hotel
staff were very friendly and welcoming rooms were spacious and very clean the hotel is right on the sea front and all shops and bars are all close by
Reviewed on 6 Apr 2026

The Marine Hotel
Didn’t realise the whole hotel is covered in construction. We stayed during a windy night and it felt like the wall was going to fly off! The mirror was shaking. Might have been handier if the dog friendly rooms were on the ground floor - being on the third floor wasn’t the most ideal.
Reviewed on 6 Apr 2026

The Seafront Hotel by Compass Hospitality
Rooms were clean, and had all we needed eg kettle, coffee etc.Also had hairdryer.Ensuite was small which was ok but shower head fixed at top and angled vertically, so did not use.Would rate it as ok and cannot fault location.
Reviewed on 6 Apr 2026

Beachmount Holiday Apartments
Such a peaceful location and property exceeding our expectations in every way!
Reviewed on 1 Nov 2025

3 Bed Caravan - Sleeps 8 - Pets - Parking - Wifi

3 Bed Caravan - Sleeps 8 - Pet Friendly, Parking
Popular places to visit

Venue Cymru
One of the United Kingdom’s foremost concert and theater venues overlooks the Irish Sea and the rocky beach of Llandudno.

Llandudno Pier
Llandudno Pier is an impressive structure that dominates the coastline of Llandudno, a picturesque town in North Wales. The largest pier in Wales, stretching 2,296 feet into the Irish Sea, is one of the finest, and best preserved, examples of a Victorian pier you will find anywhere in the UK.

Llandudno North Shore Beach
With a paddling pool and climbing frame at one end and pantomime puppet shows at the other, this strand is a child’s dream.

Promenade
The wide red boardwalk separates the road from the beach in this scenic zone, where pantomime puppets and paddling pools take prominent positions.

Great Orme Tramway
The only cable-hauled tramway in Britain, and in fact one of the last remaining in the world, the Great Orme Tramway is one of the most beloved heritage attractions in Wales, carrying in the region of 160,000 passengers every year from Victoria Station in Llandudno to the Summit Station, a distance of around a mile. First opened at the turn of the 20th Century, and preserved in part through funding from the National Lottery and the EU, the tramway operates on a funicular system, whereby each car is attached to the cable that is winched up the hill, the weight of the descending car helping to pull up the one ascending.

Great Orme Country Park
A prominent limestone headland on the north coast of Wales, the Great Orme has mystified historians and archaeologists for centuries.
Things to do

North Wales and Caernarfon Castle day tour from Chester



