Cornwall, United Kingdom

Three Mile Beach

Price per night from$659.81

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (GBP520.00), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Boutique beach huts

Setting

Great British seaside

If you’re fond of sand dunes and salty air, you’ll love Three Mile Beach in Cornwall. This coastal collection of breezy beach houses provides everything you could possibly need for a Great British seaside break (except weather guarantees). Each colourful, clapboard house has bright white interiors with splashes of pink, turquoise and blue, but the star of the sandy show is out on the deck: sunken cedar hot tubs, a barrel sauna and an optimistic barbecue. Handy trucks are set up by the dunes to dispatch sundowners and street food, or you can hire a chef to use your lovely kitchen for you. 

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

A welcome hamper of Cornish produce, including a bottle of local sparkling wine

Facilities

Photos Three Mile Beach facilities

Need to know

Rooms

15 self-contained beach houses. A minimum stay applies on some dates.

Check–Out

10am. Earliest check-in, 5pm.

Prices

Double rooms from £520.00, including tax at 20 per cent.

More details

Rates don’t include breakfast.

Also

As with any beach hut worth its sea salt, each house has all of the coastal British break essentials, including board games, books and beach bags, towels and toys.

At the hotel

Each house has free WiFi, beach bags, towels and toys, board games, books, under-floor heating, smart TV, a Bluetooth speaker, a fully-equipped kitchen, filtered-water taps, a wine fridge and Land & Water bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Half of the beach houses face the fields out back, the others the sea in the distance – for a glimpse of the Atlantic served up to your hot tub, go for the latter. The three-bedroom Club Tropicana is the furthest away from the road and check-in area, and the quietest of the residences.

Packing tips

Relieve your roof-rack of any bulky boards – all wave-riding equipment can be borrowed nearby, as can wetsuits to help with easing into the Atlantic temperatures.

Also

The sandy setting is not easily navigable for wheelchair users.

Pet‐friendly

Each beach house can accommodate up to two dogs (although you're welcome to request for more); a fee of £50 for each pet will apply for every stay. See more pet-friendly hotels in Cornwall.

Children

All ages are welcome and the beach houses can accommodate children in twin beds. Kids can run wild in the wilds, and the houses are stocked with board games and beach toys.

Food and Drink

Photos Three Mile Beach food and drink

Top Table

There are a handful of picnic benches right by the truck – or retreat to your well-equipped terrace.

Dress Code

Windbreakers and wellies in winter; light linens in summer.

Hotel restaurant

There’s no formal restaurant, just a handy street-food truck dispensing dinners of tapas with influences from all over the world: feta-stuffed peppers, marinated manchego and harissa prawn cocktail. Delivery direct to your beach house is available for residents, and private chefs can be booked to do the hard work for you. All meals should be pre-ordered by 11am. In winter, the truck is shuttered on Mondays and Tuesdays, and service hours may vary.

Hotel bar

Next door to the truck is a pink Piaggio tuk-tuk, where you can order beers, wine and soft drinks.

Last orders

The truck serves food on Monday to Saturday between 5.30pm and 8.30pm, with bar service from 5pm to 9pm. On Sunday, the bar is open between noon and 6pm, with food available from 1pm to 5pm.

Room service

The room-service offering extends to helpful forgotten items such as surf wax and sunscreen – along with actually edible things from the truck’s menu.

Location

Photos Three Mile Beach location
Address
Three Mile Beach
Gwithian Towans, Gwithian
Hayle
TR27 5GE
United Kingdom

This set of boutique beach houses is right beside the dunes of Gwithian Towans Beach on the shores of St Ives Bay in Cornwall.

Planes

Newquay’s airport is closest, a 50-minute drive away. Flights land here from other parts of the UK, as well as Ireland, Germany, Denmark, Portugal and Spain.

Trains

The nearest station is St Erth, which is on the Paddington to Penzance line. The drive from here to the beach should take less than 15 minutes and staff can pre-book you a taxi. If you’re hiring a car, get off the train at Truro – from here, the drive should take around 40 minutes. Or catch the glamorously (and possibly misleadingly) named Night Riviera Sleeper, which leaves London just before midnight and chugs into Cornwall bright and early.

Automobiles

Each house has three private parking bays, as well as a charging point. The hotel is a two-hour drive from Exeter, just over three hours from Bristol and at least five hours from London. A car will definitely come in handy.

Other

Penzance has its own heliport and private jets can land at Newquay Airport.

Worth getting out of bed for

If you’ve always wanted to learn how to surf, there are few better places in the UK to try it than right here in Cornwall – Global Boarders has a surf school on Gwithian Towans Beach. The hotel can arrange paddleboards and surfboards to borrow, along with bicycle hire and coasteering. Other water-based adventures include kite-surfing and swimming with horses, or stick to dry land with a trip to the Barbara Hepworth museum and sculpture garden in St Ives.

Local restaurants

Masterchef star Adam Handling is manning the kitchens at the Ugly Butterfly, overlooking Carbis Bay through floor-to-ceiling windows. Locally sourced produce is put to good use in the dishes, with zero waste, since offcuts reappear in drinks and creative bar snacks. Cornwall’s most authentic Italian awaits at The Old Forge in Lelant, where the breakfast has a list of pre-noon cocktails and ordering them is actively encouraged. Above the harbour in St Ives, Porthminster Kitchen adds a little global influence to its Cornish cooking – expect dishes such as crispy fried squid with miso and roasted cod with herb gnocchi. 

Local cafés

Warm up with coffee and doughnuts from The Kiosk by Yallah Coffee in St Ives, or enjoy coffees and cocktails with a view of the coast from Harbour View House.

Local bars

A 20-minute drive south from Three Mile Beach, The Mexico Inn is a Longrock institution, having served refreshments to the community for 200 years. Today, it’s a gastropub with colourful plates of food that put shame to its beige British culinary cousins. For somewhere to drink in St Ives, head to Little Palais, a charming little wine bar and bottle shop.

Reviews

Photos Three Mile Beach reviews
Mina Holland

Anonymous review

By Mina Holland, Wayfaring food writer

I came to Cornwall late in life. By ‘late’, I mean towards the end of my twenties, which definitely made me late to the Cornish party. As a teenager returning to school after the summer holidays, I remember my friends referring to Rock and Booby’s Bay (no schoolgirl forgets a name like that), and hearing their coming-of-age experiences from a south-western land of vast beaches. It had an almost folkloric quality in my mind.

But then I met a man who had been one of the kids who’d gone to Cornwall every summer. He took me to stay with his family in Bodmin Moor, we walked in the woodlands of the Camel Valley, and ate peerless fish and chips in the north coast’s Seven Bays while our dog scampered on the shoreline. I got the appeal. When we had children, my husband wanted them to have the Cornish holidays, too, which, sadly, the pandemic put on hold.

Until, that is, we went to Three Mile Beach, a collection of 15 luxury beach houses (with kitchens) nestled in the dunes of Gwithian in St Ives Bay. Our kids were almost four and nearly two when we went; and as we’d been cooped up at home for much of their early years, we were as desperate for a change of scenery as we were trepidatious. Would the children sleep well in this new place? Was the beach a safe one? What about food, would it be easy to find and cook the things they liked there? And don’t get me started on the word ‘luxury’ in the hotel’s comms, which was both seductive and anxiety-inducing. What havoc would our kids wreak on this beautiful place, what damage could they do?

But Three Mile Beach was made for families like ours, because it’s made for everyone. The compound of beach houses is set back from the bay – it takes about five-to-10 minutes to walk down to the sand, past the rock pools – but the view as we approached it made us gasp. The hugeness of the sea, the sky, the sand, impossible to capture on a camera, looked like the perfect antidote to London’s restrictions.

Our three-bedroom house, Rock the Kasbah – each building has a punkish moniker – may have been surrounded by the other houses (indeed, in the neighbouring one, there was a group of surfers, who happened to be on a stag do), but each one is designed to feel private and secluded, like it’s your own. The children toddled in excitedly, thrilled by the space and the colourful design, a mix of clean lines and vibrant Berber-inspired rugs and cushions. I needn’t have worried about cooking there, either; each kitchen at Three Mile Beach is better equipped than even my own, with a saucepan for every eventuality, good sharp knives and a handsome collection of Yeti vessels to keep coffee hot and wine cool. The welcome hamper was exemplary too, including every herb and spice you could possibly need, scones with clotted cream and local jam (important: in Cornwall, the jam goes on first) and a bottle of Camel Valley sparkling wine for once the kids had gone to bed. Yes.

We visited in early November, not exactly lie-on-the-beach season, but at Three Mile Beach this doesn’t matter. There is so much else to do. If surfing’s your bag, you can hire surfboards and wetsuits. There’s Chomp, which in summer is an on-site beach bar and restaurant, and in winter does meal deliveries. The hot tub was the star of the show, though; I spent hours a day in ours with my daughter, her taking delight in endless bubbles while I immersed my body in the heat and felt the cold sea air on my face, alternating between coffee and more of that sparkling wine.

As it was winter, we had all our meals inside, where the setup is very practical for family life: a kitchen island is home to the stove, and behind that, a big table (with two Stokke high chairs, available on request, like cots), then an enormous L-shaped sofa in front of a huge television. You can cook and keep an eye on children as they vegetate after an afternoon’s crabbing or, in our case, day trips to the likes of St Ives, the Eden Project, the Lost Gardens of Heligan and various brilliant eateries. Celebrated pub the Gurnard’s Head is a must, gorse-yellow and unmissable on the horizon, where we tucked into mussels and chips while the bairns had, well, chips and chips – and excellent ones they were, too. We loved the Standard Inn as well, the new-ish pub by chef Simon Stallard, where I had a stew to end them all: cod, bean, tomato and tarragon, topped with lashings of aioli. My children loved going for ice creams at Moomaid of Zennor in St Ives, while I picked up some lovely bottles at wine and coffee spot, St Eia.

We didn’t actually need to eat out. Cornwall is such a treasure trove for produce these days, and our kitchen at Three Mile Beach was so good, that cooking at home was a joy. Nearby Trevaski’s is a farm shop where we bought local fish, meat and vegetables (and the children picked the very last of the year’s raspberries from the polytunnels). One night we fried skate, on another we had a family roast; we attempted to copy that stew from the Standard on another still. Very quickly, it felt like a home away from home. Maybe my kids will get their Cornish summers, after all. And me, well, I may have come to Cornwall late, but that’s definitely better than never.

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Price per night from $659.81