Inn on the Beach
Beach: The blue flag Hayling Island beach
View: Spectacular views over the beach and the Solent at all times of the year. If you can’t spot the windsurfers, the bar and conservatory also give a great view of the incoming and departing ocean liners leaving Portsmouth and Southampton.
What’s on the menu?: This popular pub on the beach serves up great home-cooked food. It has a large upstairs bar and separate restaurant which specialises in fish on a Friday and Saturday evening, and a downstairs Beach bar making it an ideal place to meet, eat and watch the windsurfing action on the waves.
Planning your visit to Inn on the Beach
Inn on the Beach, 97 Sea Front,, Hayling Island, Hampshire PO11 0AS, United Kingdom
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Inn on the Beach 7 Day Weather Forecast
Hayling Island weather forecast from Yr, delivered by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and NRK
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In this 'you may also like' section we attempt to answer what else can do near Inn on the Beach? Here you have a list by order of being the closest some more beaches, things to see and do, places to eat and upcoming events.
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Beachlands is primarily a shingle beach part of the larger Hayling seafront but this central part stretches from the Inn on the Beach in the west towards the funfair in the east. This area of the seafront is the best for entertainment of all sorts. It is the home of the Hayling Fairground, and the amusement arcades are open all
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Eastney beach is a shingle beach with some sand as the tide goes out. This beach is shingle and offers a camp site and caravan park and is ideal for swimming, wind surfing, fishing and other water sports. The facilities are good with parking for over 300 cars and excellent water quality but no lifeguard. Eastney Beach is a naturist
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RNLI Portsmouth lifeboat station can be viewed by small numbers of visitors during Sunday mornings. Lifeboats: Atlantic 75 and D class. Boats normally launched on exercise between 9.30 – 10.30am.
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Southsea Parade Pier sits in the middle of the long Southsea Beach and promenade. The original 1,950ft (591m) pier was intended for passengers travelling to and from the Isle of Wight. In 1904, a severe fire destroyed the structure, and it reopened in 1908 after a rebuild, although is now a lot shorter at just 600ft (183m). The pier has
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