Beaches In Pembrokeshire -
Newport Sands
Beach Guide
Bathing
Cafe
Canoeing
Car park
First aid
Lifeguard
Phone
Sailing
Sea angling
Sea rowing
Seaside award beach
Slipway or launching
Subaqua
Toilets
Wind surf
Sand Beach
Sand Dunes
A broad, long beach at the mouth of the River Nevern. This dune backed, sandy beach is plenty big enough for all your beach activities and at low tide you can wade across the river to Newport Parrog. It’s very popular with all kinds of watersports enthusiasts.
Awards: Seaside Award (Resort) 2012.
Parking: At beach head or at Newport Parrog (this car park gets very busy in the summer months).
Beach facilities: Slipway. Lifeguards patrol between end of June and beginning of September.
On shore facilities: Café and toilets. Newport provides all the amenities of a large village including galleries, bike hire, golf club and a National Park Visitor Centre. A good choice of hotels, B&Bs, guesthouses, caravan and camping sites can found in the area. The golf course backing onto the beach was extended to 18 holes in 2008 and a fabulous restaurant and hotel built.
ID: 1642 Revised: 18/5/2012
The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park is a spectacular and distinctive coastal area. It’s Britain’s Only Coastal National Park, as it’s the only one of Britain’s 14 National Parks to be entirely coastal in nature...
186 miles of walkers paradise on both ild headlands and pristine beaches with picturesque towns and villages like Tenby, St Davids and Solva en route. Most people walk a little bit a time, coming back year after year to explore a bit more. If you want to do the whole lot, allow 15 days...
No other county in Britain has more Blue Flag Beaches or Seaside Award beaches than Pembrokeshire. With over 50 beaches to choose from, there’s going to one that’s perfect for you, whether you want surfing, kayaking or kite surfing, or just somewhere peaceful to relax, sunbathe and build sandcastles...
There are 51 forts and castles in Pembrokeshire including enormous stone fortresses like Pembroke castle, Manorbier castle and Carew castle. There are medieval walled towns of Tenby and Pembroke and fortified Bishops Palaces at St Davids and Lamphey.
A pristine environment, clean seas, very little population and lush vegetation makes for rich and varied habitats, most important of which are the Islands: Skomer, Skokholm, Ramsey, Grassholm and Caldey. Home to thousands of Puffins, Gannets and other sea birds. Dolphin, Porpoise and Whale watching boat trips are popular too...

