7 nights
£421 - £893
7 nights
£644 - £896
7 nights
£468 - £959
7 nights
£632 - £1,708
7 nights
£1,113 - £3,169
Please enter a valid email address.
At holidaycottages.co.uk, part of The Travel Chapter Group, your privacy is paramount to us. You can read in our privacy statement how we safeguard your data. You can opt out at any time.
7 nights
£2,234 - £5,373
7 nights
£431 - £791
7 nights
£717 - £882
7 nights
£433 - £826
7 nights
£472 - £891
7 nights
£485 - £988
7 nights
£465 - £1,123
Showing 1-12 of 18 properties
Withypool is a tiny village in Exmoor National Park. With modest amenities that amount to a village shop, a summer tea room and a pub/inn, this is a superb place to enjoy a countryside retreat. Stay at one of our holiday cottages on Exmoor. We have properties for all your requirements in and around Withypool, whether you are travelling with your immediate family or a larger group we have the right place just for you. Bring your dog along because many of our Exmoor and Somerset cottages are pet-friendly.
Follow the River Barle to the distant villages of Simonsbath and Lanacre, hunt down the perfect spot for a picnic. We’d recommend a spot by the six-arch stone bridge that cross the Barle. Walk to the Bronze Age stone-circle close to the summit of Withypool Hill or enjoy a walk over Withypool Common and Brightworthy Burrows. Head over to Minehead, Watchet and Dunster for a day by the coast, on a clear day you can see Wales across the Bristol Channel, catch a steam train or hangout at Dunster Castle. Withypool has had made it into the history books as it was at the village inn that General Eisenhower plotted much of the D-Day landings in the WW2 along with the training exercises at Saunton and Westward Ho! Artists like Arthur Munnings based themselves in Withypool too, it’s also claimed that Lorna Doone by RD Blackmore was written in the village.
Where will you stay on your Exmoor cottage break? We have excellent accommodation in Withypool, the former artists capital of the moors. It’s a wonderful place for an escape to the South West of England.