Published On: Sat, Mar 14th, 2026
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I stayed at UK holiday park ‘better than Center Parcs’ — my verdict | UK | Travel

Bluestone National Park Resort Review

This remote corner of the UK is magical. It is steeped in history and home to the most beautiful landscapes. Stone burial chambers date back 4,000 years, standing stones inscribed with Latin and ancient Irish dot the countryside and wrapped around it all is one of the most striking coastlines anywhere on the planet, where waves roll in over pristine sandy beaches or smash violently against towering rock faces.

At the heart of it all is the Bluestone National Park Resort, set within 500 acres of wild Welsh countryside. A holiday park it may be, but Bluestone wants you to feel like you are part of the Pembrokeshire panorama that surrounds you on all sides. So well-absorbed is the resort into its surroundings that despite its size and its hundreds of lodges you’d scarcely have any clue it was there until you were well inside.

But that’s not to say it’s not also a modern and luxurious holiday experience, especially where its new lodges are concerned. They took my breath away.

Bluestone summed up

An aerial view across Bluestone National Park Resort shows how naturally it's incorporated into its surroundings

Bluestone is perfectly incorporated into its beautiful surroundings (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

Most of Bluestone is made up of its 300 or so beautiful wooden lodges of various sizes dotted across hills not far from the pretty town of Narberth. The centre of the resort is its purpose-built village home to a couple of dozen charming, colourful stone cottages, a handful of restaurants, some shops (selling a wide range of Welsh foods, beers, spirits and toys), a spa, a pub and a playground (on a sunny day, the beer garden’s proximity to the playground is a godsend for parents).

Also in the resort is a large indoor play area called The Hive (with one of the best features you’ll find in any indoor play area – more on that later), the Blue Lagoon, a large swimming area with indoor and outdoor slides and a wave machine, and the Serendome, a covered indoor-outdoor adventure play area featuring everything from a theatre to an extensive aerial adventure course. Generally speaking, the resort is probably better for younger children rather than teenagers (mine are 10 and under) but you can make your own call on that.

I’ve been holidaying here for a decade. My children have grown up coming here almost every year of their lives so it already holds a special place in my family’s hearts. We’ve just returned from our most recent visit, which coincided with winter turning to spring (though no one told the Welsh weather that). I’d go back tomorrow.

Accommodation

There’s only one place to start and that’s with Bluestone’s new Platinum Collection lodges. Immaculate and beautifully-designed, these brand new lodges are on another level to any I’ve stayed in before. We stayed in a St Govan Lodge (named after one of the most striking parts of the nearby coastline) with three bedrooms sleeping six people, two bathrooms including one gorgeous en suite with rain shower, standalone bath, twin sinks and serene starlight effect lighting on the ceiling.

A family looks out of an open sun room on the first floor of a St Govan Lodge in Bluestone's new Platinum Collection

Looking out of the lodge sun room with fully retractable glass doors was a highlight of the stay (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

Looking out through open bifolding doors from the sun room at a St Govan Lodge in Bluestone National Park Resort

This is the view from the inside (Image: Steffan Rhys)

There was a spacious upstairs open-plan living area with a dining room, a “cwtch” (a snug room with two chairs and a TV for relaxing, working or giving the kids some quiet time) and a sun room, a stunning new feature for Bluestone lodges with two fully retractable glass walls. Even at winter’s end we opened them wide to breathe in the Pembrokeshire air and drink in those views. In summer, it would be heavenly drinking prosecco or a cold beer as well as the scenery.

The lodges come fully-equipped with an oven, microwave, fridge freezer, dishwasher and even an air fryer, which we made full use of for breakfasts and an evening meal around the six-seater dining table. After a home-cooked meal on our first night, we settled into the huge u-shaped sofa in front of a cosy electric fire.

A cooked breakfast on the table in the open-plan upstairs living area in a Bluestone lodge

Waking up to breakfast in the open-plan upstairs living area in our Bluestone lodge was heaven (Image: Steffan Rhys)

A double bed and chair in the master bedroom in a Bluestone lodge

Our master bedroom was simple but really comfy and cosy (Image: Steffan Rhys)

The Platinum Lodges also come with their own electric buggy to help you get around the resort. This was the highlight of my five-year-old’s trip as we tootled along in our six-seater at 6mph engaging in the resort-wide game of “beep the horn at everyone you pass”. The lodges also have their own buggy charging point.

All Bluestone’s lodges, which sleep between two and 14 people, come with kitchen and open plan living areas, while the cottages in the village have one or two bedrooms.

Checking in

Check-in is effortless. For most of the park’s guests, it’s a drive-through process: arrive at the welcome lodge, drive around the one-way system to your own lodge, unload your car then return it to the car park at the resort’s edge and forget about it until it’s time to leave. Outside check-in and check-out times, Bluestone is a car-free resort so you can stroll the roads or drive your buggy in peace and safety.

A lodge in Bluestone's Platinum Collection with a buggy parked outside

Platinum Collection lodges come with a buggy included — these are fantastic for getting around in Bluestone’s car-free resort and kids love them! (Image: Steffan Rhys)

A tree towers over one of Bluestone's lodges

You don’t have to stay in a Platinum Collection lodge to have a luxurious stay — this is one of the Gold Collection lodges (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

For Platinum Collection guests, it’s even smoother. We had our own exclusive entrance, check-in lodge, car park and buggy pick-up point. There can’t have been more than five minutes between checking in and driving odoff in the buggy after a quick how-to guide.

Things to do

A sign on the wall in Bluestone’s village says “there’s no bad weather in Pembrokeshire, just the wrong clothes”. Not everyone will agree with this but you’re in west Wales so you need to accept that there might be rain whenever you visit.

A general view of the cottages inside Bluestone's village

It’s easy to forget when you’re strolling around Bluestone’s cottages that you’re in a resort and not a real village! (Image: Steffan Rhys)

A wooden wizard sculpture looks over the village in Bluestone

There are magical touches all over the resort — the village lights up in a light show every evening (Image: Steffan Rhys)

Bluestone has masses of outdoor activities for all the family, from stand-up paddleboarding on its lakes to cycling, archery, exploring its woodland trails, zip-lining or rustic outdoor eating and marshmallow-toasting at Steep Ravine and Camp Smokey (which reopen in June after storm damage forced them to close). You also have all of Pembrokeshire and its award-winning beaches on your doorstep.

A small stream with a little waterfall runs past a Bluestone lodge

You are surrounded by nature in Bluestone (Image: Steffan Rhys)

Neon-lit animal sculptures float above colourful picnic tables in the Serendome at Bluestone

And you can head undercover in the indoor-outdoor Serendome (Image: Steffan Rhys)

But even when it rains (and it’s Wales so there’s a high chance of this) there are masses of activities under cover. My kids were entertained every minute of the day. Start the day with a swim at the Blue Lagoon Water Park, an indoor pool heated to perfection (using locally sourced biomass) with four flumes, a wave machine, toddler splash areas and a lazy river which takes you outside for a quick loop before returning indoors. It’s looking a bit tired in parts and could probably do with a bit of touching up in the not-too-distant future as it approaches its 20th birthday but that doesn’t detract from how much fun it is.

An outdoor slide at the Blue Lagoon Water Park

Among the slides at the Blue Lagoon Water Park is one that goes outdoors (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

The Hive indoor activity centre has soft play, a huge bouncy castle, climbing walls, messy play, and a cafe-bar upstairs where parents can relax while the kids tire themselves out. But the highlight of my trip this time round was watching my two children try Adrenaline, a circular zipline suspended from the roof which they flew around high above the play area. They came off grinning from ear to ear.

A family walks into the Serendome at Bluestone National Park Resort

The Serendome at Bluestone (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

Looking across the Skywalk aerial adventure course inside the Serendome at Bluestone National Park Resort

The Serendome is an indoor-outdoor adventure centre featuring, among other things, the Skywalk aerial course (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

The Serendome is an indoor-outdoor adventure play area housed under a giant transparent dome housing everything from a multi-level aerial adventure course in which kids (and adults) can ride a bike across a zipwire three storeys high to an amphitheatre-style theatre in which we watched a local male voice choir perform on St David’s Day and danced along to a silent disco. There’s also a bar and a few pop-up food stalls.

The Celtic Thermal Suite in The Well Spa at Bluestone

You can head to the Well Spa if you want some quiet time (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

Looking up at one of the flumes inside the Blue Lagoon Water Park at Bluestone National Park Resort

Or there’s the Blue Lagoon Water Park, which is free for all resort guests to visit as often as they like — we went every day (Image: Bluestone National Park Resort)

And there’s The Well Spa, a tranquil, adult-only spa offering thermal experiences, hydrotherapy, saunas, steam rooms and a range of luxury treatments. The kids’ mum headed here for two hours of peace while the youngsters used up some energy on the Serendome’s aerial adventure course.

Eating and drinking

One of the great joys of Bluestone for me is being able to prepare and eat a meal in a beautiful upstairs open-plan dining room with views of the countryside all around. Whether it’s breakfast in morning sunshine or a cosy evening meal and glass of red wine with the wind and rain howling outside, we always plan on having at least one family meal in the lodge.

An exterior view of the Farmhouse Grill restaurant in the Bluestone village

The Farmhouse Grill restaurant is in the Bluestone village (Image: Steffan Rhys)

A salmon meal from the Kinghts Tafarn in Bluestone

There’s also food in the Knights Tafarn pub, where you can also watch live sport (Image: Steffan Rhys)

But there are plenty of options for dining out too. Our go-to is the Farmhouse Grill, a casual and rustic restaurant serving steaks, burgers fish and kids’ dinners. The Oak Tree serves pizza and other Italian food, there’s pub food in the Knights Tafarn (where a roaring log fire keeps you warm on cold winter days and a beer garden lets you soak in the summer sunshine), fast food at the NRG Lab in The Hive and outdoor eating at Camp Smokey. The food’s not award-winning but it’s perfectly decent. There’s more refined dining at the gorgeous Black Pool Mill, a newer addition to Bluestone’s eating options which is off-site and a 20-minute walk along a well-marked path or very short drive away.

Outside Bluestone

We didn’t spend a single second outside Bluestone during our three-night stay. We never do. But if you did fancy a change, Bluestone is the only UK holiday resort situated inside a national park so you’re not only immersed in protected landscapes but have easy access to land, sea and coast. You are spoilt for choice in all directions in one of the most naturally beautiful places in Britain. Five minutes down the road is the gorgeous town of Narberth, which is packed with independent shops, outstanding restaurants and has been named among the best places to live in the country.

Tenby, Wales, United Kingdom

The beautiful seaside town of Tenby is a short drive away (Image: Getty)

An antiques shop in Narberth

Narberth’s independent shops and excellent restaurants are also just down the road (Image: Crown Copyright Visit Wales 2025)

The stunning seaside town of Tenby is 25 minutes away and is also brimming with places to eat and drink. It also has no less than four beaches within a few minutes’ walk of the town centre. The less famous, but equally charming, town of Saundersfoot is just a short drive along the coast.

THe village and harbour of Porthgain under a pink sky

Despite its size, Porthgain is home to a first-class bistro, brilliant pub and independent art galleries (Image: Getty)

St Govan's chapel

St Govan’s chapel is jaw-dropping (Image: Getty Images)

A little further away you have the unique harbour village of Porthgain, which, despite being tiny and at the end of one road in and out, manages to have one of the best places to eat in Wales as well as one of its best pubs. Also not too far away are Britain’s smallest city of St David’s, with its magnificent cathedral, the harbour village of Solva (yet another place in the area named among the best places to live), and the truly jaw-dropping St Govan’s Head, where a tiny chapel is built into the cliff face just above thundering waves below.

Barafundle Bay Wales

Incredible beaches like Barafundle are dotted all over Pembrokeshire’s coastline (Image: (Image: Getty))

And then there are the world-class beaches: Barafundle, Whitesands, Freshwater West and East, Marloes Sands – it’s difficult to find the superlatives for them.

‘Better than Center Parcs’

Steffan Rhys sits at a raised wooden table in the Farmhouse Grill restaurant in the Bluestone National Park Resort village

The Farmhouse Grill is our go-to restaurant when we visit (Image: Steffan Rhys)

I have no hesitation in saying I prefer staying in Bluestone to Center Parcs. But don’t just take my word for it. It has been named the best holiday park in Wales (and third best in the UK) for the third year running by holidaymakers and Which? readers, beating heavyweights like Center Parcs, Haven, Warner, Butlins, Parkdean and more.

How much does it cost?

Bluestone’s prices vary by accommodation type and time of year. Here are examples of costs for the upcoming season:

  • Weekend Easter break (arriving 10 April): from £645 for a 3‐night stay (up to 4 guests in a Ramsey Lodge or Caldey Deluxe).
  • Midweek Spring breaks: from £300 for a 4‐night stay (up to 4 guests in a Caldey Lodge).
  • The Mini Adventurer Break (from £300) is a deal designed especially for families with children under five and includes a bundle of free activities and entertainment during select midweek stays throughout the year. For qualifying dates, costs and included activities, visit https://www.bluestonewales.com/offers/free-activities-entertainment

  • For any other costs, please get in touch or visit https://bookings.bluestonewales.com/search-rates

  • All breaks include unlimited access to the Blue Lagoon water park, free indoor and outdoor play areas in The Hive, Serendome and village. Several activities do cost extra and need to be booked in advance: I would thoroughly recommend the 90-minute Sky Walk aerial adventure course (from £30, there’s also a Sky Walk Mini for smaller kids at £12.95), the Adrenaline circular zipline (£18 for two rounds) and the silent disco (from £5).
  • A meal for four including drinks at the Knights Tafarn pub cost £73 while a meal for seven including drinks and a bottle of wine at Farmhouse Grill came in at £220.
  • Access to the Celtic Thermal Suite to enjoy its steam rooms, sauna, ice pod and hydrotherapy pool costs from £20 and a Signature Massage costs from £75.