Louise Edwards Louise Edwards

Visiting Sunderland This Summer: Where to Stay

Sunderland sits on the North East coast within easy reach of County Durham and Teesside, and its two main beaches, Roker and Seaburn, both hold 2026 Seaside Awards, with Roker also flying a Blue Flag this summer. For families and leisure guests planning a coastal break, a serviced apartment offers more room than a hotel, a full kitchen, and a comfortable base close to the sea.

A serviced apartment suits a seaside holiday better than a single hotel room. You get separate living and sleeping space, laundry facilities for sandy towels, and the freedom to cook breakfast before a day on the beach or reheat a late dinner after one. For longer summer stays, that flexibility usually works out cheaper and calmer than eating out for every meal.

What is there to do in Sunderland this summer?

Plenty, and much of it is free. RNLI lifeguards patrol Seaburn, Roker and Cat and Dog Beaches from 10am to 6pm daily until early September, so the main bathing areas are supervised through the school holidays. Roker Pier has reopened after storm repairs, and Roker Park has a children’s railway, play areas and a model boating lake. Live music fans can catch One Big Summer by the Sea at Seaburn’s Cliffe Park on 14 and 15 August 2026.

A few simple tips for a North East summer trip:

  • Pack for changeable weather, the coast can be breezy even in July.

  • Arrive early at Roker and Seaburn on warm weekends, the car parks fill quickly.

  • Use Sunderland as a base for day trips to Durham city, Beamish and the wider Teesside coast.

How far is the coast from a Cozy Quarters apartment?

Most of our County Durham and Teesside properties are within a short drive of the Sunderland seafront, and several sit close to main roads and rail links that make the journey simple. Whether you are travelling with children, visiting family, or simply after a quiet week by the sea, a self-contained apartment keeps everyone comfortable.

When you are ready to book, reserve direct at cozyquarters.co.uk. Booking with us rather than through the large travel sites saves you between 10 and 20 percent, because we do not pass on the commission those platforms charge. Have a question about a property or your dates this summer? Send us a message through cozyquarters.co.uk and we will help you find the right fit.

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Local Guide Louise Edwards Local Guide Louise Edwards

Spring Bank Holiday in Teesside: Family Days Out 2026

The Spring Bank Holiday falls on Monday 25 May 2026, and it kicks off May half-term week for most schools across County Durham and Teesside. If you are planning a few days exploring the coast, the moors and the market towns of the North East, here is a clear, local guide to the best things to do, with practical tips for families and visitors arriving from further afield.

Cozy Quarters manages 22 serviced accommodation properties across County Durham and Teesside, including family-friendly homes in Redcar, Guisborough, Stockton-on-Tees, Hartlepool, Sunderland, Trimdon and Billingham. Every Cozy Quarters property includes free Wi-Fi, free parking, a fully equipped kitchen and fresh linen, so families can spread out, cook breakfast at their own pace and travel light.

What is open in Teesside this Spring Bank Holiday weekend?

The standout family event is Day Out with Thomas at the North Yorkshire Moors Railway, running on 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 29, 30 and 31 May 2026. Trains depart from Pickering and Grosmont and travel through some of the best moorland scenery in England. Kids go free on standard NYMR services in 2026, with one free child ticket per fare-paying adult, which makes it one of the best value family days out across the half-term week.

Closer to the coast, Redcar Rugby Club is hosting a free Family Fun Day with bouncy castles, carnival games, rides and food stalls. Entry is free, with small charges for rides. In Saltburn, the Earthbeat Centre is running a sushi-making workshop where children and adults learn from scratch and take home what they create. Over in Whitby, Whitby Abbey runs its half-term Mystery Missions, an English Heritage activity that combines exploration of the ruins with puzzle solving.

Where to take younger children

For under-fives, the long sandy beach at Redcar is hard to beat. Park on the seafront, walk along the esplanade, watch the trains pull in at Redcar Central and pick up fish and chips from one of the kiosks. Saltburn pier and the Cliff Tramway are a short drive away. The tramway is the oldest working water-balanced funicular in Britain and costs only a small fare each way, which makes the ride itself the attraction.

Guisborough Forest and Walkway is another good choice, with flat paths, a play area and forest trails that are buggy friendly. Hartlepool Marine Park and the National Museum of the Royal Navy at Hartlepool give an indoor option if the weather turns, with hands-on exhibits and the historic Trincomalee to climb aboard. Preston Park Museum in Stockton is also free to enter for the grounds and has a recreated Victorian street that older children love.

Quick tips for half-term in the North East

Book bank holiday Monday activities in advance because they sell out fast. Pack waterproofs even on bright days, since coastal weather changes quickly. Drive routes between Saltburn, Whitby and Pickering can be slow on bank holiday afternoons, so an early start pays off. If you want to combine the coast with city days out, base yourself in Stockton, Billingham or Guisborough, all within thirty minutes of Redcar, Saltburn and the A19.

Many of the best half-term events are free or low cost, but parking in Saltburn and Whitby fills up by mid-morning on the bank holiday weekend. Public transport is a sensible alternative for Saltburn from anywhere along the Esk Valley line, and the X4 bus links Stockton, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Saltburn directly.

Why book direct with Cozy Quarters?

Guests who book directly at cozyquarters.co.uk save 10 to 20 percent compared to Airbnb or Booking.com, with no booking fees and a local team on hand for questions or recommendations. Our properties suit families, couples, contractors and groups, and we can advise on which house works best for your group size and the activities you have planned. Whether you want a beach-walk base in Redcar or a quiet retreat in Trimdon, there is a Cozy Quarters home within a short drive.

If you are still deciding where to stay this Spring Bank Holiday, take a look at our family-friendly homes in Guisborough, Redcar and Stockton at cozyquarters.co.uk. We will help you find a base that means less time hunting parking and more time on the moors, on the beach or on the steam train.

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Local Area Guide Louise Edwards Local Area Guide Louise Edwards

Hartlepool: A Coastal Hidden Gem Worth Discovering

Hartlepool has a talent for surprising people. Visitors who arrive expecting a post-industrial town often leave having found a place of genuine character: a spectacular headland, one of the most remarkable museum ships in Europe, beaches that stretch further than you imagine, and a history that the town carries with quiet pride. If you have not spent time here, it is well worth putting right.

Old Hartlepool and the Headland

Old Hartlepool, the area known locally as the Headland, feels like a town apart. The tight streets, the twelfth-century Church of St Hilda, and the views across the harbour give the Headland a distinct sense of place that is hard to find anywhere else on the Teesside coast. Walking out to the Heugh Breakwater gives some of the finest open-water views on the North East coast, and on a clear day the visibility stretches for miles in both directions along the shoreline.

HMS Trincomalee and the Historic Quay

The headline attraction in Hartlepool is HMS Trincomalee, the oldest warship still afloat in Europe. Built in Bombay in 1817 and now fully restored and rigged, the ship gives a remarkable insight into Georgian naval life. Alongside it in the Historic Quay development is a recreation of an 18th-century seaport, complete with costumed interpreters, period shops, and hands-on displays. It is one of those attractions that consistently punches well above its weight and makes for a genuinely engaging few hours, particularly for families.

The Heugh Battery Museum

A short walk from the Headland stands the Heugh Battery, the only First World War battlefield site in the United Kingdom. In December 1914, German warships bombarded the Hartlepools in one of the first direct attacks on British soil during the war. The museum tells the story of that bombardment and the communities who lived through it with real care and detail. Entry is free, and it deserves to be far better known than it currently is.

Summerhill Country Park and the Coast

For a quieter afternoon, Summerhill Country Park on the western edge of Hartlepool combines a local nature reserve with easy walking trails and outdoor activity facilities. It is a good option for families with younger children, and the wildflower meadows along the reserve paths are particularly attractive in late spring. The wider coast around Hartlepool is worth exploring too: Seaton Carew to the south has a long sandy beach and an old-fashioned seaside feel, while Crimdon Dene to the north offers a more sheltered stretch of shoreline popular with dog walkers.

Staying in Hartlepool with Cozy Quarters

Hartlepool makes an excellent base for exploring the wider Teesside coast, with Stockton-on-Tees and Middlesbrough a short drive inland and Redcar and Guisborough both within easy reach. Cozy Quarters manages serviced accommodation properties in Hartlepool and across the surrounding area, offering flexible short stays with all the space and comfort of home.

Find out more about our Hartlepool properties and book your stay at cozyquarters.co.uk.

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Seasonal Louise Edwards Seasonal Louise Edwards

How to Spend the Spring Bank Holiday in the North East

The Spring Bank Holiday falls on Monday 25 May this year, and with a long weekend stretching ahead, the North East of England is one of the best places in the country to be. Whether you are travelling with family, a partner, or simply looking for a proper recharge, County Durham and Teesside offer an extraordinary range of things to do, many of them right on the doorstep.

Get Out on the Coast

The North East coastline at this time of year is at its best: fresher than high summer, the beaches less crowded, and the light across the North Sea genuinely breathtaking. Saltburn-by-the-Sea is the perfect starting point, with its Victorian pier, colourful beach huts, and a legendary cliff tramway that children and adults alike adore. From Saltburn it is an easy walk along the coastal path south toward Skinningrove, or north along the sands toward Redcar. The Majuba Beach stretch at Redcar is wide, flat, and ideal for a blustery bank holiday walk, with a fine fish and chip shop or two nearby to reward the effort.

Beamish Museum: Festival of Transport

This May Half Term, Beamish Museum near Durham City is running its popular Festival of Transport, with vintage buses and road steam vehicles travelling around the museum site from 23 to 31 May. The bank holiday weekend is an ideal time to visit. Beamish is always worth a half-day or a full day, and the reconstruction of early 20th-century town life, a colliery village, and a Victorian farm makes it genuinely unlike anywhere else in the country. Families visiting over the bank holiday weekend will find it particularly memorable.

Guisborough and the Moors Fringe

For those staying in Guisborough, the bank holiday is a great reason to explore both the market town and the moorland countryside immediately behind it. Guisborough Priory makes for a wonderful short visit, and the surrounding lanes offer fine walking and cycling. The North York Moors National Park begins almost immediately to the south, with Roseberry Topping, the distinctive cone-shaped hill above Great Ayton, a firm favourite for families looking for a manageable half-day hike with spectacular views as a reward.

Durham City and the Dales

Durham City is always worth a visit, and a bank holiday is a good reason to take it slowly. The riverside walk around the Cathedral and Castle is one of the finest short walks in England, and the cafes and independent shops along Saddler Street and Elvet Bridge are well worth an afternoon. The Durham Dales, to the west of the city, are at their most vivid in late May when wildflowers are at their peak. Weardale and Teesdale both reward a drive, and the waterfalls at High Force near Middleton-in-Teesdale are spectacular after spring rain.

Plan Your Stay with Cozy Quarters

If you are planning a trip to the North East over the bank holiday, arriving a day or two early means you avoid the rush and get the best of the quieter, midweek version of these places. Cozy Quarters manages serviced accommodation properties across Guisborough, Hartlepool, Redcar, Billingham, Stockton-on-Tees, Sunderland, and County Durham, all set up with the comfort of home and none of the compromise of a standard hotel room.

Browse our Spring Bank Holiday availability at cozyquarters.co.uk and find your perfect base for exploring the North East this May.

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