Hornsea

Hornsea is a small seaside town in East Yorkshire. It grew slowly in the 20th century as a resort, and commuter town for Hull, then the railway closed in 1964. And Hornsea has remained largely frozen in time since then.

Understand
Hornsea has a population of about 8,500.

Visitor information

 * Hornsea Town Council

Get in
By road the usual approach from points west and south is along A1035 / B1244.

By bus
East Yorkshire Bus 240 runs M-Sa hourly from Hull via A165 Skirlaugh to Hornsea, 70 min, only three buses on Sunday.

Bus 246 runs M-Sa hourly from Hull via Beverley to Hornsea, 80 min.

Bus 130 runs twice daily from Bridlington to Hornsea, 70 min.

By train
The nearest railway stations are at Bridlington 10 miles north and Beverley 10 miles west; see those pages for other transport options.

See

 * Hornsea is a quiet seaside town with a rebuilt seafront promenade. The seafront area has just a pub/restaurant and two cafes.

Do

 * Stroll on the beach. It's sandy, sort of, with shingle and mud.
 * Explore the toffee cliffs along the coast. The 20 miles south from Hornsea to Withernsea is being steadily lost to the sea: some medieval village sites are now three miles offshore. The land ends in 15- to 30-foot-high cliffs, where the underlying clay is being eroded into strange towers that look like toffee, and that succumb like toffee to wave action. Everywhere there are farm buildings, caravan pitches, stretches of road, pipes and cables, and wartime pillar-boxes, cracking and tilting at jaunty angles as they slither down the slope. There are also lots of spent shells and mortars from washed-away artillery ranges. The main limitation is access - the sea is washing away steps and ramps faster than new ones are provided. Don't descend onto the beach unless you've checked the tides (which will come right up to the cliffs) and thought about how you'll get back up.
 * Explore the toffee cliffs along the coast. The 20 miles south from Hornsea to Withernsea is being steadily lost to the sea: some medieval village sites are now three miles offshore. The land ends in 15- to 30-foot-high cliffs, where the underlying clay is being eroded into strange towers that look like toffee, and that succumb like toffee to wave action. Everywhere there are farm buildings, caravan pitches, stretches of road, pipes and cables, and wartime pillar-boxes, cracking and tilting at jaunty angles as they slither down the slope. There are also lots of spent shells and mortars from washed-away artillery ranges. The main limitation is access - the sea is washing away steps and ramps faster than new ones are provided. Don't descend onto the beach unless you've checked the tides (which will come right up to the cliffs) and thought about how you'll get back up.

Buy

 * Hornsea Freeport is a shopping Outlet Village on the southern edge of the town.
 * Tesco is close to the Mere.

Eat
There's half a dozen fish & chips shops, couple of Italians and an Indian restaurant.

Sleep
Most visitors are on day trips, or stay on the caravan sites nearby along the coast. There are no hotels.



Connect
As of March 2024, Hornsea and its approach roads have 4G from EE, Three and Vodafone, and a basic mobile signal from O2. 5G has not reached this area.

Go next
The clay cliffs resume south of Withernsea, then turn to sand hills, culminating in the three-mile spit of Spurn Head.

The coast to the north is more attractive, with Bridlington, Flamborough Head, Scarborough and the rugged coast up to Whitby.