stress-free self-catering holiday accommodation in East Anglia

Bed and Breakfast

The Oak, 111 Saxmundham Road, Aldeburgh 4 diamond suffolk tourist board


A warm welcome awaits you in our centrally heated home which is approx. 12-15 minutes from the beach and the town centre.

There are 2 double bedrooms available both with en-suite shower rooms and colour television.

breakfast room

A fridge for your cold drinks and tea/coffee making facilities are in both bedrooms. A Radio/CD player is provided, as are a few CDs.

There is ample off-road parking.

Use of front patio garden and lots, lots more.

garden

Small dogs are welcome.

Full English breakfast is provided daily and we are only too happy to cater for vegetarians.

Sorry - no smokers.

We are 4 diamond suffolk tourist board rated by the East Anglian Tourist Board.

Prices

£60 to £75 per night per room


Aldeburgh, on the Suffolk Heritage coast, has a particular charm that has attracted visitors from all over the world.

the scallop - aldeburgh beach

Some have stayed, adding their own stories to the long history of the town. The composer Benjamin Britten settled here, his opera Peter Grimes was inspired by local poet George Crabbe and the town itself.

The annual Aldeburgh Festival at nearby Snape Maltings was developed by Britten, the site being transformed from disused malthouses into a concert venue of international acclaim that now hosts a year-round programme of musical events.

Take a walk along the unspoilt sea front, little changed since Victorian times, it's uneven row of individual houses each seeming to have a character of their own.

lobster fishing aldeburgh beach

The wide atmospheric East Anglian sky, the shelved shingle beach, the rugged North sea, the wildness of the marshes and the stillness of the wide, winding river Alde, separated from the sea by a single path and some fortuitously placed shingle.

The High street has a mix of traditional shops and galleries, a fish and chip shop of some fame and a small but perfectly formed cinema showing blockbuster films as well as those for the more discerning palate.