Bath
City Guide

Bath

Royaume-Uni · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.

Guide coming in Français, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget £80.00/day
Best season Apr-Oct
Language English
Currency GBP
Time zone Europe/London
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

A City Poured from Honey — Bath in One Breathless Sweep

09:00

Bath Abbey

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From Bath Spa station, exit onto Manvers Street and walk north — in under 5 minutes the tower of Bath Abbey appears above the rooftops, pulling you into Abbey Churchyard like a golden compass needle. The honey-coloured Gothic west front catches the low morning sun at its most dramatic: 52 stone angels climbing and tumbling down Jacob's Ladder, every carved feather thrown into relief by the sidelight. Circle around to the south side on Stall Street and peer over the railing to glimpse the steaming Kings Bath below — ancient Roman water still bubbling at 46°C, open to the sky since antiquity.

Tip: Stand on the east side of the Churchyard facing west for the best full-façade photo — the morning sun backlights the tower dramatically. By 10:30 three tour buses arrive simultaneously and the square becomes a bottleneck. If you want the Abbey to yourself, this 9 a.m. window is non-negotiable.

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10:15

Pulteney Bridge

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Exit the Churchyard east along Orange Grove and follow Grand Parade where the view opens up over the river — a 5-minute walk with the horseshoe weir appearing before you even reach the bridge. Pulteney Bridge is one of only four bridges in the world lined with shops on both sides, designed by Robert Adam in 1774 to echo Florence's Ponte Vecchio. Cross to the east bank and descend the steps for the postcard shot: the Palladian arches reflected in the cascade below, then continue 50 metres down Great Pulteney Street for the grandest Georgian boulevard perspective in England.

Tip: The classic weir photo is taken from the bottom of the steps on the east bank, where you get the full curve of the weir and all three arches in one frame. Morning light is softer and the water calmer than afternoon. Skip the tiny shops on the bridge itself — they are overpriced tourist souvenirs selling the same fridge magnets you will find in every English city.

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12:00

The Raven

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €18

Walk back through the centre along Bridge Street and High Street, ducking left into narrow Queen Street — an 8-minute stroll past Georgian shop fronts at every turn. The Raven is a proper English pub with a cult following built on one thing: handmade pies baked fresh daily in a kitchen the size of a cupboard, served with creamy mash and real gravy. Grab a stool at the bar, order a local ale, and eat like a Bath local on lunch break.

Tip: Order the Steak and Ale pie (around £14) — the pastry is shatteringly flaky and the filling is rich with West Country beef. Pair it with a half-pint of Bath Ales Gem. Arrive at noon sharp; by 12:30 every table is taken and the pie board starts showing sold-out flavours. No reservations, first come first served.

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13:15

The Circus

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Walk north through Queen Square — where Jane Austen once lived — and up the gentle slope of Gay Street past Georgian townhouses that grow grander with every block, a 10-minute climb. John Wood the Elder's masterpiece is three curved terraces of 33 houses forming a perfect circle, like the Colosseum turned inside out, with five enormous plane trees filtering afternoon light onto the golden stone. Stand in the centre and slowly turn — each segment uses a different classical order (Doric, Ionic, Corinthian), a detail most visitors walk straight past.

Tip: Look at the cobblestones underfoot in the centre: you will find carved acorns, a nod to the legend of King Bladud who supposedly founded Bath after his pigs were healed by the hot springs. Stand at the southern entry facing north for the most symmetrical photograph with all three terraces visible and the plane trees perfectly framed.

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14:15

Royal Crescent

Landmark
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €0

Continue west down Brock Street — a 2-minute flat walk between identical townhouses — until the street ends and the Royal Crescent unfurls in one breathtaking 150-metre arc. John Wood the Younger's 1774 masterpiece joins 30 houses behind a unified façade of 114 Ionic columns, the single most commanding sweep of Georgian architecture in Britain. Walk down the sloping lawn to the ha-ha — a hidden sunken wall that keeps cattle out without breaking the view — look back up at the crescent against the sky, then stroll through Royal Victoria Park below where locals picnic on the grass.

Tip: Do not photograph from the pavement — the classic shot is from the lower lawn looking up, with the full arc filling your frame against the sky. Walk to the far eastern end for the tightest curve and most dramatic perspective. If you finish early, the rooftop pool at Thermae Bath Spa (15-minute walk south, last entry around 17:00, approximately £40 for 2 hours) lets you soak in natural hot spring water with a panoramic view of the city — a spectacular way to fill the gap before dinner.

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19:00

The Marlborough Tavern

Food
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €40

Stroll 3 minutes west along Marlborough Buildings, a quiet residential crescent where the evening light turns every window to amber. The Marlborough Tavern is the gastropub Bath locals would rather you did not discover — seasonal British cooking with genuine technique, real West Country ales on tap, and a sheltered garden terrace. This is where you reward yourself for a full day on your feet.

Tip: Order the slow-braised lamb shoulder (around £19) or the pan-seared duck breast (around £22) — both sourced from farms within 30 miles. Walk in before 19:00 on weekdays for a table without booking; reserve ahead on Friday and Saturday. Ask for the garden terrace if the weather is kind. Final warning: avoid the cluster of restaurants on Cheap Street and around the Abbey — they charge London prices for reheated food and survive entirely on tourist footfall. If a man is standing outside waving a menu at you, keep walking.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Bath?

Most travelers enjoy Bath in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Bath?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Bath?

A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Bath?

A good first shortlist for Bath includes Bath Abbey, Pulteney Bridge, The Circus.