Image of the corithia London exterior
UK Luxury Travel
From London's grand Georgian townhouses and Michelin-starred restaurants to misty Scottish Highlands and honey-stone villages in the Cotswolds, the UK is where history lives alongside modern luxury


The UK doesn't shout about luxury the way other destinations do. It's quieter, more assured—afternoon tea at Claridge's, a weekend at a Cotswolds manor house where the gardens have been perfected over centuries, or a castle stay in the Scottish Highlands where your room overlooks lochs that haven't changed in a thousand years.


London anchors it all with hotels that have hosted royalty since before most countries existed, Michelin-starred dining that rivals any capital, and neighborhoods where Georgian architecture meets cutting-edge culture. Beyond the capital, the countryside unfolds in layers—Scotland's whisky trails and dramatic peaks, Ireland's emerald landscapes and castle estates, the Cotswolds' honey-stone villages and spa retreats hidden in parkland that stretches for acres.


This is luxury with heritage, character, and a cup of perfectly brewed tea. The destinations that deserve your time, the hotels that have earned their reputation over decades (not Instagram hype), and the version of British travel that feels like coming home—even if you've never been before.

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The English Countryside
From honey-stone manor houses to rolling parkland and gardens that have perfected English charm over centuries


For travelers seeking something beyond London's intensity, The Cotswolds deliver honey-colored villages, manor houses converted into luxury hotels, and landscapes designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty for good reason. Soho Farmhouse brings members' club sophistication to 100 acres of Oxfordshire countryside with indoor and outdoor pools, cinema, and restaurants where urban meets rural. Cowley Manor Experimental offers 36 rooms across 55 acres with C-Side Spa and Dorothée Meilichzon interiors, while Lucknam Park reveals country-manor glamour at the end of a mile-long tree-lined avenue on 500 acres near Bath.


Emerging beyond the Cotswolds, Cliveden House in Berkshire commands National Trust grounds with Thames-side grandeur, while Heckfield Place in Hampshire pioneered organic farm-to-table luxury long before it became fashionable. Even lesser-known gems like The Pig in the Cotswolds at Barnsley House reveal their potential for travelers seeking Rosemary Verey's legendary gardens and kitchen garden dining.


Each destination brings its own personality—some offer spa sanctuaries and Michelin dining, others provide shooting estates and country pursuits—but all share that same intoxicating blend of rolling hills, manor house architecture, and the kind of English countryside that makes you forget what day it is.