You can have an extremely pleasant time in Bath wandering the streets, admiring the peerless Georgian architecture and reliving history through the words of Jane Austen. For culture, pick from the dozen or so museums – if you do just one of the best things in Bath, make it the Roman Baths. For exercise, venture out into the countryside on the city’s fringes. Cycle along the Kennet and Avon canal and walk in National Trust meadows with far-reaching views across the city. For a relaxing treat, have a revitalising soak in Bath’s hot thermal waters at Thermae Bath Spa.
For more Bath inspiration, see our guide to the city and its best restaurants, bars, pubs, hotels and places for afternoon tea.
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Centre
Tour the Roman Baths
The Roman Baths are fascinating for visitors of all ages, with not only the Great Bath to take in (the surrounding statues are Victorian additions), but also the remains of the temple to Sulis Minerva, hypocaust (underfloor heating) systems, and more hot and cold baths. The audio guides are excellent – including the commentary for children. Screens show bathers going about their business, and live actors play out the lives of merchants and stonemasons. Set aside around 90 minutes for the visit. In the peak summer weeks, the baths stay open till 10pm and are atmospheric and usually quiet in the evenings.
Insider’s tip: Booking ahead with a timed entry slot guarantees you can get in when you want to, and on busy days tickets sell out for some slots. Walk-up tickets are also purchasable, subject to availability on the day.
Contact: romanbaths.co.uk
Book tickets
Learn about the World Heritage Site
Tucked away behind the Roman Baths on York Street, Bath’s free-to-enter World Heritage Centre does a pretty good job at explaining why the city is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Colourful and interactive information boards flag up the key attributes – the hot springs, Roman remains, Georgian lifestyle and architecture, and the city’s lovely green setting. You can also learn a little about how and why Bath is part of second UNESCO listing, The Great Spa Towns of Europe.
Insider’s tip: The centre stocks an informative map and a family trail marked up with the key sights associated with the city’s World Heritage Site status, and there’s also a related app to download. Everything is free.
Contact: bathworldheritage.org.uk
Explore the Bath Abbey
There’s been a church on the site of Bath Abbey as long ago as Saxon times. What you see now dates from 1499 – it is one of the last ecclesiastical buildings in England constructed in the Perpendicular style – and, despite its name, it is in fact just a parish church. Highlights inside include the fan-vaulted ceiling and hundreds of memorials on the walls and floor. An entrance fee was introduced in 2023; it also covers admission to the abbey’s good new heritage centre. Tower tours (additional cost) are very enjoyable, and provide great views over the city.
Insider’s tip: Outside on the west front, look either side of the main window at the ascending and descending angels on ladders – probably alluding to Jacob’s ladder in the Book of Genesis. Also note on the far left- and right-hand sides of the west front the rebuses (pictorial puns) showing the name of Bishop Oliver King, who ordered the church’s rebuilding in 1499.
Contact: bathabbey.org
Soak in natural waters at Thermae Bath Spa
A two-hour session at the Thermae Bath Spa’s New Royal Bath, the complex’s main spa, grants you access to the 34-degree Celsius waters of an open-air rooftop pool and the larger indoor Minerva Bath, along with steam rooms and saunas. You can sometimes also book a session in the spa’s historic and much more intimate Cross Bath, which can accommodate up to 10 people.
Insider’s tip: You can pre-book the two-hour session at the New Royal Bath, but some spaces are also kept available on the day. At busy times, if you haven’t pre-booked, visit the spa early in the day to maximise the chances of getting a slot. Packages, some with treatments, are also on offer and need booking ahead.
Contact: thermaebathspa.com
Discover Bath’s link with Frankenstein
Mary Shelley wrote much of Frankenstein while living in Bath from September 1816 to March 1817 – hence the presence of Mary Shelley’s House of Frankenstein, a multi-faceted attraction on Gay Street just up from the Jane Austen Centre. As well as explaining about Shelley’s tragic life, galvanism (the concept of bringing bodies to life with electricity), the creation of the horror story and its portrayal in popular culture, there’s a memorable eight-foot-tall version of the monster complete with heaving chest, and a gore-filled basement to explore. Not suitable for children under 12.
Insider’s tip: The house where Mary Shelley stayed in Bath 1816-1817 – 5 Abbey Church Yard – is no longer there. It was knocked down in the 1890s and replaced by an extension to the Pump Room. There’s an information board to the left of the Pump Room entrance explaining all.
Contact: houseoffrankenstein.com
Imagine living in the Royal Crescent
The Royal Crescent is arguably Bath’s most singularly impressive piece of architecture. It is, in fact, a half-ellipse, not a crescent. When it was built by John Wood the Younger between 1767 and 1775 it was on the edge of the city, overlooking fields. Its 30 houses are now mostly divided up into apartments. No1 Royal Crescent is a museum maintained by the Bath Preservation Trust and furnished in period style, including the servants’ quarters. Its engaging ‘immersive experience’ uses film and sound projections in each of the rooms to help evoke what life was like in Bath in Georgian times. No1 serves as the London townhouse of the Featherington family in the Netflix hit Bridgerton.
Insider’s tip: Get another view of the crescent by booking an indulgent afternoon tea at The Royal Crescent Hotel & Spa. The tea is best enjoyed on a warm summer’s afternoon out on the lawns of the hotel’s expansive, hidden garden.
Contact: no1royalcrescent.org.uk
See where the Georgians partied
The Assembly Rooms were the prime focal point of entertainment in Bath in Georgian times. The beautifully proportioned Ballroom, Tea Room and Great Octagon card room evoke Jane Austen’s Bath better than anywhere else in the city. Jane attended balls here, and two of her novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, have scenes set here. The building was badly damaged in an air raid in World War Two but subsequently restored to its former glory. The spectacular chandeliers are the original ones.
Insider’s tip: Under its owners the National Trust, the Assembly Rooms is undergoing a major restoration and being redeveloped into a “new Georgian experience” for visitors, due to open late 2026. In the meantime, fascinating guided tours are often on offer of the main rooms and sometimes behind the scenes (book ahead); free exhibitions and events are also sometimes held in the rooms.
Tour the Jane Austen Centre
Jane Austen moved from rural Hampshire to Bath with her family in 1801, and she lived in a number of houses in the city until leaving for Southampton in 1806. All her novels mention Bath, and Northanger Abbey and Persuasion are primarily based in Bath. The Jane Austen Centre will tell you much more. A visit includes an introductory talk about the Austen family, a light-hearted 15-minute film highlighting the city’s Austen links, and a permanent exhibition detailing her time in Bath and what people got up to in the city in its Georgian heyday.
Insider’s tip: The centre’s shop has a wealth of Austen souvenirs, including I Love Mr Darcy T-shirts. At the top of the Georgian house you’ll find the cosy Regency Tea Room.
Contact: janeausten.co.uk
Book tickets
Learn all about why the Georgian architecture
The Museum of Bath Architecture needs an overhaul, which it is due to get some time soon. But even in its present state, the museum really helps you appreciate why Georgian Bath looks like it does. Models, maps and prints provide a revealing introduction to the transformation of the city in the 18th century. Displays focus on the ubiquitous Bath Stone and the layouts of the houses, and hone in on details such as sash windows, the vaults set underneath pavements, and how the backs of properties are often a mishmash. The ostentatious Georgians only really cared how the front facades appeared.
Insider’s tip: The museum is housed in the Countess of Huntingdon’s Chapel. In Gothic Revival style, the Methodist place of worship opened in 1765, in opposition to the immorality of the social scene in Bath.
Contact: museumofbatharchitecture.org.uk
West
Watch hot air balloons float over the park
Spreading over 57 acres westwards from below The Royal Crescent, the vast and beautiful Royal Victoria Park offers something for everyone and is the city’s main green lung. Its highlights include a pretty, nine-acre botanic garden dating from 1887 and one of the biggest and best children’s playgrounds you’ll find anywhere.
Insider’s tips: It’s fun to watch hot air balloons launch from the park on a fine summer’s evening; they take off daily between March and October, weather permitting. Take a flight yourself with Bath Balloons to gain a bird’s-eye view of the city’s architecture and its seven hills.
Contact: visitbath.co.uk
Learn about Bath’s famous star-gazers
In 1781, William Herschel discovered the planet Uranus through a home-made telescope from the back garden of 19 New King Street, his home in Bath. As well as an astronomer, William was an acclaimed telescope maker and highly accomplished musician; his sister Caroline, who lived with William in Bath, was also a pioneering astronomer, renowned for her work on comets. All is beautifully documented in the Herschel Museum of Astronomy, which takes up the charmingly modest 18th-century townhouse.
Insider’s tip: Be sure to examine the full-size replica of the seven-foot telescope used by Herschel to discover Uranus, along with a model of a 40ft telescope that he designed, which was the largest in the world.
Contact: herschelmuseum.org.uk
East
Scope out fine art at the Holburne Museum
The Holburne Museum occupies what was originally the grand reception building for Sydney Gardens, elaborate pleasure gardens in Georgian times. The permanent collection mostly focuses on the 18th and 19th centuries, and many of the paintings and much of the decorative art, which includes silverware, pottery and textiles, have Bath connections. There are works by Thomas Gainsborough, the best-known artist to work in Bath in the city’s Georgian heyday. Excellent temporary exhibitions are also shown, and there’s an attractive café in a glass atrium at the back.
Insider’s tip: Jane Austen lived in a townhouse across the street from what’s now the Holburne’s car park from 1801 to 1804. No 4 Sydney Place is the only dwelling where Jane lived in Bath with a plaque acknowledging her residency.
Contact: holburne.org
South
Explore an 18th-century garden at Prior Park
The National Trust grounds of Prior Park Landscape Garden are laid out below Prior Park mansion. Now a Catholic school, it was built as a very grand home for Ralph Allen, whose quarries in Combe Down on the outskirts of the city supplied the honey-coloured Bath Stone out of which Georgian Bath was created. The garden is in part designed by Capability Brown and Alexander Pope. It takes about 40 minutes to walk around the woodland-flanked valley that sweeps down to the delicate Palladian bridge and lake. You may well spot deer on the way, and the views across Bath are sensational.
Insider’s tip: It’s a steep, uphill one-mile walk from the centre of town to the garden. There is no on-site parking at the garden and nearby street parking is tricky. The No 2 bus takes you to the entrance from stop BK on Dorchester Street.
See Bath from the countryside
One of the joys of Bath is that it is flanked by hills, meadows and woodland. The Bath Skyline Walk is a well-signposted, enjoyable six-mile circular trail that starts on the south-eastern fringes of the city above Bathwick and Widcombe – the most scenic section of the walk, with fantastic views. The circuit then skirts Prior Park, the university and a golf club.
Insider’s tip: If you only have 90 minutes to spare, try the shorter, circular three-mile Walk to the View route from the city centre. It takes in Great Pulteney Street, Sydney Gardens, a pretty section of the Kennet and Avon Canal and the meadows of Bathwick Fields.
Contact: nationaltrust.org.uk/bath-skyline; nationaltrust.org.uk/bath-skyline/trails/walk-to-the-view
Cycle through former train tunnels
The Bath Two Tunnels Circuit is a satisfying and immensely varied 13-mile loop that leaves the city via two dramatically lit former train tunnels. The Combe Down Tunnel is Britain’s longest cycle tunnel. The circuit then passes through the village of Monkton Combe, before returning to Bath along the towpath of a scenic section of the Kennet and Avon Canal.
Insider’s tip: Stop for fortification at one of the pubs along the way, such as the Hope and Anchor just off the trail in Midford, or canalside The George Inn at Bathampton. If you don’t have your own wheels, you can hire bikes from Bath Narrowboats.
Contact: bathnes.gov.uk; sustrans.org.uk
How we choose
Every attraction and activity in this curated list has been tried and tested by our destination expert, to provide you with their insider perspective. We cover a range of budgets and styles, from world-class museums to family-friendly theme parks – to best suit every type of traveller. We update this list regularly to keep up with the latest openings and provide up to date recommendations.
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For places to stay, explore our guide to the best spa hotels in Bath