From the Broads to the North Norfolk Coast: Hot Tub Lodges Worth Booking
Norfolk divides naturally into zones that suit different kinds of trips. The North Norfolk coast, from Salthouse and Titchwell through to the Burnhams, draws birdwatchers, coastal walkers, and anyone who wants marsh views and dark skies. Inland, the Norfolk Broads around Hoveton, Wroxham, and Potter Heigham offer boat hire, riverside pubs, and flat cycling. West Norfolk, around King's Lynn, Heacham, and Dersingham, runs quieter, with Sandringham Estate, Snettisham beach, and working farms setting the pace. The variety means you are booking a location as much as a property, and it is worth thinking about what you want the days to look like before choosing.
The hot tub setups vary more than on most county pages. Several properties include the hot tub in the price and maintain it daily. Others charge a surcharge, typically between 120 and 350 pounds. The individual write-ups flag which setup each property has, so check before booking if the hot tub is central to your plans. Indoor hot tubs, clifftop hot tubs with sea views, gazebo-covered tubs for winter use, and hot tub plus sauna combinations all appear in this set.
Most properties are self-catering cottages or barn conversions rather than holiday park lodges, which means woodburning stoves, enclosed gardens, and hosts who leave welcome hampers with local produce. Birdwatching couples wanting marsh-view stays gravitate toward the Titchwell and Burnham Market end of the coast, while the Broads properties around Potter Heigham and Hoveton suit families who want boat hire and flat cycling on the doorstep. West Norfolk, around Heacham, Dersingham, and King's Lynn, has the larger farmhouse-style lets, and the biggest group options (sleeping 16 and 21) sit near Cromer and Upwell, respectively. Dog-friendly properties accept between one and three dogs, and several have enclosed gardens large enough to let them off the lead.