Dog-Friendly Lincolnshire Coast & Wolds (2026 Guide)

Dog-friendly Lincolnshire: the best year-round coast beaches (Mablethorpe, Theddlethorpe, Huttoft), the Wolds AONB walks, and the seasonal dog rules.

A dog on a wide sandy Lincolnshire beach
Updated
By Rob Griffiths18 June 2026 · 7 min read
A dog on a wide sandy Lincolnshire beach

Lincolnshire is one of England's most underrated dog-friendly counties, and it comes in two very different halves. The coast is enormous: mile-wide sandy beaches backed by dunes, big skies and, outside the resorts, hardly anyone about. Inland, the Lincolnshire Wolds (a rolling chalk-hills National Landscape, formerly an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty) offer quiet valleys, market towns and long-distance trails.

This guide covers the best of both, the all-important seasonal beach rules, and where dogs are restricted. For more coastline ideas, pair it with our best dog-friendly UK beaches roundup.

Which Lincolnshire beaches are best for dogs?

Miles of sand, much of it dog-friendly all year

COAST

Mablethorpe North Beach Editor's pick

Wide sand, dog-friendly all year

  • All-year visits
  • Families
  • Long runs
  • Type Resort sandy beach
  • Dog access North end all year; central seasonal
  • Parking Pay-and-display by the front
  • Highlight Dog-welcoming seaside town
Mablethorpe is the easy choice: the North Beach, to the left of the promenade, is dog-friendly year-round and offers acres of flat sand for a proper run, while the central beach has the usual summer restrictions. The town is genuinely dog-welcoming - dogs are even allowed on the seasonal sand train - so it works as a full day out rather than just a walk.

What we liked

  • Huge sandy space, open all year at the north end
  • A dog-welcoming seaside town behind it
  • Easy parking and facilities

Watch out for

  • Central beach restricted in summer
  • Busy in peak holiday weeks

COAST

Theddlethorpe and Huttoft Best for peace

The wild, quiet dune beaches

  • Quiet walks
  • Dune scenery
  • Year-round dogs
  • Type Dune-backed wild beach
  • Dog access Both dog-friendly all year
  • Parking Free or small charge
  • Highlight Near-empty even in summer
For wildness and solitude, head to Theddlethorpe and Huttoft. These are wide, clean, dune-backed beaches - Theddlethorpe stretches nearly a mile wide in places - with free or cheap parking and barely anyone about even in August. Dogs are welcome all year, which makes them the pick for an off-season walk with big skies and an empty horizon.

What we liked

  • Dog-friendly all year round
  • Genuinely quiet, even in summer
  • Beautiful dunes and free parking

Watch out for

  • Few facilities - bring what you need
  • Exposed in wind and bad weather

COAST

Cleethorpes

The lively resort beach

  • Day trips
  • Off-season visits
  • Cafes and amenities
  • Type Resort sandy beach
  • Dog access All beach Oct to Easter; part-year otherwise
  • Parking Plentiful town parking
  • Highlight Promenade and pier
Cleethorpes is the busy, full-facilities resort end of the Lincolnshire coast. The whole beach is dog-friendly from October to Easter, and the stretch to the right of the Leisure Centre stays open the rest of the year. With a promenade, cafes and the nearby Humberston Fitties dunes, it is the best bet when you want amenities alongside the sand.

What we liked

  • Full resort facilities and cafes
  • Whole beach open in the off-season
  • Humberston Fitties dunes nearby

Watch out for

  • Central beach restricted in summer
  • Busy and built-up compared with the wild beaches

INLAND

The Lincolnshire Wolds Best for walking

Chalk valleys and the Viking Way

  • Hill walks
  • Market towns
  • Quiet countryside
  • Type Chalk-hills National Landscape
  • Dog access Open countryside, livestock about
  • Parking Village and country-park car parks
  • Highlight Hubbard's Hills, Louth
Inland, the Lincolnshire Wolds are the county's walking secret: a rolling National Landscape of chalk valleys, hidden villages and the long-distance Viking Way. The glacial valley at Hubbard's Hills near Louth is the standout for a dog walk, and Snipe Dales Country Park adds woodland and stream trails. Keep dogs on a lead near the abundant sheep and livestock.

What we liked

  • Lovely, quiet hill and valley walking
  • Hubbard's Hills and the Viking Way
  • Charming market town of Louth nearby

Watch out for

  • Lots of livestock - leads needed
  • Few facilities away from the towns

NATURE RESERVE

Gibraltar Point

A reserve to visit with care

  • Wildlife walks
  • Winter visits
  • Birdwatchers
  • Type National Nature Reserve
  • Dog access Restricted - no beach dogs Apr to Sep
  • Parking Reserve car park (charge)
  • Highlight Dunes, saltmarsh, lagoons
Just south of Skegness, Gibraltar Point is a spectacular 1,000-hectare nature reserve of dunes, saltmarsh and lagoons at the edge of The Wash. It is worth a visit, but the dog rules are strict: no dogs on the beach or foreshore from 1 April to 1 September, and short leads the rest of the year to protect ground-nesting birds. Treat it as an autumn-and-winter outing with a dog.

What we liked

  • Stunning, wildlife-rich landscape
  • Great off-season, on the trails
  • Genuine wilderness near a busy resort

Watch out for

  • No beach dogs in the summer months
  • Short-lead rule year-round on the reserve

When can dogs go on Lincolnshire beaches?

The short version of the seasonal rules

The rule of thumb is simple: the quiet ends of beaches are open to dogs all year, while the central, lifeguarded resort stretches restrict dogs roughly from 1 May to 30 September. So Mablethorpe North, Theddlethorpe and Huttoft are year-round, while parts of central Mablethorpe and Cleethorpes close to dogs in high summer.

The exception is Gibraltar Point, where the nature-reserve rules are tighter - no beach dogs from April to September. Dates do shift slightly year to year, so always check the signs at the entrance before you let your dog off the lead.

Frequently asked questions

Q01Are there dog-friendly beaches in Lincolnshire all year round?
Yes. Mablethorpe North Beach, Theddlethorpe and Huttoft are dog-friendly year-round, and Cleethorpes opens its whole beach to dogs from October to Easter. The quieter, dune-backed beaches like Theddlethorpe and Huttoft are the best bet for an off-season walk with plenty of space and few people.
Q02Can dogs go to Gibraltar Point?
Yes, but with restrictions. Dogs are not allowed on the beach or foreshore at Gibraltar Point National Nature Reserve from 1 April to 1 September, and must be kept on a short lead the rest of the year to protect ground-nesting birds and wildlife. It is best visited with a dog in autumn and winter, on the trails.
Q03Is the Lincolnshire Wolds good for dog walking?
Very. The Lincolnshire Wolds National Landscape has quiet chalk-valley trails, the long-distance Viking Way, and beauty spots like Hubbard's Hills near Louth and Snipe Dales Country Park. There is a lot of grazing livestock, so keep your dog on a lead and visible, especially in lambing season.
Q04Where should I stay for a dog-friendly Lincolnshire break?
Base yourself near Louth for the Wolds and an easy run to the coast, or in or near Mablethorpe and Cleethorpes for the beaches. Self-catering cottages and shepherd's huts on the farms inland make good dog-friendly bases - see our self-catering guide for how to choose.

Last reviewed June 2026. Sources: Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust and Visit Lincolnshire information; individual beach and reserve dog policies. Seasonal dog restrictions and exact dates change year to year - always check the signage at each beach or reserve before you go.