Places to visit in England
Explore nature reserves, woodlands, parks, and green spaces across 9 regions.
East Midlands
37kThe National Forest, Rutland Water, and Sherwood Forest sit at the heart of a region steadily reclaiming its industrial past with woodland and wetland.
Eastern
55kWide skies, working estuaries, and some of England's best nature reserves — from the Broads to Breckland to the Essex coast.
London
11kOver 3,000 parks and green spaces across 33 boroughs — from ancient commons to Royal Parks to hidden nature reserves on suburban streets.
North East
25kHadrian's Wall, sweeping moorland, and a dramatic North Sea coastline — England's least-densely settled region.
North West
41kFrom the Lake District's fells to Manchester's city parks and Liverpool's waterfront — England's most varied outdoor landscape.
South East
84kThe North and South Downs, the New Forest, and 600 miles of coastline — England's most accessible and heavily visited countryside.
South West
85kDartmoor, Exmoor, the Jurassic Coast, and Cornwall's Atlantic headlands — England's wildest and most varied outdoor landscape.
West Midlands
45kThe Shropshire Hills and Malvern Hills frame a region better known for cities — yet hiding some of England's most rewarding green corridors.
Yorkshire and the Humber
42kThe Yorkshire Dales, North York Moors, and Peak District fringe make this one of England's greatest concentrations of upland national parks.