Places to visit in North Wales
Explore nature reserves, woodlands, and parks across 6 counties in North Wales.
Snowdonia's peaks, Anglesey's coastline, the Llŷn Peninsula, and the Vale of Conwy — the most mountainous and most visited part of Wales.
Conwy
A district from the Snowdonia National Park's Carneddau range to the Conwy Estuary and the north Wales coast, with the Conwy Valley and Sychnant Pass woodland.
Denbighshire
A district spanning the Clwydian Range AONB's limestone ridgeline, the Vale of Clwyd's farmland, the Dee valley, and a stretch of north Wales Heritage Coast.
Flintshire
A northeast Wales district along the Dee estuary, with the Clwydian Range AONB, the Dee Estuary's wading-bird reserves, and the Greenfield Valley Heritage Park.
Gwynedd
A district covering most of Snowdonia National Park, with Yr Wyddfa's summit, the Llŷn Peninsula coast path, Cardigan Bay, and the Glaslyn and Ffestiniog river valleys.
Isle of Anglesey
An island district connected to the mainland by Menai bridges, with the Anglesey Coastal Path encircling 125 miles of varied coastline and Newborough Warren NNR.
Wrexham
A northeast Wales district with the Clwydian Range on its western edge, the Dee valley, Erddig National Trust estate parkland, and the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct canal path.