π½οΈ Restaurants, Pubs & CafΓ©s
Pembrokeshire has a thriving food scene built on exceptional local seafood, Welsh beef and lamb, and a growing number of award-winning restaurants. Ratings below are sourced from public platforms (Google, TripAdvisor) and press (Good Food Guide, AA) and may not reflect current performance. Always verify directly with the venue before booking.
More events & what's on
For a comprehensive and up-to-date events calendar covering all of Pembrokeshire:
π Weather & Surf β Pembrokeshire
Live conditions and 7β14 day forecast. Data from Open-Meteo (free, open-source meteorological data). Always check local conditions before entering the water.
π More surf resources
Marine wave data powered by Open-Meteo Marine API. Always check local conditions and use qualified surf forecasting services before entering the water.
π¨ Water safety
- Always swim between the red and yellow RNLI flags where present
- Never swim alone β tell someone where you're going
- Check tide times β Pembrokeshire has large tidal ranges (up to 6m)
- Freshwater West has no lifeguards β experienced surfers/swimmers only
- Cold water shock is a risk year-round in Pembrokeshire waters
- In an emergency at sea: call 999 and ask for Coastguard
About visitpembs
visitpembs is a practical, independently maintained visitor guide to Pembrokeshire, Wales β one of Britain's most spectacular coastal counties and home to the UK's only coastal National Park.
This site provides broad coverage of key destinations across the whole county β beaches, towns, villages, castles, food and drink, events, surf conditions and weather β designed to give visitors a useful overview in one place, optimised for mobile.
π Areas covered
St Davids, Whitesands, Porthgain, Abereiddy, Solva, Newgale, Fishguard, Strumble Head, Dinas Island, Newport, Nevern, Pentre Ifan, Tenby, Saundersfoot, Freshwater East, Manorbier, Barafundle Bay, Caldey Island, Pembroke, Stackpole, Bosherston, St Govan's Chapel, Freshwater West, Angle, Dale, Marloes, Skomer Island, Broad Haven, Little Haven, Narberth, Haverfordwest and more.
π Data sources & quality
- Official sources (marked β Official source): Visit Pembrokeshire, Cadw, National Trust, RSPB, Wildlife Trust of South & West Wales, RNLI, individual venue websites
- Reviewed sources (marked β Reviewed/Press): Good Food Guide, AA Guide, CAMRA Good Beer Guide, Visit Wales, national food press
- Community (marked β Community): TripAdvisor community reviews, Google ratings, local knowledge
- Weather & surf: Open-Meteo (WMO-standard meteorological models)
Opening hours and admission prices change β always verify with venues before visiting. Restaurant ratings are sourced from public platforms and may be partial or not reflect recent changes. visitpembs has no commercial relationship with any listed business.
πΊοΈ About Pembrokeshire
Pembrokeshire is the westernmost county of Wales β 186 miles of coastline, a National Park covering the entire coast, and some of Britain's finest beaches, wildlife and food. The county spans from Cardigan Bay in the north to the Castlemartin Peninsula in the south, and from Haverfordwest inland to the wild Atlantic headlands of St Davids and Strumble Head. Home to St Davids (Britain's smallest city), Pembroke Castle, Caldey Island monastery, world-class surf beaches and exceptional seafood.
π Official visitor resources
Content updated daily at 05:30. Data sourced from open and official sources. No affiliation with any commercial operators unless stated. Map links open Google Maps. Built with β€οΈ for Pembrokeshire visitors.