The Good Hotel Guide is the leading independent guide to hotels in Great Britain & Ireland, and also covers parts of Continental Europe. The Guide was first published in 1978. It is written for the reader seeking impartial advice on finding a good place to stay. Hotels cannot buy their way into the Guide. The editors and inspectors do not accept free hospitality on their anonymous visits to hotels. All hotels in the Guide receive a free basic listing. A fee is charged for a full web entry.
The Good Hotel Guide
About Us
Independent
Recommended
Trusted
Independent
Recommended
Trusted
Best dog friendly pubs with rooms in Yorkshire
Featured Hotels
The Star Inn at Harome
Nr Helmsley, Yorkshire
The White Swan
Pickering, Yorkshire
The Blue Lion
Leyburn, Yorkshire
The Durham Ox
Crayke, Yorkshire

The Carpenters Arms
Thirsk, Yorkshire

The Alice Hawthorn
York, Yorkshire
Overlooking the village green and duck pond, this 18th-century pub is a friendly local drop-in and foodie destination with Scandi-cool house bedrooms and spacious, eco-friendly, super-duper, stripped-back-chic timber garden rooms.

The Owl
Helmsley, Yorkshire
A 19th-century drovers' inn in an estate village lives again as a friendly local gastropub with rooms and spectacular moorland views.

The Fauconberg
Thirsk, Yorkshire
With views to the Howardian hills, this traditional village pub beloved of locals, walkers and their dogs, has individually styled, traditional bedrooms and serves hand-drawn ale alongside locally sourced classic country food in the characterful dining room.

The Blue Bell
Harrogate, Yorkshire
A handy stopover just minutes from the A1, this updated but atmospheric village pub, with flagged floors, beams, wood burner and comfy seating, offers spruce, contemporary bedrooms, modern bathrooms, and menus of pub classics with more ambitious dishes.

The Ellerby Country Inn
Whitby, Yorkshire

The Sportsman's Arms
Harrogate, Yorkshire
More country hotel than pub with rooms, this creeper-covered 17th-century inn is in a lovely location in the heart of the Nidderdale valley. It has traditionally furnished bedrooms, some in a converted barn, and a display of old clocks in a characterful dining room with menus of Yorkshire produce.
















