South Stack Lighthouse on its rock stack at the foot of the cliffs of Holy Island, Anglesey, with the Irish Sea stretching beyond.

Anglesey Atlas

Ynys Môn — an island you can cross in an hour and spend a lifetime reading.

North WalesIsland countyCoast & old stone

Begin

The island

Anglesey is small enough to cross in a morning, but it rewards anyone who gives it more than a pass-through glance: sea light, old roads, ruined stone and long horizons.

Field notes

How to use this atlas.

Choose a coast, compare the ten places, then open the full guide for parking, tides, route detail and timing.

Best for
Coast roads, lighthouses, castles, quiet sand
Best pace
Two or three places in a day
Best light
Late afternoon, especially the west coast
Start with
Llanddwyn, South Stack or Beaumaris
Watch for
Tides, full car parks, exposed weather

Pick the day, not the postcode.

Four kinds of day, sorted by mood and weather rather than by map. A starting shape, not a schedule — let one stop lead to the next.

Find your side of the island.

Anglesey makes more sense when you stop treating it as one place. It has four sides, each with its own weather and reasons to go. Pick a side, and you've picked your day.

Pick a coast. Plan a loop. The rest follows.

The full atlas

The Anglesey record, charted so far.

Every place we've stood in and written up, in one index. Start with the one below, or search the full list by name or the kind of day you want.

Start here Llanddwyn Island at sunset — a low tidal headland of rock and chapel ruins reaching into the sea off Newborough, Anglesey, with the mountains of Eryri on the horizon.
Signature · the place to begin

Llanddwyn Island

A tidal island of old pilots' cottages, a ruined chapel and twin lighthouses at the edge of Newborough — the place most people picture when they picture Anglesey. Walk out at low tide; check the tide first.

Half a day · tidal — check before you walk out Read the guide

Not sure where to start? For drama, start with South Stack. For history, Beaumaris. For something stranger, Parys Mountain. For slow coast, Llanddwyn or Newborough.

Signature
— essential Anglesey places.
Worth the drive
— strong stops that justify the detour.
Hidden gem
— quieter places with a local, discovery feel.

Before you go.

A short field note. Nothing here is a substitute for checking on the day — it's just what tends to matter on Anglesey.

Tides

Check the tide before Llanddwyn and any tidal beach walk — the crossing closes on a rising sea.

Parking

Popular coast car parks fill early on clear days. Arrive in the morning, or come for the late light.

Weather

The west coast is exposed. Visibility changes everything on the cliffs — a clear hour is worth waiting for.

Pace

Two or three places is plenty for a good day. The island is better savoured than collected.

Start with one place.

Start with one place, check the tide, and make the drive. The island is small enough to learn and large enough to keep surprising you.