Use our interactive Seaglass map or the search function to find your perfect beach, and don’t forget to check the Sea Glass score to see if it’s a good day for hunting treasure.
Compton Bay Sea Glass Guide
Dinosaurs, Shipwrecks and a Wild Channel Shore Best For: Why Compton Bay – where 125 million years of history meet
Ventnor Beach Sea Glass Guide
Southern Exposure on the Island’s Sunniest Shore Best For: Why Ventnor – the southernmost beach on the island, and the
Fort Victoria Beach Sea Glass Guide
Beachcombing at the West Wight’s Best-Kept Secret Best For: Why Fort Victoria? There are beaches on the Isle of Wight
Yaverland Beach Sea Glass Guide
Dinosaur Coast, Channel Glass and Culver Cliff Best For: Why Yaverland -the Isle of Wight’s best-kept glass secret The Isle
Barton-on-Sea Sea Glass Guide
Eocene Cliffs, Fossils and Channel Shingle Best For Why Barton-on-Sea – where the cliffs give up their secrets Barton-on-Sea is
Fort Gilkicker Beach Sea Glass Guide
Palmerston Forts, Royal Navy History and Solent Shingle Best For: Why Fort Gilkicker – the Solent’s most historically loaded shingle
Hastings Beach Sea Glass Guide
Europe’s Biggest Fishing Fleet and a Thousand Years of Glass Best For: Why Hastings – where fishing history meets the
Pevensey Bay Beach Sea Glass Guide
Where the Normans Landed and the Smugglers Ran Best For: Why Pevensey Bay – history in every pebble Pevensey Bay
Folkestone Beach Sea Glass Guide
Victorian Cliffs, Channel Glass and a Hidden Cove Best For Why Folkestone- a Channel coast original Most people know Folkestone
Aldeburgh Beach Sea Glass Guide
Tudor Shingle and North Sea Gold Best For: Why Aldeburgh – where the Tudor port slipped into the sea Walk