Market Place storefronts in central Henley — Tudor pub, brick building above Moda In Pelle, Georgian house with arched ground-floor
About the town

Why Henley.

Henley-on-Thames is a riverside market town on the Oxfordshire–Berkshire border, an hour from central London by train. It's best known for the Royal Regatta — the world's oldest rowing event — but the town earns its weekend-break reputation year-round: independent shops along the high street, century-old pubs, walks along the Thames, and easy access to the Chiltern Hills.

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Market Place · central Henley
Coming up

Events worth planning around.

The Thames at Henley — looking towards the bridge from the towpath
01 — On the river

The river is the whole point of Henley.

Three ways in.

  • i. Hobbs of Henley. Five minutes' walk along Station Road. Hire a self-drive launch for the afternoon (Edwardian-style boats included), book a passenger cruise upstream to Marlow or downstream past Temple Island, or grab a rowboat by the hour. Themed evening cruises — gin & fizz, jazz, wildlife — run through summer. hobbsofhenley.com
  • ii. Walk the towpath. The Thames Path runs both directions from the bridge. Head upstream for a six-mile circular to Hambleden Mill that crosses the river at the weir and returns down the Regatta course. Downstream takes you to Marsh Lock. Both are easy and signposted.
  • iii. Marsh Lock. A ten-minute walk south of the bridge. A working lock with a long timber footbridge over the weir — one of the prettiest spots in town, and most visitors miss it.
02 — A short drive out

Three villages out of a storybook.

All within fifteen minutes by car.

  • i. Hambleden. Five miles north. Quintessentially English village of brick, timber and flint cottages, untouched in two hundred years — it's why Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, 101 Dalmatians, Sleepy Hollow and Band of Brothers were all filmed here. The Stag and Huntsman and the village shop are both excellent.
  • ii. Sonning. Five miles south. Famous for its old bridge and an unusually high concentration of celebrity homes (George Clooney's place is here). The Bull Inn for lunch.
  • iii. Stonor. Five miles north-west. See Stately homes, below.
Greys Court in sunshine — Tudor manor with chimneyed brick and stone façade
Greys Court · photo by John of Reading · CC BY-SA 3.0
03 — Stately homes & gardens

Eight hundred years of continuous occupation.

Stonor Park — home of the Stonor family for over 850 years, set in a deer park in the Chilterns. Three distinct gardens: a 17th-century Italianate pleasure garden, an old kitchen garden, and an eclectic arboretum. House open seasonally; gardens longer. stonor.com

Greys Court (National Trust, three miles west) — Tudor manor with 16th-century stained glass, a walled garden famous for wisteria in May, and an unusual donkey-powered well house. Spring–summer arts and sculpture programme through 2026. nationaltrust.org.uk/greys-court

Mapledurham House (fifteen miles, thirty minutes) — Elizabethan country house and working watermill on the Thames, the inspiration for Toad Hall in The Wind in the Willows. Open select Sundays in summer.

Florist on a covered alleyway, leading to the Barlows Mews entrance
04 — Theatre, cinema, a wander

Old streets, quiet finds.

Kenton Theatre (five minutes' walk) — the fourth-oldest working theatre in the UK, on New Street. Properly varied programme: drama, comedy, music, talks. thekenton.org.uk

Regal Picturehouse (five minutes' walk) — three-screen independent cinema and café-bar on Boroma Way. Mainstream alongside indie, foreign-language and documentary. picturehouses.com

Friday Street — short historic street of Victorian buildings worth a quick wander, with The Old Bell (1325) at the end of it; said to be the oldest dated pub in town.

The Ama of the Thames — bronze mermaid sculpture on Red Lion Lawn next to the bridge. Easy to miss; a Henley quirk.

Henley Farmers' Market stalls in Market Place
05 — Wine, beer and produce

What to take home with you.

Stanlake Park Wine Estate (Twyford, eight miles) — 150-acre Berkshire vineyard offering a £20 tour-and-tasting (six wines). One of the oldest English wine producers. stanlakepark.com

Gabriel Machin — Henley's serious butcher in Market Place. A genuine destination: game in season, dry-aged steaks, the works. The Three Tuns next door uses their meat.

Henley Farmers' Market — second Thursday of every month in Market Place. Worth timing a stay around if you cook.

06 — Walking the Chilterns

Henley sits inside the Chilterns National Landscape.

Beech woods, chalk downs, sleepy villages. Three named walks if you want something specific to aim at — the local-favourite middle option puts three villages, two stately homes and two pubs on a single day.

Walk 01 / Half-day

Hambleden Mill circular

6 miles Moderate 3 hours

Crosses the Thames at the weir, returns down the Regatta course. The most photogenic of the three — Hambleden village sits at the top, the river is at the bottom.

Walk 02 / Full day

Henley → Stonor → Greys Court

12 miles Moderate–hard 5–6 hours

Three villages, two stately homes, two pubs along the route. The signature local walk — pace yourself for the second half.

Walk 03 / Town centre

The Henley Ale Trail

Self-paced Flat Six pubs

Six historic pubs in a town-centre loop. Pick up the guide at the tourist information centre on the high street.

07 — Eat & drink

Walking from the door, or worth the twenty-minute drive.

The Three Tuns in Market Place is the locals' favourite — same owners as Gabriel Machin butcher next door. Côte Brasserie sits directly opposite the Barlows Mews alleyway. Twenty minutes out, you're at Tom Kerridge's Hand and Flowers in Marlow and the three-Michelin-starred Waterside Inn at Bray.

See the full list →