Holiday rentals in St Davids

Find and book unique accommodation on Airbnb

1 of 3 pages
1 of 3 pages

Popular amenities for St Davids holiday rentals

Stay near St Davids's top sights

St. Davids Cathedral124 locals recommend
St Justinian's4 locals recommend
The Bishops29 locals recommend
The Cambrian Inn28 locals recommend
CK's Supermarket Ltd9 locals recommend
Oriel y Parc Landscape Gallery and Visitor Centre17 locals recommend

Quick stats about holiday rentals in St Davids

  • Total rentals

    340 properties

  • Rentals with dedicated workspaces

    80 properties have a dedicated workspace

  • Pet-friendly rentals

    180 properties allow pets

  • Family-friendly rentals

    220 properties are a good fit for families

  • Total number of reviews

    12K reviews

  • Nightly prices starting at

    £24 before taxes and fees

Your guide to St Davids

Welcome to St Davids

Welcome to the United Kingdom’s smallest city, named after Wales’ patron saint, sitting beautifully on the most westerly point of the country. It’s a city because of its historic cathedral, built on a 6th-century monastic site and redeveloped impressively in medieval and Victorian times. Just across the River Alun sit the equally grand ruins of Bishops Palace: an ornate 700-year-old wheel window in a wall of the Great Hall gives a measure of the building’s original majesty.

The rest of the city is a small cluster of streets around open green spaces, with brightly painted buildings hosting cafes, shops, and galleries. The town is also only 2.5 miles from the surfers’ paradise of Whitesands Beach, facing the windy waves of the Irish Sea, and near smaller coves such as Caerfai with its multicoloured rocks, and the craggier Porthmelgan and Porthselau (accessible via the Pembrokeshire Coastal Path). The area is also known for great ice cream parlours and independent restaurants, the local speciality, of course, being seafood.


The best time to stay in a holiday rental in St Davids

The weather in St Davids is typical for Wales: mild in summer with beautiful balmy spells, cold in winter, and a raincoat in the rucksack is always advised. St Davids remains beautiful all year round, although if you’re a nature lover, spring and autumn are hard to beat. Enjoy the city peacefully, then from March to July take a boat to Ramsey Island from the jetty at nearby St Justinian’s for views of peregrine falcons, choughs, and kittiwakes. Starting in September, the island becomes one of the biggest seal pupping sites in the United Kingdom, with hundreds of babies being born on beaches and in caves. Summers are gentler for wildlife on the peninsula, but louder for beach life, with surfers descending on Whitesands, and watersports such as coasteering, kayaking, and diving keeping sea-lovers busy. Those wanting more spiritual endeavours will enjoy the cathedral’s music festival every May.


Top things to do in St Davids

Porth-y-Tŵr

This Grade 1-listed gatehouse is majestic, one of four that used to lead pilgrims towards the cathedral walls. Its 13th-century octagonal tower is also still fully functional, housing ten bells that regularly resound through the city. Listen out on Wednesday evenings when the bell-ringers have their weekly practice.

St Non’s Chapel and Holy Well

A mile south of St Davids, on a stretch of the Pembrokeshire Coastal Path full of dramatic cliffs, are the ruins of a medieval chapel, built on the site of a 6th-century house where St David himself was said to have been born. St Non was his mother, and a well bearing her name sits alongside it, hosting a small shrine and stone grotto. A modern chapel and retreat centre also add to the site’s spiritual setting.

The Oriel y Parc Landscape Gallery and Visitor Centre

Based in a fully accessible, eco-friendly modern building, this beautiful visitor centre and gallery showcases treasures from the National Museum of Wales and work by Pembrokeshire artists. It also has regular artists-in-residence, a discovery room to encourage visitors’ creativity, and a popular cafe.

Destinations to explore

  1. Airbnb
  2. United Kingdom
  3. Wales
  4. Pembrokeshire
  5. St Davids