Dog-Friendly Gardens & Stately Homes in the UK

Which UK gardens and stately homes welcome dogs? Chatsworth, RHS Rosemoor, National Trust gardens and Blenheim, and which allow assistance dogs only.

A dog on a lead in the formal gardens of a UK stately home
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By Rob Griffiths17 June 2026 · 8 min read

A great garden or stately-home estate is one of the most civilised days out you can share with a dog, but the rules vary enormously. Some estates throw open hundreds of acres of parkland to dogs on leads; others restrict them to the car-park walk or admit only assistance dogs. Knowing which is which before you set off saves a wasted journey. This guide rounds up the UK gardens and estates that genuinely welcome dogs, explains the schemes that make planning easier, and is honest about the ones that do not.

Can you take a dog to gardens and stately homes?

Often, but it depends entirely on who runs the place. There is no single national rule, so it pays to understand the main schemes and how generous each one is.

  • National Trust properties grade each place with a one-to-three pawprint rating, and 87 per cent now welcome dogs. Many of its great gardens, such as Stourhead and Mottisfont, are dog-friendly on a lead.
  • Private estates set their own rules, and the best, like Chatsworth, are extremely dog-friendly across their gardens and parkland.
  • The Royal Horticultural Society is more restrictive: after a trial, only RHS Garden Rosemoor allows pet dogs, and only on certain days. Wisley, Harlow Carr, Bridgewater and Hyde Hall admit assistance dogs only.
  • The National Garden Scheme lists hundreds of private gardens that open for charity, and runs a dog-friendly gardens category worth browsing for local finds.

Wherever you go, expect to keep your dog on a lead for the sake of wildlife, livestock and the planting. For the heritage-castle equivalent of this guide, see our companion piece on dog-friendly UK castles.

Which gardens and estates are most dog-friendly?

DERBYSHIRE · PRIVATE ESTATE

Chatsworth House Editor's pick

One of Britain's most dog-friendly great estates

  • A full day in grand grounds
  • Peak District trips
  • Garden and parkland
  • Managed by Private estate (Devonshire)
  • Dog access Garden and park (not the house)
  • Lead On a lead
  • Region Derbyshire
Chatsworth, the Devonshire family seat on the edge of the Peak District, is about as welcoming as a stately home gets for dogs. Well-behaved dogs on leads are welcome throughout both the garden and the wider park, with doggy drinking stations near the toilets and in the Stables courtyard. Only the house itself is off-limits to pet dogs. Between the 105-acre garden, the cascade and the vast parkland along the Derwent, it is an easy full day out.

What we liked

  • Dogs welcome across garden and park
  • Dog drinking stations provided
  • Vast grounds beside the Derwent

Watch out for

  • Pet dogs cannot enter the house
  • Lead needed for deer and livestock

Garden, cascade and a deer park along the Derwent, nearly all of Chatsworth is open to a dog on a lead.

DEVON · RHS

RHS Garden Rosemoor

The one RHS garden that welcomes pet dogs

  • Garden lovers with dogs
  • Mid-week visits
  • Horticulture days out
  • Managed by Royal Horticultural Society
  • Dog access Selected areas, certain days only
  • Lead Short lead
  • Region Devon
Rosemoor in north Devon is the exception among the Royal Horticultural Society's flagship gardens: it welcomes well-behaved dogs on short leads on selected days, currently Mondays to Wednesdays. Dogs are allowed on the paths through the formal gardens, stream field, lakeside, arboretums and woodlands, which is a generous slice of this beautiful 65-acre garden. It is the place to combine serious horticulture with a dog walk, but do check the current dog days before travelling.

What we liked

  • The only dog-friendly flagship RHS garden
  • Wide access across the garden
  • Beautiful planting and woodland

Watch out for

  • Dog days are limited to Mon to Wed
  • Confirm current days before you go

WILTSHIRE & HAMPSHIRE · NATIONAL TRUST

National Trust gardens

Pawprint-rated gardens across the country

  • Landscape gardens
  • Pawprint planning
  • Riverside garden walks
  • Managed by National Trust
  • Dog access Many gardens on a lead (check pawprint)
  • Lead On a lead
  • Region Nationwide
The National Trust looks after some of Britain's finest gardens, and many welcome dogs on a lead. Stourhead in Wiltshire, with its world-famous landscape garden and lake, and Mottisfont in Hampshire, with its walled rose gardens and riverside walks, are both popular dog-friendly days out. The Trust's one-to-three pawprint rating tells you at a glance how dog-friendly each garden is, so check the rating on the property page. See our dedicated National Trust guide for the full picture.

What we liked

  • Many world-class gardens welcome dogs
  • Clear pawprint ratings to plan by
  • Stourhead and Mottisfont both excellent

Watch out for

  • Access varies by property
  • Houses are assistance dogs only

OXFORDSHIRE · PRIVATE ESTATE

Blenheim Palace

Glorious parkland walks, but parkland only

  • Big parkland walks
  • Capability Brown landscape
  • Lakeside strolls
  • Managed by Private estate (Marlborough)
  • Dog access Parkland only (not gardens or palace)
  • Lead On a lead
  • Region Oxfordshire
Blenheim, the baroque palace and UNESCO World Heritage Site near Woodstock, offers superb dog walking across its Capability Brown parkland, where dogs are welcome on a lead. The catch is that this is parkland only: dogs are not allowed in the palace, the Great Court, or the formal and walled gardens. Manage your expectations and it is a wonderful place to stretch a dog's legs, with the lake, the Grand Bridge and miles of designed landscape to explore.

What we liked

  • Hundreds of acres of historic parkland
  • Lake and Grand Bridge to walk to
  • Easy reach of Oxford

Watch out for

  • No dogs in the formal gardens or palace
  • Parkland ticket still required

Which gardens don't allow dogs?

Plenty of famous gardens admit assistance dogs only, so it is worth checking before you build a day around them:

  • RHS Wisley, Harlow Carr, Bridgewater and Hyde Hall do not allow pet dogs, though they run occasional dog-focused evening events. Only RHS Rosemoor permits dogs on its dog days.
  • Formal and walled gardens at many estates, including Blenheim, are off-limits even where the parkland is dog-friendly, to protect delicate planting.
  • House and palace interiors are almost always assistance dogs only, including at otherwise dog-friendly estates like Chatsworth.

If a garden is not clearly listed as dog-friendly on its own website, assume pet dogs are not welcome until you have confirmed it.

Tips for visiting gardens with a dog

Check the policy and the day

Garden dog access often varies by area and even by day of the week, as at RHS Rosemoor. Confirm on the official site before you travel.

Keep to a lead and the paths

Most gardens require dogs on a lead and on the paths to protect borders, wildlife and livestock. Stick to the marked dog-friendly routes.

Expect houses to be off-limits

Even at dog-friendly estates, the house or palace is usually assistance dogs only. Plan for an outdoor visit.

Look for drinking stations

The best estates, like Chatsworth, provide dog water points, but carry your own water and a travel bowl to be safe.

Mind the wildlife and livestock

Deer parks and grazing are common on big estates. A secure lead protects both your dog and the animals.

Consider membership

If you visit National Trust gardens regularly, membership quickly pays for itself in free parking and entry across hundreds of dog-friendly places.

Frequently asked questions

Q01Are dogs allowed at Chatsworth House?
Yes. Well-behaved dogs on leads are welcome throughout the garden and the wider park at Chatsworth, with dog drinking stations provided. Only the house itself is off-limits to pet dogs, while assistance dogs are welcome everywhere.
Q02Can I take my dog to RHS gardens?
Mostly no. Of the RHS flagship gardens, only RHS Garden Rosemoor in Devon allows pet dogs, on short leads and on selected days (currently Monday to Wednesday). Wisley, Harlow Carr, Bridgewater and Hyde Hall admit assistance dogs only.
Q03Which National Trust gardens are dog-friendly?
Many are. The Trust grades places with a one-to-three pawprint rating, and gardens such as Stourhead in Wiltshire and Mottisfont in Hampshire welcome dogs on a lead. Check the pawprint rating on each property's page before visiting.
Q04Are dogs allowed at Blenheim Palace?
In the parkland only. Dogs on leads are welcome across Blenheim's historic parkland, but not in the palace, the Great Court, or the formal and walled gardens. It is still a superb place for a long parkland walk.
Q05Can dogs go inside stately homes?
Almost never. The house or palace interior at nearly every estate is reserved for assistance dogs, to protect the collections and fabric. Plan on enjoying the gardens and grounds with a pet dog rather than the building.