£50 Off 4-night Breaks & £100 Off 7-night Breaks
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
There comes a point, usually somewhere between your third cup of lukewarm office coffee and a meeting about another meeting, when the idea of escaping to a forest cabin starts to feel less like a whimsical fantasy and more like a reasonable life choice. Something about the low-level hum of…There comes a point, usually somewhere between your third cup of lukewarm office coffee and a meeting about another meeting,…
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 1+ month
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 28th Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Ends: 21st Jul 2025
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
Terms & conditions, exclusions may apply.
These may still work, so give them a try if you're still looking for a working promo code.
× Likely expired on: 2nd June
× Likely expired on: 12th May
× Likely expired on: 3rd April
× Likely expired on: 22nd May
× Likely expired on: 5th June
There comes a point, usually somewhere between your third cup of lukewarm office coffee and a meeting about another meeting, when the idea of escaping to a forest cabin starts to feel less like a whimsical fantasy and more like a reasonable life choice. Something about the low-level hum of fluorescent lights brings on the sudden urge to swap spreadsheets for pine trees. And Forest Holidays - a UK-based company that offers log cabin stays nestled deep in 13 different forests - seems built around that very impulse. No over-ambitious wilderness survival required. Just you, a hot tub, and more moss than stress.
Forest Holidays' pitch is refreshingly straightforward: stylish cabins, secluded forest settings, and the option to soak in a hot tub while listening to owls rather than email notifications. Cabins are dotted around the UK in locations like Strathyre in the Highlands, Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire, or Cropton in the North York Moors. A new site in Glentress Forest, near Edinburgh, adds some fresh options for those wanting fewer midges and more urban access.
The accommodation itself is somewhere between "log cabin" and "Scandinavian startup retreat." There are multiple sizes, sleeping two to ten, with layouts designed for families, romantic couples, or bigger groups including that one mate who insists they’re "not really into nature," but mysteriously never misses a break that includes a hot tub and a Bluetooth speaker.
All cabins come with the usual mod cons - underfloor heating, fully equipped kitchens, smart TVs - and while you are technically "off-grid," you’ll still be able to post a strategically lit bowl of granola to your stories. Pet-friendly options also abound for dog owners who feel their collie might enjoy the Forest of Dean more than a dog park behind Tesco.
Prices for breaks vary depending on cabin size, location, and season, but unlike budget airlines, Forest Holidays isn’t trying to smuggle £37 in hidden fees out of you for the privilege of bringing toothpaste. A long weekend in spring hovers around £395–£535 for two adults, with larger lodges naturally costing more. Late availability deals are occasionally sprinkled in if your schedule is more "we live on instinct now" than "Google Calendar-dependent."
At the time of writing, May breaks at Glentress start from £395, while Deerpark gets a touch steeper at around £525. These are not tent-in-the-back-garden prices, but they’re also not Shangri-La. You're paying for privacy, clean air, and the luxury of not hearing the phrase "urgent pivot" for four days. Booking requires a £25 deposit with monthly payments available - a useful touch if the forest calls louder than your bank balance allows.
There is a sign-up offer: 10% off selected bookings through December 2025. It’s not headline-grabbing, but for fans of low-effort discounts, it’s an easy win. Refund and cancellation policies are fairly industry standard: full refunds available depending on how early you cancel, though as always, the fine print is worth a glance before clicking "confirm."
In a world drowning in "experiential staycations," Forest Holidays strikes a balance between curated and grounded. You get the forest setting, but also curated extras like in-cabin meal delivery, forest ranger walks, or the endearingly named "Elvis Owl Nature Trail." Not all activities are breathtaking - owl trails are wholesome but not life-altering - but if you’re the type who enjoys a gentle amble with a clipboard, you’ll be in good hands.
Guests generally report high satisfaction; a 4.8-out-of-5 service rating lends credibility. Though, as one recent visitor to Deerpark observed, not every dog is as enchanted by the lodge lifestyle. Still, you can’t reasonably hold poor layering and an over-zealous squirrel against the venue.
Accessibility, however, has room for improvement. One guest flagged a so-called wheelchair accessible villa where the bedroom didn’t quite meet that promise. Forest Holidays’ staff apparently responded quickly, and with creativity involving bed frame disassembly, but it’s a reminder that it’s worth double checking amenities if mobility is a concern.
Forest Holidays offers a version of nature adjacent to reality - you’re not exactly off-grid, nor do you need to be. These breaks aren’t designed for Instagram adventurists or off-roading survivalists. They're for people who want to stare at trees with a glass of wine and not feel judged for it. Which, depending on how your week is going, might be far more luxurious than it sounds.
No, it doesn’t reinvent the staycation. But it does a solid, often excellent job at offering real peace and quiet with just enough Wi-Fi to keep the panic at bay. Just try not to check your inbox from the pine-scented hot tub. It ruins the whole aesthetic.
Last updated:
⭐ Rating: 3.8 / 5 (29 votes)