Oxford city break guide

Expert guide to Oxford

  1. Overview
    Overview

    Overview

  2. Hotels
    Hotels

    Hotels

  3. Attractions
    Attractions

    Attractions

  4. Restaurants
    Restaurants

    Restaurants

  5. Nightlife
    Nightlife

    Nightlife

  6. Shopping
    Shopping

    Shopping

An insider's guide to Oxford, featuring the city's best hotels, restaurants, bars, shops and attractions, as chosen by Gail Simmons, our destination expert.

Why go?

Renowned throughout the world as a centre of learning, and latterly as the home of Inspectors Morse and Lewis, Oxford blends medieval charm with the buzz of a modern city. The city may have given her name to everything from a prestigious dictionary to a bitter marmalade, but it is the university that most people associate with the town. Over the past eight centuries eminent scientists, philosophers, authors, archbishops, explorers and politicians have emerged from its ivory towers.

Oxford is an international city on an intimate scale. One minute you can be pushing through crowded shopping streets, the next diving down a serene cobbled alleyway, its ancient stone walls laced with wisteria, or stepping through one of the college gatehouses into an enclosed and enigmatic world.

You can walk across Oxford’s medieval heart in less than 20 minutes, though don’t be surprised to find a famous face crossing your path, or to catch yourself eavesdropping on snatches of conversation that range from philosophy to politics to physics. Yet despite its lofty, intellectual air there’s a modern dynamism about the city, which bustles with small businesses, intriguing cafés, quirky shops and, nowadays, some of the best hotels and restaurants in the country.

The best hotels in Oxford

When to go

There is no best time to visit Oxford, as every season has its charms. In early spring the trees of North Oxford drip with blossom, though May is when Oxford perhaps looks her loveliest. The trees are in full leaf, the students are in celebratory mood and the famous “Bumps” (boat race) is taking place along the river.

In summer the student throngs melt away, leaving the city to residents and tourists, and you can punt and picnic on the rivers Thames (or Isis, as it’s known here) and Cherwell. There’s an air of lazy romance about the city, although it’s also the time when crowds of boisterous foreign students clog the shopping streets. Autumn, when the students return and the trees are burnished bronze, is mournfully beautiful and Christmas, when the streets are eerily quiet and the medieval buildings frosted in snow, can be magical.

Know before you go

Oxford’s Tourist Information Office       

Address: 15-16 Broad Street, Oxford OX1 3AS
Contact: 01865 686430

Quick tip

If you’re planning to explore further afield than the walkable historic city centre, it's worth investing in a SmartZone bus pass, which allows unlimited travel on Oxford’s three main bus companies. One day and one week passes are available, either online or in person from Debenhams Travel Shop (1-12 Magdalen St, Oxford OX1 3AA). Contact: city.oxfordbus.co.uk

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Expert guide to Oxford

  1. Overview
    Overview

    Overview

  2. Hotels
    Hotels

    Hotels

  3. Attractions
    Attractions

    Attractions

  4. Restaurants
    Restaurants

    Restaurants

  5. Nightlife
    Nightlife

    Nightlife

  6. Shopping
    Shopping

    Shopping