Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Hailsham
Hardens guides have spent 35 years compiling reviews of the best Hailsham restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 22 restaurants in Hailsham and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Hailsham restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Hailsham Restaurants
1. The Tasting Room, Rathfinny Wine Estate
British, Modern restaurant in Alfriston
Rathfinny Wine Estate - BN26
Overlooking the vines and South Downs from the first floor of Mark & Sarah Driver’s winery, this vineyard restaurant has a “beautiful setting” with “great views” of the fields supplying the “interesting wines from the estate”. Chef Chris Bailey serves a lunchtime selection of interesting small plates, with a small selection of larger dishes. Evenings are often in collaboration with top chefs from London.
2. The Crown Hastings
British, Modern restaurant in Hastings
64 - 66 All Saints Street - TN34
In the Old Town, near the seafront – “a short walk from the Hastings Contemporary gallery” – this “absolute favourite pub” is “a community hub that’s a true asset to the area”. “Not only is it the ultimate pub, with its vibe, location, and friendliness” but “the food’s a cut above your normal pub grub” and “they always have a banging range of ales on draft, interesting cans in the fridge, and fun soft drinks too”. “The atmosphere is lovely with all the local art on the walls”. Top Menu Tip – “Aubergine curry with spicy garnishes was flavourful; ciabatta fish goujon sandwich with wedge chips is if anything too generous!”
3. The Star
British, Modern restaurant in Alfriston
High Street - BN26
This former religious hostel on the banks of the Cuckmere River is considerably less humble than in days of yore, having been given the Olga Polizzi treatment (Bloomsbury Set artworks, fancy Elizabethan-style floor, plush bedrooms) a few years back. While some baulk at the “very expensive” price tag, for most it’s justified by the “very good” British cooking and, if you overnight – perhaps after a trip to Glyndebourne or a stroll on The Downs – “it should be mentioned that the breakfasts are particularly good”.
4. The Mirabelle, The Grand Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Eastbourne
King Edwards Parade - BN21
Dining amid the Edwardian “time-warp” splendour of the Grand Hotel is “always a wonderful experience” according to traditionalist fans of this seafront landmark, which “continues to sail along offering well spaced tables, attentive silver service”. One or two reports regret that in moving with the times it’s become “sadly less stylish than in times past, with no serving cloche or pianist on the night visited”, but all acknowledge it’s “still a lovely room”, with “imaginative cuisine” from chef Alex Burtenshaw – cooking that all reports acknowledged as consistent this year.
5. Ram Inn
restaurant in Firle
The Street - BN8
2022 Review: At the heart of a picture-perfect village in the South Downs National Park which was beloved by Virginia Woolf in her day, this rambling brick and flint pub-with-rooms has a “great garden, or more like field” (!) offering views over the Sussex countryside. Inside offers an “intimate” and “romantic” backdrop to “modern and fresh” food of a “reliable” bent.
6. Middle House
British, Modern restaurant in Mayfield
High Street - TN20
2022 Review: They “recently extended the outdoor space and garden” at this imposing wattle-and-daub Elizabethan inn, built for the Keeper of the Privy Purse to Elizabeth I, no less. Together with a “new menu” of snacks and heartier grub it now makes a “great eating place” by all accounts.
7. St Clement’s
British, Modern restaurant in St Leonards-on-Sea
3 Mercatoria - TN38
Former Le Caprice chef Nick Hales this year celebrates 21 years at his townhouse restaurant, where he showcases the daily catch provided by Europe’s largest beach-launched fishing fleet at Hastings – “there are meat dishes, but the fish and seafood is what you should come here for (and I’m not a great fish-eater!)”. All reports suggest its “on top form” currently.
8. The Griffin Inn
British, Modern restaurant in Fletching
2025 Review: “In a delightful village”, this “scenic” gastroboozer-with-rooms continues to please, two years after longtime owners the Pullan family handed the keys to the Young’s group; the “best atmosphere is in the bar” (as opposed to the annexe), though the “great garden” remains the standout here, offering lovely views of the Ouse countryside.
9. The Royal
British, Modern restaurant in St Leonards-on-Sea
1 Saint Johns Road - TN37
This “satisfying haunt” – a smartly renovated Victorian hotel opposite the station – attracts a “relaxed regular clientele” with a “solid-if-limited menu on weekday lunchtimes, but more varied and flavourful choice in the evening”.
10. Three Faces of Del Parc
Spanish restaurant in St Leonards-on-Sea
1 Western Road - TN37
2022 Review: Owners Alan McNally and Steve Morrish (who have collectively worked in some of London's trendier spots: Crispin, Leroy, Lyle’s and The Clove Club) run this tapas, eatery and deli with the aim of creating a “Balearic vibe”. No feedback as yet, but on paper it looks well worth a try.
11. The Wild Mushroom
British, Modern restaurant in Westfield
Woodgate House, Westfield Lane - TN35
“Paul Webbe’s original restaurant is still a pleasure to visit” almost three decades after opening, the farmhouse venue having since spawned a clutch of fish-centric spin-offs alongside a cookery school in Hastings. “Reliably old-fashioned (in the best possible way)”, it combines “superb service and some first-rate cooking” which, as per the name, is focussed on foraging, including “a marvellous set luncheon with a very large choice for each course at a reasonable price in this day and age”. For several reporters this is a place to “go back to on special occasions as the quality is very good”.
12. Webbe’s Rock-a-Nore
Fish & seafood restaurant in Hastings
1 Rock-a-Nore Road - TN34
“There’s no better place to enjoy wonderful English fish ’n’ chips”, say devotees of this outfit “in the historic area close to the fishing boat beach and famous net huts”, from wild food expert Paul Webbe, praised for its “superb cuts of fish fried in a crisp, non-greasy batter that seals in the succulent flesh”. (“If you’re dining on the outside tables you need to keep guard against the thieving seagulls…”). If you want to perfect your own skills, the venue also hosts a fish cookery school.
13. Maggie’s
Fish & chips restaurant in Hastings
Rock-a-Nore Road - TN34
“Flaky firm cod, tempura-like batter and a pale ale to wash it down” – this wooden shack down by the Hastings beach-launched fishing fleet serves some of “the best fish ’n’ chips you’ll find”, sourced “straight from the local fishermen” and in “really generous portions”. Now in its third decade, it was founded by Margaret Banfield and is still run by her family.
14. Rock a Nore Kitchen
British, Modern restaurant in Hastings
23a Rock-A-Nore Rd - TN34
A “totally unpretentious” venture serving “lovely, simple seafood, cooked well and at a decent price, in a little shack of a dining room down on the Hastings seafront”, and where the catch is, reassuringly, “landed on the beach just opposite”. Add in “lovely relaxed service” and is a “really enjoyable” formula all-round.
15. Cru
restaurant in Eastbourne
8 Hyde Gardens - BN21
2025 Review: Fans proclaim the “best food in Eastbourne”, at this “fun” and “buzzy” subterranean wine bar, restaurant and bottle shop, whose décor is enlivened by a pink neon Hunter S Thompson quote. On the food front, there’s “something for everyone” (namely small and large plates), while the “ever-changing, excellent wine list” features English bottles and rare wines by the glass.
16. Rostick
Italian restaurant in Eastbourne
209 Terminus Road - BN21
2023 Review: “Great attention to detail is the hallmark of this Italian restaurant close to the seafront in Eastbourne”. Run by chef/patron, hospitality veteran Lorenzo Cinalli, it’s in a traditional mould and – according to a recent review from the Mail on Sunday’s Tom Parker Bowles “is one of those rare places that manages to combine the old school with the resolutely regional” including “spanking fresh turbot... up there with Scott’s, Wiltons or Bentley’s”.
17. Galleria
Fish & seafood restaurant in St-Leonards-on-Sea
39 Norman Road - TN38
2023 Review: No feedback as yet on this August 2020 arrival in this ever-more fashionable seaside town, but it’s a July 2022 tip from Giles Coren writing in The Times and awarding it 23/30. “I probably shouldn’t have been as surprised as I was by the low, low prices on the menu” achieved with “unfashionable fish – mussels, sea trout, plaice, mackerel – and plenty of pasta.”
18. Bayte
East & Cent. European restaurant in St Leonards-on-Sea
45-46 Kings Road - TN37
Taking over the former King’s Road Antiques site in July 2023, this modern European neighbourhood restaurant was co-founded by Ruby Boglione, whose parents run Richmond lifestyle brand Petersham Nurseries. Given that filiation, there’s a decidedly “boho atmosphere” (lots of trees, madcap art and bare plaster walls), while an open-fire grill fuels chef Joshua Dickinson’s Britalian farm-to-table cooking, which makes much of “great-quality, locally sourced ingredients” and is “always interesting”. Pasta dishes dominate on Mondays, and there’s also a casual café-style menu of focaccia sandwiches.
19. Reel
restaurant in St Leonards-on-Sea
43 Norman Road - TN38
“An amazing small restaurant in quirky premises” that span an “historic cinema” (the Kino, which dates back to 1913) and the “interesting” Baker-Mamonova Gallery, which showcases 20th-century Russian art. The dining area has had a few different iterations over the years, and is currently run in-house, focussing on crowd-pleasing mains (the “mussels are amazing”), “great coffee” and breakfasts, plus a long list of cocktails. Given the location, it’s particularly “good for a pre-Kino dinner”.
20. Lury Restaurant
Sri Lankan restaurant in Hastings
8 Cambridge Road - TN34
Unlikely but promising something spectacular – that’s the potential of this brave newcomer: the passion project of chef Jack Lury and his wife, Issy Cianchi, set in a small, 10-seat basement that’s a stone’s throw from this not-so-lovely portion of the British seafront. It’s a dream that started life as a delivery business during Covid, and opened here in Spring 2025 – rather late for feedback in our annual diners’ poll. But in her June 2025 visit, The Times’s Charlotte Ivers went wild for cooking that showed “an extraordinary level of ambition”. Drawing on Jack’s British and Burgher (European-meets-Sri Lankan) heritage he creates fusion dishes of huge imagination and variety, and according to Charlotte, “If this is not quite yet a five-star restaurant… it will be soon”. She concludes: “Who creates a ten-course menu for their first permanent restaurant? A madman, that’s who. But one of quite clearly astonishing creativity and talent”.
View full listings of 22 Hailsham Restaurants
Popular Hailsham Restaurant Searches
Hailsham Restaurant News