From piers to castles and country parks to museums, we look at some of the family-friendly places to visit
5. Beachy Head Countryside & Visitor Centre
Beachy Head with its dramatic white chalk cliffs is the 'eastern gateway' to the South Downs National Park and it is from here that the famous South Downs Way stretches the 99 miles length of the Park to Winchester in Hampshire.
The South Downs National Park is the 10th National Park to be designated in England, providing an area of protected countryside that everyone can visit and enjoy.
Free to visit. Photo: Submitted
6. Hastings Country Park
The park contains wide open spaces with outstanding views as well as woods, a nudist beach and some wheelchair friendly paths.
Admission charges apply. Photo: Staff
7. Devil's Dyke National Trust
A legendary beauty spot on the South Downs Devil’s Dyke, just five miles north of Brighton, offers stunning panoramas, a record breaking valley, a curious history and England’s most colourful habitat.
At nearly a mile long, the Dyke valley is the longest, deepest and widest 'dry valley' in the UK. Legend has it that the Devil dug this chasm to drown the parishioners of the Weald.
Pay and display parking. Photo: Staff
8. Hastings Miniature Railway
The 10 1⁄4 in (260 mm) gauge miniature railway is located on the seafront at Hastings. It originally opened in 1948 and remains a popular tourist attraction.
Admission charges. Photo: Staff