Photo by Ed York

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Check availability on Worstead 5 Star Hotels

Compare Worstead 5 Star Hotels with updated room rates, reviews, and availability. Most hotels are fully refundable.

Old Town Hall House

5.0 star property
10.0 out of 10, Exceptional, (3)
"Superb small hotel/B&B and it is genuinely well run and managed. Loved staying there and would do so again in the near future. "
Old Town Hall House

Carrick's At Castle Farm

5.0 star property
9.8 out of 10, Exceptional, (13)
"Although it was a good stay and in an excellent location, the room we stayed in was very dusty and needed a good clean. Bathroom blind was very dusty, exposed wires from a towel rail. Bedroom needed dusting and windows that opened needed cleaning. Confusion over the bill when we left."
Carrick's At Castle Farm
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Learn more about Worstead

Head to Wroxham Barns and East Ruston Old Vicarage—just two of the sights around Worstead.

This way to North Walsham And to Cromer and Sheringham beyond. At left the signal box can be seen; it is located in one of the adjoining Station Cottages' garden. The former signal box is located in one of the adjoining Station Cottages' gardens. The line connecting the city of Norwich with North Walsham was opened in 1874 and it reached the seaside town of Cromer by 1877. The rest of the line, between Cromer and Sheringham, opened in 1887. It is the remains of the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway line (based in Melton Constable), part of which is preserved as a heritage railway, between the coastal town of Sheringham and Holt, further inland. Passenger services are operated by 'One Railway' which is part of the National Rail network, operated by National Express East Anglia and uses Class 150, Class 153, Class 156 or Class 170 diesel multiple units. The line is named after the Bittern (a member of the Heron family), a rare bird which can still be found in Norfolk's wetlands.
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Open Photo by Evelyn Simak (CC BY-SA) / Cropped from original