Where is Miss Austen filmed? Inside the locations you can visit

where is miss austen filmed
Where is Miss Austen filmed? Robert Viglasky - BBC

Miss Austen is the latest BBC period drama to grace our screens. Adapted from Gill Hornby's best-selling novel of the same name, the four-part series tells the story of Jane Austen's older sister, Cassandra, who famously destroyed the private letters of her literary sister, following her death.

Storyline aside, the series transports viewers from white-sand beaches to impressive stately homes. But where exactly is Miss Austen filmed? And which real-life locations can you visit?

Miss Austen was largely filmed in Sussex and Hampshire, with many locations being used to replicate the seaside town of Sidmouth.

Keep reading for everything you need to know about where BBC's Miss Austen was filmed:

Rye and Camber Sands

The rolling dunes of Camber Sands, the longest stretch of white sand beach in East Sussex, provided the perfect backdrop to Miss Austen. While the book's beach scenes took place in Sidmouth, Devon, the producers looked to these picturesque dunes as a place to tell the story.

"We had a week in Rye in East Sussex which was absolutely stunning. Rye doubled as our Sidmouth; we filmed on the Sand Dunes around Camber Sands," Synnøve Karlsen, who plays the younger Cassandra in Miss Austen, told Muddy Stilettos.

Meanwhile, cobbled Watchbell Street in the centre of Rye was used to film various scenes. Rye News reported that the Church of Saint Mary was renamed St Margaret's Church for the show. Locals spotted many extras, including a horse, when the exterior scenes were filmed.

"We used some of the cobbled streets, which were very hard to walk on in the shoes my character wore," says Phyllis Logan who plays Mrs Austen in the show.

where is miss austen filmed
Robert Viglasky - BBC

Langleybury House, Hertfordshire

Over in Hertfordshire, Grade II-listed Langleybury Mansion has played host to many popular TV shows and films, including Downton Abbey and Paddington. In Miss Austen, it doubled for Winchester, Southhampton, and Basingstoke Assembly Rooms.

The sprawling property is situated within the grounds of a 400-acre estate and boasts beautiful period interiors. It is one of the few vacant period manor houses available for film use in the UK.

where is miss austen filmed
Robert Viglasky - BBC

Chawton, Hampshire

It's fitting that Jane Austen's former home, where she wrote and revised her novels, appeared in the show. Nestled in the village of Chawton, the property is where Jane spent the last eight years of her life. It is here where she revised Sense and Sensibility, and Pride and Prejudice.

"It's true that Jane Austen didn't, that we know of, work hugely on any of her novels whilst they were moving around in lodgings," says Stella Merz, the producer. "It was only when she moved to Chawton… that she had a room of her own to write in and was incredibly productive."

where was miss austen filmed
Robert Viglasky - BBC

Shottesbrooke House, Berkshire

This moated 15th-century house was used to create Steventon — the home of the Austens based near Basingstoke, where Jane began to work on novels including Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice. Jane's nephew tore down the house and rebuilt a rectory.

Shottesbrooke House is privately owned and can't be visited by the public.

Adwell House, Oxfordshire

Sitting at the foot of the Chiltern Hills in the Oxfordshire countryside, Adwell House stood in for Kintbury Vicarage during the filming of Miss Austen. It's here where Cassandra goes to locate, and then destroy, her sister's letters.

where is miss austen filmed
Robert Viglasky - BBC

Jane Austen's 250th anniversary

With 2025 marking the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen's birth, there's also never been a better time to visit the southwest of the UK, also known as ‘Jane Austen’s England’, which recently topped the list of best places to visit this year by The New York Times.



Enid Blyton's Enchanted Wood: Reelig Glen, near Inverness

Photo credit: Jan Holm / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Jan Holm / Alamy Stock Photo

Reelig Glen, located near Inverness, Scotland, wonderfully resembles the enchanted wood described in Enid Blyton’s famous The Faraway Tree book series.

Its enormous magical trees stand some 64 meters tall, making them the tallest in the UK, and remarkably similar to the gigantic tress described in the stories. The children in the book regularly visit the enchanted wood and climb the Faraway Tree where they encounter various magical people and dreamlike lands.

The forest transports visitors to Blyton’s mystical location with options to walk along crafted trails (including the tall trees trail) and has plenty of space to run around and play.


Roald Dahl's BFG Country: Isle of Skye, Scotland

Photo credit: Brian Jannsen / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Brian Jannsen / Alamy Stock Photo

Although not quite the location Roald Dahl described in his 1982 book The BFG, Scotland’s The Isle of Skye has become synonymous with the film of the same name released in 2016.

The story takes place in a few locations, the most magical of which is Giant Country, where The BFG (short for the Big Friendly Giant) takes orphan Sophie.

Covered in rocky hills and slopes, this island off the north of Scotland presents an extraordinary rugged landscape which can be easily accessed and trekked.


JK Rowling's Diagon Alley: Shambles, York

Photo credit: Anna Stowe / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Anna Stowe / Alamy Stock Photo

York’s historic Shambles, which dates as far back as the 14th century, has grown in popularity amongst Harry Potter fans over the years.

The street has similarities to Diagon Alley, a magical shopping market where Harry and his friends get their wands, owls and generally anything not fit for muggles’ eyes.

Recently coined York’s real life Diagon Alley, the street is even home to two Potter themed shops and attracts thousands of visitors wanting to experience a day trip to the wizarding world.


JRR Tolkien's Caves of Helm's Deep: Cheddar Gorge Caverns, Somerset

Photo credit: Peter Lytle / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Peter Lytle / Alamy Stock Photo

JRR Tolkien’s epic novel The Lord of The Rings offers numerous fantasy locations of amazing magnitude. However, the "glittering caves of Helm’s Deep" is one of the most otherworldly, and can be experienced in Somerset.

Although not the exact glittering caves mentioned in Tolkien’s book, The Cheddar Gorge Caverns are said to be the inspiration for Tolkien’s The Two Towers. They can still be described as "immeasurable halls, filled with an everlasting music of water that tinkles into pools", just as the glittering caves are defined in the book.

The perfect place for a family day out, you can even indulge in rock climbing.


Beatrix Potter's Gardens: Hill Top Farm, The Lake District

Photo credit: Timothy Smith / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Timothy Smith / Alamy Stock Photo

Born in 1866 in London, Beatrix Potter was an English author, illustrator, natural scientist and conservationist.

As a child she spent her summers in the Lake District lapping up the beauty of the area that she painted, and it was this area that inspired many of the settings in her famous books.

In 1905, she bought Hill Top Farm and moved to the Lake District permanently, adding extra plots of land as her books made more money so as to preserve the unique hill side landscape.

Today, Hill Top Farm is part of the National Trust. Members can drop by to see Beatrix Potter’s home and the iconic gardens and lake which inspired Jemima Puddle-Duck and Tom Kitten.

READ: Review of Beatrix Potter tour of the Lake District


AA Milne's Hundred Acre Wood: Ashdown Forest, Sussex

Photo credit: Dorling Kindersley ltd / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Dorling Kindersley ltd / Alamy Stock Photo

Winnie-the-Pooh is possibly the most treasured bear of all time - his famous stories have been captivating children since 1926.

The tales, set in the Hundred Acre Wood in the beautiful surroundings of Ashdown Forest, allow for the most wonderful of woodland adventures for all who visit.

Pick up a map of the forest allowing you to follow in the great bear’s footsteps from the visitor centre. The path culminates at Pooh’s much-loved bridge where you can take a moment to play Pooh Sticks – the honey loving bear's favourite game.


JK Rowling's Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry: Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire

Photo credit: Michael Warwick / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Michael Warwick / Alamy Stock Photo

Perhaps one of the most magical settings of all time is Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry – from the Harry Potter series written by J K Rowling.

Used to film the interior scenes of Hogwarts in many of the movies, including Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, the castle walls are magical for fans of all ages.

Whilst both the Warner Bros. Studio Tours in Watford and the Wizarding World of Harry Potter in Universal Studios create an immersive experience, Lacock Abbey offers a more authentic and less crowded Potter location to visit.


Jill Murphy's Mrs Cackle's Academy for Witches: Peckforton Castle, Cheshire

Photo credit: Commission Air / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Commission Air / Alamy Stock Photo

The Worst Witch by Jill Murphy follows the life of Mildred Hubble, a well-meaning yet clumsy witch in training who never seems to get anything right.

A large amount of the book series is set within the walls of a girls-only school, which is housed in a castle surrounded by vast plush forest.

Fans of the books can visit this fictional setting in real life, at Peckforton Castle in Cheshire. Its resemblance to the description of the book is so close that it’s even the filming location of the CBBC TV adaptation of the book.


CS Lewis' Narnia: Mourne Mountains, Northern Ireland

Photo credit: Nature Picture Library / Alamy Stock Photo
Photo credit: Nature Picture Library / Alamy Stock Photo

The world of Narnia, the primary setting from CS Lewis’ book The Chronicles of Narnia, is loved amongst children worldwide for its enchanting surroundings and magical inhabitants.

Trek through the Mourne Mountains in Northern Ireland and you’ll be instantly transported there, especially if you visit during the snowy months when the weather matches that described in the first book of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe chronicles.

Lewis regularly holidayed in these mountains saying that the scenery "made me feel that at any moment a giant might raise its head over the next ridge".

The landscape was a huge inspiration for the Narnia stories, so much so that visitors can now walk along the ‘Narnia Trail’ which seeks to capture the imagination of children of all ages.

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