Pubs in Redhill
Discover the best pubs and bars in Redhill. Browse opening hours, menus, events, and more.
Found 23 pubs in Redhill — Page 2 of 2
Marquis Of Granby
8 Hooley Lane, Redhill RH1 6ET
The sign of this pub is still surmounted by the badge of its former owner, Friary Meux, who were part of Allied Breweries, who no longer exist. A small amount of wood carving from what seems to be the interior's original decor survives on one end of the glass gantry. The present pub replaced the earlier 17th century one which stood in front of it in the 1930s. Food is sold 12-9:30 Monday to Thursday, 12-10 Friday and Saturday and 12-6 Sunday.
Old Chestnut
12 Station Approach West, Earlswood, Redhill RH1 6HP
Built around 1864, this community local was originally called the Station Hotel. It consists of one room around a very large bar. To one end is a pool table and darts is played away from this. The pub also runs its own golf society. Sky Sports is shown and the pub still has its real fire. There is live music on 2 Friday evenings of each month. The floor of the area round the pool table has a vinyl-type surface, while the rest of the pub has carpeted areas where tables and chairs are placed, with pathways of bare wooden boards between the tables and round the bar. A guest beer is sometimes available when demand for real ale is expected to be higher than usual. Food is served from 1-5 Saturday and Sunday and a pizza van is parked outside from 5 to 9 on Saturday. It is next door to the well known Ruchita Indian Restaurant.
Old Oak
40 Somerset Road, Meadvale, Redhill RH1 6LT
A tile-hung locals' haunt in a residential area. Friary Meux lanterns still adorn the exterior. One large bar with few vestiges of its multi-bar past. Bar billiards and darts played. No food.
Junction
1 High Street, Redhill RH1 1RD
Standing in the centre of town on what was once the crossroads of the A25 and A23, this listed building dates from 1902. The pub's original name of the Wheatsheaf is still to be seen at the top of the building, and on the gable ends the name of the original owner, Nalder & Collyer, is proudly displayed. It became the non-brewing Firlot & Firkin in the 1980s and when this chain stopped in 2001, it was named O'Neill's, a fake Irish bar. It is now a more traditional and comfortable pub in a modern style, with bare boards and square tables, and is popular with diners and families. Food is served 11:30-3 (4 Sat) and 5:30-9:30 (no food Sunday). The menu includes authentic Thai dishes plus a few more traditional items such as burgers and fish and chips. Food can be ordered as a take away. There is a weekly quiz, TVs show sport and there is a small outside area at the back mainly used by smokers. Dogs are welcome and there is free WiFi. Both the pub and the upstairs restaurant are available for functions.
Plough Inn
11 Church Road, St Johns, Redhill RH1 6QE
Parts of this welcoming and characterful white-rendered pub date back to the 16th century and over time the premises have seen the typical expansion into adjoining properties and outhouses, gaining all sorts of nooks and crannies in the process. The ceiling in parts is extremely low, even for buildings of this kind; whilst a set of flagstones in the back bar are said to be around 400 years old and were reputedly used as an influence in the set design of a Harry Potter film. There are several real fires. The pub was originally owned by Mellersh & Neale, Reigate brewers, eventually becoming a Friary Meux badged pub before being bought by Punch Taverns. There is a nice old photo of the pub in its Mellersh & Neale livery in the low ceilinged restaurant. A charming, characterful, and cosy pub selling good beer and excellent food. In the garden there is a smokers' "pavilion". The large garden also has twenty tables and has been landscaped to provide three different seating areas, along with a children's play area. Children under 10 are not allowed in the pub. Good quality food is served, with a breakfast menu from 10 am-12 noon daily and the main menu from 12-2:50 and 6-8:50 (9:20 Friday) weekdays, from 12-9:20 on Saturday and from 12-5:50 on Sunday. Please note that the pub is open each morning from 10am. One guest beer is from a local brewery, normally Pilgrim or Surrey Hills.
Red Lion
48 Linkfield Lane, Redhill RH1 1DP
This listed pub has a single main room with a central bar and tables set up for eating and drinking. One end has an inglenook fireplace and a small snug area, the other end has a raised section with additional seating. Both ends have TVs usually showing Sky or BT Sports. There are tables at the front of the building and a roofed smoking area to the side which also has a built-in barbecue. This was once the local of great train robber Ronnie Biggs and the pub contains some memorabilia of the robbery. Meals are served Monday from 12-3, 12-8:30 Tuesday to Saturday and from 12-5 Sunday with Mondays advertised as curry night. As well as their own car park, parking is free in the evening at the car park opposite.
Sun
17-21 London Road, Redhill RH1 1LY
When the Sun opened on 14 August 1996, it was Wetherspoon's 150th pub and is named to commemorate local astronomer Richard Carrington who wrote Spots on the Sun in 1861. It is on the site of a former Magnet kitchen store, and has been built as a huge brick slab with windows along the whole frontage at a lower level. Inside there is one long bar serving one vast open space. A raised dining area is to be found at the left hand side of the bar. A total of four pillars provide the only relief from the openness of the pub, and one of these is surrounded by fruit machines. A bookcase fills part of the right hand wall, and there are many prints telling stories of famous local people. A number of modern paintings by local artist Robert Jones depicting life in Redhill are also displayed. Families are welcome until 6pm, and food is served all day from 8-11. Around six guest beers are sold, usually with three from LocAle brewers and three from further afield. Real cider is available in pins kept in the fridge. A quiz is held Monday nights from 7pm.
Toby Carvery Redhill
2 Redstone Hill, Redhill RH1 4BL
Still known to older locals as Lakers, unfortunately the marketing department at Mitchells & Butlers, the pub company now owning the property, have decided to apply corporate branding to this large pub. The interior of this Victorian bar-cum-hotel has been so thoroughly modernised that not a single original feature appears to have survived and it is now impossible to discern the original layout. Having said that, today's pastel-shaded and light-wooded decoration is still in a traditional vein and the many wooden dividing screens help break the large interior up into more secluded and intimate drinking areas. Heavily food oriented, as the name would suggest, meals are available every day from 8 in the morning to 10pm. "Bob's Bar", now the administrative offices, once rivalled the Home Cottage for popularity in the 1970s. Attached is a 37 bedroom Travelodge. Earliest parts of the building date from 1846 when it was originally called the Reigate Junction Railway Hotel in "Reigate Foreign" (as Redhill was called in those days) and owned by one Richard Laker. Renamed the Railway Hotel when Redhill finally became a town it became known as Laker's Hotel from the turn of the 20th century. Charrington's took it over in the early 1960s and it is now part of the huge M&B chain. To make it even less pub like, handpumps were removed in 2019 and only keg beers are available.
Monson Club
Lyndale Road, Redhill RH1 2HA
Dating from 1922, this CIU affiliated club serves the local community. It was known as the Monson Road Working Mens Club until 2016.Darts and pool are played and the club fields football teams. Snooker also played.
Redhill & Reigate Golf Bar Venue
Clarence Lodge, Pendleton Road, Redhill RH1 6LB
The 19th hole of the Redhill & Reigate Golf Club is open to everyone. At the back is an old fashioned area which is where all the golf club memorabilia is to be found. However the main bar is split into two large areas, the first of which is carpeted. The area beyond this has a wooden floor. Both are furnished with comfortable chairs and well spaced out tables. Very good food is served in these areas all day from 8-7 Monday to Thursday and Saturday, 8-9 Friday and 8-5 Sunday. There are a number of television screens around the venue which are used for Sky Sports and BT Sports and there is a separate pool room. Outside is an attractive patio area overlooking the golf course (which is on the other side of the road). The guest beer tends to come from Hogs Back.
Brooklyn Bar & Billiards
9 Queensway, Redhill RH1 1QT
Hidden behind a tiny street frontage, this is a huge snooker and heavy metal bar on the second floor of a modern building. The bar area is split into sections and in total there are 10 US and 8 UK pool tables, 8 snooker tables plus darts and table tennis. Poker is sometimes played. Live music and other entertainments are regularly provided. Basic food like burgers and sandwiches are available.
