The Water's Edge apartments at Bouley Bay have 2 bedrooms and enjoy partial sea views from both the double master bedroom suite and the living room balconies.
Bouley Bay is popular with local fishermen and is a scuba diving area with a fully equipped Dive Centre offering adult and children's lessons. It is a quiet bay on the north coast of the island and perfect for a relaxing holiday in idyllic surroundings. The north coast cliff path passes the apartments affording good walks and fabulous views.
Children of all ages most welcome.
This property does not allow pets.
Images shown are Apartment 3.
The neighbouring Water’s Edge Hotel is under new ownership. A 'soft strip' of the interior is currently underway, with full demolition scheduled for late summer 2026. While we do not expect significant disruption during the main holiday season, please be aware of potential works in the vicinity.
Bouley Bay Hill Climb
Guests enjoy free admission to these Jersey Motor Cycle and Light Car Club events which will be held on the hill, on dates in May, July and August. Access in and out on these days is by arrangement with the course marshals.
The first hill climb was held in 1920 when the road surface was concrete and the club had just been formed. The idyllic setting on Jersey’s north coast, with the French coastline visible on a clear day is unsurpassed for its atmosphere and spectacle in British hill climbing. The original course was 1065 yards in length but this was reduced to the current 1011 in 1949. Demanding, technical and challenging are just a few of the descriptions used by the UK competitors who visit each year for the British National Hill Climb Championship. Unlike many UK events the JMC & LCC hill climbs are open to all types of machinery from cars to sidecars and motorbikes to karts - all are welcome to entertain the crowds. With its mixture of blind bends through high banked tree lined corners to the tight hairpins towards the top, Bouley Bay has everything to challenge the best in the business. For spectators the high banks above the top half of the hill are a natural amphitheatre looking down the hill as the competitors race up.