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CuisineTraditional British
LocationWest Hoathly, United Kingdom
Michelin

A Michelin Plate-recognised village pub in the Sussex Weald, Cat Inn trades in the kind of honest, unhurried pub dining that the gastropub movement was supposed to protect. Beamed ceilings, open fires, and locally sourced pub classics make it a reliable stopping point for visitors to West Hoathly, with four bedrooms for those who want to stay the night.

Cat Inn restaurant in West Hoathly, United Kingdom
About

The Village Pub That Held Its Ground

The Sussex Weald has never been short of country pubs, but holding Michelin recognition while remaining genuinely local rather than destination-led is a narrower achievement than it might appear. Cat Inn, on North Lane in the hilltop village of West Hoathly, sits in that smaller category: a pub with beamed ceilings, pewter tankards, and open fires that reads as a working local first, and a Michelin Plate recipient second. That ordering matters. The gastropub revolution of the past two decades produced two distinct outcomes: kitchens that used the pub format as a vehicle for chef ambition, and kitchens that used better ingredients and more careful technique to make pub food worth eating without reframing what a pub was. Cat Inn belongs to the latter group.

To understand where Cat Inn sits in the broader British pub dining conversation, it helps to map the spectrum. At one end, places like Hand and Flowers in Marlow hold two Michelin stars while operating under a pub roof, a model that repositions the format almost entirely around kitchen ambition. At the other end, the village pub that added a daily specials board but changed little else. Cat Inn occupies the middle tier: recognised by Michelin for cooking that is worth the trip, priced at ££, and designed around the rhythms of a genuine village community rather than a food-focused clientele travelling from outside the county.

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What the Michelin Plate Actually Signals Here

A Michelin Plate, awarded in 2025, means the inspectors found cooking that is consistently good, made with fresh ingredients, and prepared with care — without the technical ambition that drives a Star recommendation. For a pub in this price bracket, that is a meaningful signal. It places Cat Inn in a peer group of British pubs and inns that take their kitchens seriously without abandoning the format's essential accessibility. The food here is described by Michelin as focused on pub classics: locally smoked ham, egg and chips, and steak, mushroom and ale pie among the examples cited. These are dishes that live or die on sourcing and execution rather than invention, and the recognition suggests both are being handled with some discipline.

For context on where the Plate sits within Michelin's British recognition hierarchy, the starred end of the Traditional British category includes properties like Pipe and Glass in South Dalton, which holds a Star while maintaining a pub identity, and at the furthest extreme, venues like L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and CORE by Clare Smyth in London operate at three and two stars respectively with price points and formality that belong to an entirely different category. Cat Inn is not competing in that space and is not trying to. Its Google rating of 4.7 across 930 reviews reflects consistent satisfaction from the audience it is actually serving: locals, walkers, and visitors to the Weald looking for a reliable, honest meal in a room that feels genuinely old.

The Room and What It Tells You

The physical character of Cat Inn is worth reading carefully before arriving with wrong expectations. Beamed ceilings and open fires are common descriptors in rural England, but the Michelin citation specifically notes pewter tankards and cosy corners alongside friendly, efficient service. This is the language of a pub that has been maintained rather than renovated for effect. The atmosphere is warm because the building is genuinely old and the room is being used as it was intended, not because a designer has recreated the feeling of age. For visitors exploring West Hoathly, which sits in a quiet part of the High Weald with connections to Priest House and the surrounding AONB walking routes, the pub functions as the kind of anchor point that makes a full day in the area coherent rather than just a stop on the way to somewhere else. For more on the area, see our full West Hoathly restaurants guide.

Staying Over: The Four Bedrooms

The four bedrooms at Cat Inn extend its usefulness significantly. The High Weald is better explored over two days than one, and the pub's position in West Hoathly puts walkers and cyclists within reach of routes that connect to Ashdown Forest and the broader Surrey Hills. Michelin's description of the rooms as tastefully decorated fits the pattern of a rural inn that understands its audience wants comfort and quiet rather than boutique hotel styling. For those looking at accommodation options alongside the pub, our full West Hoathly hotels guide covers the wider picture.

Planning Your Visit

West Hoathly is not on a main road, and Cat Inn is not a venue with a prominent digital presence: phone and website details are not listed in our records, so the most reliable approach is to contact the pub directly through its address at North Lane, West Hoathly, East Grinstead RH19 4PP. The ££ price positioning makes it accessible across a wide range of occasions, from a post-walk lunch to an overnight stay with dinner. Given the 4.7 rating across nearly a thousand reviews and Michelin recognition, booking ahead for weekends is a reasonable precaution. Those travelling to the area for dining specifically, and who want to extend into the wider Sussex and Kent dining scene, will find relevant context at hide and fox in Saltwood and Gidleigh Park in Chagford for a broader sense of the region's more formal end. For bars and wine in the area, our West Hoathly bars guide and wineries guide are worth checking alongside our experiences guide for West Hoathly.

The broader Traditional British dining category in the UK spans an enormous range, from the technically elaborate historical reconstructions at Dinner by Heston Blumenthal and the refined country house cooking at Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton to the village pub with a good pie and a fire burning through the afternoon. Cat Inn's value lies precisely in knowing which end of that range it occupies and executing consistently within it. A Michelin Plate and a near-five-star public rating are not small things for a pub in a village of this size. They reflect a kitchen and front-of-house that has earned the trust of both a local audience and an inspector. That combination, in a room that has not been polished into something it was never meant to be, is what makes Cat Inn worth the detour into the Weald.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Cat Inn good for families?
At ££ pricing in West Hoathly, Cat Inn is an accessible option for families, with the relaxed village pub format more suited to children than a formal dining room.
What is the atmosphere like at Cat Inn?
The atmosphere is that of a working village local in the Sussex Weald: beamed ceilings, open fires, pewter tankards, and cosy corners. The 4.7 Google rating across 930 reviews and Michelin Plate recognition (2025) confirm that the experience holds up consistently, with service described as friendly and efficient rather than formal. At ££ pricing, West Hoathly's Cat Inn sits firmly at the accessible, community-facing end of recognised British pub dining.
What's the leading thing to order at Cat Inn?
Michelin's 2025 citation points specifically to the locally smoked ham, egg and chips and the steak, mushroom and ale pie as representative dishes. Both are pub classics that depend on sourcing and kitchen discipline rather than technique, which is where the Plate recognition signals Cat Inn is delivering. Traditional British cooking at this level is less about menu innovation and more about whether the kitchen takes its basics seriously — and the evidence here suggests it does.

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