The Hideout
Positioned on a quiet Lilliput Court address in central Bath, The Hideout occupies the kind of tucked-away spot that rewards those who know where to look. Against Bath's broader dining scene, which spans Michelin-recognised rooms like the Olive Tree and plant-forward counters like Acorn, The Hideout offers a different register: smaller in scale, removed from the main thoroughfares, and worth seeking out.
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- Address
- 1 Lilliput Court, Bath BA1 1ND, United Kingdom
- Website
- hideoutbath.co.uk

A Street That Bath Keeps to Itself
Lilliput Court is not on most visitors' maps. The address sits within the dense Georgian grid of central Bath, a city where the main tourist circuits run between the Roman Baths, Pulteney Bridge, and the Assembly Rooms, leaving a network of quieter courts and lanes largely to residents. The Hideout occupies one of these overlooked addresses at 1 Lilliput Court, Bath BA1 1ND. In a city that has increasingly oriented its hospitality offer toward day-trippers and heritage tourism, a room that sits off the beaten path operates by different rules: the clientele tends to be more local, the atmosphere less performative, and the decision to visit more deliberate.
This matters more in Bath than in most comparable UK cities. Bath's dining scene has consolidated around a recognisable upper tier, anchored by the Michelin-starred Olive Tree and the country-house register of Bath Priory, both priced at the ££££ bracket and aimed at a visitor-heavy audience. A step below, venues like Beckford Canteen and Beckford Bottle Shop have built loyal followings by pairing quality produce with a more relaxed format. The Hideout's Lilliput Court address places it apart from both tiers.
What the Location Says About the Room
In UK dining cities outside London, address is often a reliable proxy for a venue's ambitions and audience. The country-house rooms that define much of England's formal dining offer, from Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons in Oxford to Gidleigh Park in Chagford, use setting as a core part of the proposition. Their locations are grand, visible, and arrival is half the experience. At the other end of that spectrum sit rooms that use obscurity deliberately, where the address filters the audience.
Lilliput Court belongs to the latter category. Finding it requires a degree of local knowledge or advance research that most casual visitors to Bath won't invest. That filtering effect shapes who ends up in the room and, by extension, what kind of atmosphere the room generates. Across the wider UK dining scene, the venues that have built durable reputations have often done so through considered location and word-of-mouth-led discovery. L'Enclume in Cartmel is the clearest precedent: a two-Michelin-star room in a village that requires deliberate travel, where the remoteness itself became part of the identity. The Hideout operates at a different scale, but the logic of the address is comparable.
Bath's Dining Scene in Context
Bath punches above its population weight as a dining city. The combination of a wealthy residential catchment, a high-spending tourist base, and proximity to Bristol's food culture has produced a dining offer that exceeds what a city of roughly 90,000 residents would typically sustain. The formal upper end is well-served by the Michelin ecosystem: the Olive Tree holds a star and operates a serious tasting menu programme. The plant-forward counter at Acorn has built a reputation that reaches beyond the city. Against these established names, smaller independents in less prominent locations occupy a specific role: they absorb the local repeat trade that the destination rooms cannot capture at their price point and formality level.
That dynamic puts The Hideout in an interesting position within the city's dining ecosystem. Its Lilliput Court address places it closer to neighbourhood-specialist than destination dining. For visitors who have already worked through Bath's more prominent rooms, or for residents seeking something that isn't calibrated for the tourist circuit, this kind of address tends to offer a different quality of experience. The comparison set for a room like this is the city's quieter, more textured mid-register.
Placing It Against the Broader Field
England's provincial dining scene has produced a number of rooms over the past decade that have built reputations precisely by refusing the conventions of the destination dining format. Hand and Flowers in Marlow operates as a pub that outscores most formal restaurants on critical metrics. hide and fox in Saltwood and Midsummer House in Cambridge have each carved out reputations in cities not typically associated with fine dining at the national level. Further afield, Opheem in Birmingham and internationally, rooms like Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City, demonstrate how specific location logic and format discipline can generate outsized reputations relative to physical scale.
The Hideout doesn't operate in that tier, and the Lilliput Court address doesn't suggest it's trying to. What the address does suggest is a room that has chosen to operate on its own terms within Bath's dining geography, letting location do some of the editorial work that formal awards and press coverage do for more visible venues.
Planning a Visit
The Lilliput Court address places The Hideout within walking distance of Bath city centre's main landmarks, which makes it accessible without requiring transport. Visitors arriving by rail to Bath Spa station, which sits roughly ten minutes on foot from most of the city centre, should find the journey direct.
A Tight Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The HideoutThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Bath city centre, Cocktail & Whisky Bar | $$ | |
| Yak Yeti Yak | Bath, Authentic Nepalese | $$ | |
| Chez Dominique | $$ | near Pulteney Bridge, Modern French Bistro | |
| Henry's | Dining | , | |
| La Terra | Bath city centre, Modern Italian | $$$ | |
| The Dark Horse | $$ | Kingsmead Square, British Cocktail Bar with Seasonal Tapas |
At a Glance
- Hidden Gem
- Cozy
- Trendy
- Intimate
- Date Night
- Casual Hangout
- After Work
- Historic Building
- Craft Cocktails
- Local Sourcing
Relaxed and homely atmosphere with wood panels, Bath stone walls, quirky ornaments, and taxidermy in a historic setting.














