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Brown Flag awarded to Britain’s 13 dirtiest beaches for swimming – full list

These are the UK beaches you’d better not swim in – because you could catch a serious illness. The ‘brown flag’ awards are created by analyzing Environment Agency data on summer water quality from hundreds of beaches.

Cornwall is the fourth cleanest county in England for summer sea swimming – but a Cornish beach has been given a ‘Brown Flag Award’ for being one of the worst.




Water quality readings look for intestinal levels of enterococci and Escherichia coli (e-coli) to see if there is “fecal matter” in the water. This comes from “sewage, farm animals, wildlife, birds and road drainage”, according to the Environment Agency.

Each spa is then given an official Environment Agency score of: three stars (excellent), two stars (good), one star (sufficient) or zero stars (poor). Overall, 66.4% of monitored resorts in England currently have a three-star rating, while 4.3% achieve zero stars.

Dorset, Devon and Suffolk have the highest percentage of ‘excellent’ beaches for clean water, according to UK travel website Holiday Park Guru, which analyzed Environment Agency summer water quality data. Porthluney beach in Cornwall was rated as one of the dirtiest in England, but Cornwall as a whole was the fourth cleanest county in England for summer sea swimming.

The site analyzed Environment Agency summer water quality data from hundreds of beaches. Now it has isolated the 13 dirtiest beaches, which are given “Brown Flag Awards”.

“Winners” are given free brown flags with a poop emoji on them to display to swimmers. These beaches are rated ‘poor’ by the Environment Agency due to bacteria such as e-coli from sewage and other waste.

In total, Cornwall has 72 designated bathing beaches that are rated as ‘excellent’ – more than any other county in England in total. Lancashire came last in England, with none of the ten designated bathing spots achieving the coveted three-star ‘excellent’ cleanliness rating. Somerset, Norfolk, Yorkshire and Kent were all in the bottom half of the rankings. The Isle of Wight, Lincolnshire, Northumberland and Essex performed well, with all their designated bathing areas gaining one of the top two ratings (‘good’ or ‘excellent’).

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