Conditions guidance only. Cliffs are dangerous — never dig in or stand near them.
Check tide times locally and tell someone where you're going.
Safety page
Round Penny Nab on a falling tide and search the rock pools and nodule-strewn scars towards Port Mulgrave. Grey rounded nodules with a hint of a coil at the edge are the prize — gather them loose from the beach and split them at home.
What fossils look like here
Ammonites hide inside rounded grey nodules — a coiled edge showing at the rim is the giveaway (take nodules home to split carefully; never hammer at the cliff). Jet is matt black, feather-light and warm to the touch; sea coal looks similar but heavier and dirtier. Belemnites are amber bullet-shaped rods. Free identification: Whitby Museum welcomes photo enquiries.
Allowed: Collecting loose fossils from the beach is long-established and accepted here.
Never allowed: No digging into the cliffs or hammering in-place rock on this SSSI coast; leave the jet seams alone — commercial jet digging has damaged this coast.
Important finds: Report significant finds to Whitby Museum.
Rules can change — check locally before you collect.
Car park at the top of the village (the old bank is too steep and narrow for parking below).
Facilities
Toilets, cafés and pubs in the village.
Access
Walk through the harbour; hunt east towards Port Mulgrave under Penny Nab at low tide.
Hazards
The stretch beyond Penny Nab cuts off on a rising tide. Constant small rockfalls from the shale cliffs — helmets are sensible, standing under overhangs is not.