Step-free, quiet conditions are not guaranteed — choose your parking and approach with that in mind.
Dogs
Keep dogs on a short lead near traffic and on busy pavements.
Crossing, restrictions & safety
Vehicle limits
A 7.5 tonne weight limit and a 3 m height limit apply. Heavier or taller vehicles are diverted to the Britannia Bridge.
Closures
Planned maintenance, lane restrictions and occasional full closures can happen; phased refurbishment has continued through the 2020s.
Wind
High winds can trigger restrictions, especially for high-sided and vulnerable vehicles.
On foot
Pedestrian access is generally maintained during many traffic restrictions, though this isn’t guaranteed on the day. Don’t climb barriers or enter restricted areas. Drone use is restricted — follow the current CAA Dronecode.
Emergency
In an emergency on or near the water, call 999 and ask for the Coastguard.
What to bring
Windproof layer
Comfortable shoes
Camera
Charged phone
Travel check if crossing by car
Dog lead if needed
Atlas of Wales Discovery Highlight
The crossing that changed Anglesey.
Before the bridge, reaching the island meant a ferry across the Menai Strait — tide-dependent, weather-beaten and, at times, dangerous.
Telford’s bridge, part of the London–Holyhead road, opened in 1826 as the longest suspension span in the world. Two centuries on, it still carries the everyday traffic of the A5.
Where island meets mainland.
Atlas of Wales Verdict
Should this shape your day?
A short, memorable stop — not a full day on its own.
On foot from the village, with the Strait and Eryri in view.
Some mornings, only an outline in the fog.
How your visit unfolds
One bridge, seven small moments.
A compact landmark visit — here’s the shape of it before you go.
01 Village
Start in Menai Bridge — Porthaethwy in Welsh.
02 Waterside
Drop toward the water on the Beach Road side.
03 Towers
Penmon limestone towers rise over the road.
04 Chains
The blue-grey suspension chains draw the eye across.
05 Footway
Cross part or all of it, if conditions feel right.
Check restrictions
06 The view
Out to the Strait and Eryri on a clear day.
07 Back
Return for village cafés, Menai Heritage or Church Island.
The bridge, in pictures
Seen from the Strait.
Towers, chains, road and water — the crossing before you make it.
The full span over the Strait — mountains on the mainland skylineOne of the two masonry towers — Penmon limestone, roughly 30 m above the deckLit and still at dusk — the bridge doubled in the strait belowMenai Bridge village — the practical base for the visit
What stays with you
The parts people remember
Menai Suspension Bridge isn’t one big view. It’s a handful of small realisations.
01
The first sight of the chains
Blue-grey suspension lines, suddenly there over the water.
02
Nearly two centuries on
Built for 1826 traffic, still carrying the everyday A5.
03
Delicate against massive
Thin suspension lines strung between heavy limestone towers.
04
Eryri on the skyline
On a clear day, the mountains rise beyond the Strait.
05
Crossing on foot
Walking between mainland Wales and Anglesey — traffic noise and all.
It stays with people because it’s both an everyday road and a 200-year-old feat of engineering.
From the bridge archive
The history, carefully told.
Four field notes on Telford’s crossing — why it was built, the milestone it set, how it was strengthened, and the protection it carries now.
This is documented engineering history, not legend — and where a detail is uncertain, it says so.
Field notes
Four entries. Open one to read the note.
Engineer & road Fact
Telford’s crossing
Field note I · filed under why it was built
The bridge exists because the road to Ireland had to cross the Menai Strait.
What is known
The bridge was designed by Thomas Telford as part of the London–Holyhead road — the great mail route towards the Irish ferries. It was built between 1818 and 1826.
What the record adds
Roughly 300 workers built it, raising two masonry towers of Penmon limestone with the suspension chains anchored deep into bedrock.
What to notice there
The line of the A5 still runs straight at the crossing — the bridge isn’t a monument set aside, but a working link on a road two centuries old.
Engineering milestone Fact
1826: the longest span
Field note II · filed under the record set
When it opened, nothing else like it spanned so far in a single leap.
What is known
The bridge opened on 30 January 1826. Its main span of about 176 m (579 ft) made it the longest suspension span in the world at the time.
What the record adds
Cadw describes it as the first known modern suspension bridge. Before it, the Strait was crossed by ferry — tidal, weather-dependent and dangerous.
What to notice there
From the shore the deck looks almost level, carried on those long draped chains. That clean, simple line was the breakthrough.
Working history Fact
Strengthened to survive
Field note III · filed under kept in service
What you cross today is Telford’s bridge, repeatedly reinforced to keep carrying traffic.
What is known
It was strengthened in 1840 to reduce wind sway. The original timber deck was replaced with steel in 1893 by Sir Benjamin Baker.
What the record adds
Major restoration in 1938–1940 replaced the original wrought-iron chains with steel. It was repainted in 2005, and phased refurbishment has continued in the 2020s.
What to notice there
Despite all that work, the bridge broadly keeps Telford’s intended look — painted blue-grey now to resist corrosion.
Protected Fact
Grade I & a landmark
Field note IV · filed under protection
It is protected as a building and celebrated as a piece of engineering.
What is known
The bridge is a Grade I listed structure — the highest level of protection — and forms part of the Menai Bridge conservation setting.
What the record adds
It is recognised by the Institution of Civil Engineers as a historic civil engineering landmark.Cadw listing ref — verify
What to notice there
Protection is why the visual character survives. It also means restrictions: an old, listed structure carrying a modern road, so closures and limits are part of its life.
Continue exploring
Make it more than a bridge stop.
Four stops that turn a quick crossing into an Anglesey afternoon. They open the full map — dedicated Atlas of Wales guides for them are still to come.