The Black Bull
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The Black Bull
This old country pub has been transformed into a contemporary style hotel with an award winning restaurant. Serving intriguing and delicious dishes daily, with the freshest and best ingredients Ayrshire has to offer. These dishes are handmade daily by our team of chefs to give you the best dining experience. This independently owned hotel has proved popular with families, couples, walkers, golfers and business persons alike.

A warm and friendly welcome is always given to our customers from all over the world. Don't look past the Black Bull hotel in Tarbolton the next time you plan your trip to Ayrshire, it will be a memorable one for whatever purpose you choose to use us for.
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The family owned Black Bull Hotel is ideally located in Ayrshire on the West Coast of Scotland - the heart of burns country.
All of our contemporary styled bedrooms have en-suite facilities, flat screen televisions, complimentary toiletries, tea and coffee making facilities and free wi-fi.
We offer a single room, double rooms, family room and suite, providing flexible combinations of accommodation, all of which are maintained to the highest standard.
Good food coupled with relaxed informal dining is at the heart of the Kailyard Restaurant, where Head Chef, Alexander Burns, brings culinary inspiration to life.
We try to keep our food offering as 'local' as possible and work with a multitude of local suppliers.
We endeavor to bring sustainability to the table by supporting local suppliers and sourcing responsibly.
Our venue is suitable for weddings planned from 2pm onwards as you can arrive between 3pm and 4pm to enjoy a celebratory drink.
Our master of ceremonies will guide you through all the formalities of the reception or aid your best man or favoured guest.
There is a fully licensed bar on site which offers a range of wines, spirits or beers.
Under the thatched roof of this humble-looking, 17th-century house in Tarbolton, Ayrshire, Scotland's national bard, Robert Burns, learned to dance, founded a debating club and became a Freemason.
Just a few years later Burns made his name with the publication of Poems, Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect, which soon garnered widespread literary acclaim and established him as 'the plowman poet'.
A visit to this authentically restored house, now converted into a museum chronicling the formative years of one of Scotland's greatest literary talents, is a must for any Burns enthusiast.
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