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Star Ratings

What VisitEngland’s
“Sense of Place” Really
Means for Your Star Rating

The KittedStay Team · March 2026 · 9 min read
HomeBlog › What VisitEngland’s Sense of Place Really Means for Your Star Rating
Coastal themed holiday let room with strong sense of place — decorated with KittedStay Coastal Kit including nautical wall art, cushions and rug

A few years ago, a small hotel owner we know received a visit from a VisitEngland quality assessor. The property was well run, genuinely clean, and the host had invested in good-quality beds and decent linen. The assessor was positive throughout the visit. But when the written report arrived, there was a phrase in it that stayed with him for years.

“The rooms are very well maintained. But they don’t tell me where I am.”

He had been stuck at three stars for three consecutive assessments. The feedback on cleanliness, service and facilities was consistently good. What he could never quite pin down was why the score for the overall quality of the bedrooms — which the assessor described as “comfortable but anonymous” — kept falling short of what he needed to push the overall rating up.

He closed last year, having never quite understood what the phrase meant until hindsight made it obvious.

This article is for anyone who has received that kind of feedback, or suspects they are about to. It is a detailed, practical guide to what VisitEngland, VisitWales and VisitScotland are actually looking for when they talk about Sense of Place — what it means in practice, where it appears in the assessment framework, and precisely what can be done about it.

The assessment landscape in 2025 and 2026

Before getting into the detail, it is worth understanding the current state of the quality assessment landscape in the UK — because it has changed significantly in the past two years.

In 2024, VisitEngland Assessment Services and the AA completed a major joint modernisation of their quality schemes, following an independently chaired Quality Advisory Board convened in 2023. The result was a rationalisation of the star-rating tiers: the old one- and two-star categories have been replaced with a new “Quality Assessed” baseline accreditation, while the rated scheme now runs from three to five stars.

The practical effect is that the three-star tier has become the new minimum standard for properties that want an official star rating — and the quality bar at four and five stars has, if anything, risen. A property that might have managed three stars under the old system now needs to be genuinely strong across multiple criteria to achieve the same rating.

For BnB owners, holiday let hosts and boutique hotel operators, this means two things. First, the credential of holding a four- or five-star rating is more meaningful than it has ever been — it signals genuine quality, not just compliance. Second, achieving and maintaining those ratings now requires deliberate effort across every assessable dimension of the guest experience, including the ones that feel harder to quantify.

Décor and sense of place is one of those dimensions. And it is one of the most actionable ones available.

Who assesses your property? VisitEngland Assessment Services, VisitWales and VisitScotland all operate independent schemes but assess broadly to the same criteria. The AA runs a parallel scheme that is closely aligned. If you are enrolled in any of these, the guidance in this article applies to your assessment.

What the schemes actually assess

For self-catering properties — holiday cottages, holiday lets, short-term rental apartments — the VisitEngland/AA assessment evaluates seven key areas: bedrooms, bathrooms, cleanliness, public areas, kitchens, exterior and management efficiency. This is the framework an inspector uses the moment they walk through your door — and décor, atmosphere and sense of place feed directly into at least four of these seven areas.

For B&Bs and guest accommodation, the areas include bedrooms, bathrooms, cleanliness, public areas, and the overall hospitality and welcome experience. For hotels, the scope widens further.

Each area is scored on a five-point quality scale:

★★★★★
Excellent — 5 points
The highest score. Reserved for exceptional quality that clearly exceeds guest expectations across every detail.
★★★★
Very Good — 4 points
A strong score indicating quality that goes meaningfully beyond the standard, with clear attention to guest experience.
★★★
Good — 3 points
A solid baseline. Meets expectations competently without particularly exceeding them in any area.

Crucially, an assessor does not simply average scores across areas. The VisitWales framework — which mirrors the broader UK standard — explicitly checks for consistency across key areas. A single very high score in one category cannot compensate for consistently lower scores elsewhere. To achieve a four-star rating, the property needs to be genuinely strong across the board, not just exceptional in one area with weaknesses in others.

This means a bedroom score that falls short — for reasons like anonymous décor, absent visual character or poor coordination of soft furnishings — can hold a property’s overall rating down even when every other element is performing well. And it is precisely here that Sense of Place becomes not an abstract concept but a practical lever.

Where décor appears in the official standards — in the assessors’ own words

The connection between décor and star ratings is not an interpretive one. It is written directly into the official assessment guidance.

The VisitEngland Hotel Standards document, available from the Assessment Services website, states the following in relation to bedroom décor:

Décor – use could be made of local artist’s work, prints and/or photographs of images depicting local scenes and historical and heritage related images – it all adds to a visitor’s enhanced sense of place.

VisitEngland Hotel Quality Standards

Read that again. This is not a suggestion from a lifestyle magazine or an anecdote from a successful host. It is written into VisitEngland’s own official assessment guidance, under the bedroom scoring criteria. Local art, local prints, local photography — these contribute directly to what the assessor is scoring when they evaluate the quality of a bedroom.

VisitScotland’s Self-Catering Assessment Criteria go further still. Their guidance to hosts includes a specific tip:

International guests especially love local history, so tell yours with original artwork or photography showing the story of your property, or local area.

VisitScotland Self-Catering Assessment Criteria — Top Tips for Hosts

And the AA Self-Catering Quality Standards describe the progression in bedroom quality from three to five stars in terms that directly relate to interior design coherence. A three-star property should have well-finished fittings and décor. A four-star property should have high quality, coordinated furniture, fixtures and fittings. A five-star property should have striking interior design.

Coordination, character, striking design. These are not vague impressions — they are the language the schemes use to distinguish a four-star property from a three-star one, and a five-star from a four-star.

What “Sense of Place” means in practice for an assessor

An assessor visiting a coastal cottage in Cornwall is not expecting the same interior as an assessor visiting a farmhouse in the Peak District or a city apartment in Edinburgh. What both are evaluating is the same underlying question: does this property feel like it belongs somewhere specific?

Sense of Place, in assessment terms, is the degree to which the physical environment of the property communicates its location and context through its décor, details and atmosphere. It is the accumulated effect of deliberate choices — each individually small, together substantial.

A fishing net on the wall of a coastal bedroom, with starfish and seahorse charms woven through it, tells an assessor: this host has thought about where they are. The wooden seagulls nearby reinforce it. The nautical cushion covers on the bed coordinate with the pattern of the bedside rug. The rope curtain tie-back picks up a thread from the wall. A small wooden sign completes the room’s identity.

None of these pieces is expensive. None requires a contractor or a designer. But together, they answer the assessor’s implicit question — does this room know where it is? — with clarity and confidence.

“The assessor is not marking you on taste. They are marking you on intention. A room that has made deliberate choices about what it is and where it belongs consistently scores higher than a comfortable but undifferentiated one.”

Contrast this with the room described at the opening of this article. Cream walls, generic art, mismatched cushions, no visual coherence. The beds are made, the windows are clean, the facilities are all present. But the room has expressed no opinion about itself. It has made no deliberate choices about what kind of place it is. And the assessor, trained to distinguish intention from accident, marks it accordingly.

The seven assessment areas and where décor feeds into them

Understanding where Sense of Place appears in the scoring framework helps hosts identify where the opportunity lies. It is not limited to the bedroom score.

Assessment Area How Sense of Place and décor contribute Typical impact on score
Bedrooms Coordination of soft furnishings, quality and coherence of wall art, decorative accessories, overall design intent. This is where the direct guidance on local imagery and décor sits in the official standards. High. The bedroom is the primary scored area where character and design intention are most visible to the assessor.
Public Areas
(lounges, hallways, entrances)
First impressions. A themed hallway or entrance sets the tone for everything that follows. An anonymous entrance, even in a well-decorated property, can dampen the assessor’s initial impression. Medium to high. The assessor’s first impression is formed here, before they even reach the bedroom.
Overall Quality Score The holistic impression of the property. A coherent theme running through multiple areas — bedroom, entrance, sitting room — creates a cumulative effect that lifts the overall score. Inconsistency between areas can pull it down. High. The overall score is not a simple average — it reflects whether the property has a sustained, consistent identity.
Cleanliness Not directly influenced by décor. However, a room that feels characterful and cared-for creates a positive predisposition in the assessor before they examine cleanliness specifically. Indirect. A well-styled room signals attentiveness more broadly.
Exterior The assessor notes whether the exterior gives guests an accurate sense of the quality inside. A coastal garden with a driftwood-toned fence post, a coastal planter, a rope detail on the gate — these extend the theme outward. Low to medium. The exterior is scored separately but contributes to the overall sense of coherence.

Three stars, four stars, five stars: what each actually requires

Using the official AA/VisitEngland criteria for self-catering properties, the distinction between the three star tiers maps clearly onto the language of interior design:

Three stars — “well-finished fittings and décor”

A three-star property needs to demonstrate care and maintenance. The décor should be finished properly, with no obvious wear, peeling or mismatch. Furnishings should be functional and presentable. This tier does not require any particular design intent or visual coherence — it requires competent execution of basic standards.

Many three-star properties are stuck here not because they are poorly finished, but because they have not moved beyond competence. The room is presentable. It is just not memorable.

Four stars — “high quality coordinated furniture, fixtures and fittings”

The word that marks the boundary between three and four stars, in the AA’s own published criteria, is coordinated. A four-star property does not just have furniture — it has furniture, fixtures and fittings that have been chosen to work together. Cushion covers, rugs, art, decorative accessories — these should be part of a coherent visual language, not accumulated independently over time.

This is where a themed decoration kit with eight coordinated pieces moves the needle. It introduces coordination that is specifically the quality indicator for the step from three to four stars.

Five stars — “exceptional levels of comfort with striking interior design”

The five-star tier uses the word striking. Not just good design, not just coordinated design — design that makes an impression. This is the tier at which a fully realised coastal room, or a completely coherent countryside room, achieves its highest recognition. The themed kit is the foundation; at five stars, everything from the linen to the accessories to the details should reinforce the identity the host has committed to.

The Gold Award: what separates the best-performing properties

For properties already holding a four- or five-star rating, VisitEngland operates an additional Gold Award — granted to properties that outperform their star tier. The Gold Award is based solely on quality, not facilities. According to VisitEngland’s own guidance, assessors recommend Gold Awards by looking at quality across all areas, with particular attention to bedrooms, cleanliness and hospitality.

The Gold Award is the accreditation that most directly rewards what might be called the “guest experience” quality of a property — the things a guest notices, remembers and reviews, as distinct from the checklist of facilities available. A beautifully themed, coherent room that creates a memorable impression for every guest who walks into it is precisely the kind of quality that Gold Award assessors are trained to identify and reward.

It is also, not coincidentally, the kind of property that scores four and five stars on guest review platforms — because the experience that earns a Gold Award from an assessor is the same experience that earns a glowing paragraph in an online review.

The commercial case: why the star rating number matters

Some hosts are not enrolled in quality assessment schemes and rely on platform reviews alone. This is a perfectly legitimate approach — and platform review scores do carry significant weight with potential guests.

But a VisitEngland, VisitWales or VisitScotland star rating provides something platform reviews cannot: independent third-party verification from the national tourism authority. According to the Mintel UK Holiday Rental Property Market Report, 86% of consumers who considered staying in a holiday rental property said they would find it helpful if properties received an official quality rating. That is not a marginal number. It represents the overwhelming majority of potential guests.

A star rating displayed on a listing — or on a property’s own website and marketing materials — communicates something to a potential guest that no number of positive reviews can quite replicate: this property has been independently assessed by trained professionals against national standards. The trust it conveys is qualitatively different from crowdsourced reviews.

And the commercial premium attached to a higher star rating is well established. Savills data on the UK self-catering market shows that five-star properties consistently achieve the highest occupancy rates in the sector. Properties that secure and maintain a high official rating compete in a different tier from those without one — commanding higher nightly rates, attracting more discerning guests and generating stronger repeat booking rates.

A practical checklist for your next assessment

If your assessment is approaching — or if you are joining a scheme for the first time — the following actions directly address the Sense of Place dimension of your score.

  • Walk into your bedroom as the assessor will. What does the room say? Does it communicate where it is? If the answer is nothing in particular, that is the score the assessor will give the room’s character dimension.
  • Address the wall opposite the door. This is the first surface the assessor sees from the entrance. A wall feature that belongs to a coherent theme — a fishing net with charms, a cluster of themed prints, a piece of local art — creates an immediate positive impression that colours everything that follows.
  • Coordinate your soft furnishings. Cushion covers and a bedside rug that belong to the same visual language as your wall feature are the specific quality indicators for the three-to-four-star boundary. This is not a matter of spending significantly; it is a matter of choosing pieces that work together.
  • Introduce local imagery. The VisitEngland hotel standards explicitly name local artist’s work, local prints and local photography as contributing to Sense of Place. An art print that references your location — a coastal scene, a local landmark, a regional heritage image — does work that a generic landscape print does not.
  • Extend the theme into the entrance area. The first area the assessor encounters sets expectations for the rest of the property. A rug, a sign, a single wall element that introduces the room’s theme in the entrance prepares the assessor for a coherent experience.
  • Request your previous assessment report. If you have been assessed before, the report will contain the assessor’s specific comments on the areas where you scored lower than the overall rating might suggest. Sense of Place tends to appear in feedback on bedrooms and overall impression — often described as “comfortable but anonymous” or “lacking character.”
Not yet enrolled in a quality scheme? The schemes are open to BnBs, guest houses, self-catering holiday lets and boutique hotels of all sizes. The VisitEngland scheme costs from around £150 per year and includes an annual assessment visit, access to the national marketing platform, and the right to display the official star rating in your marketing. Details at visitenglandassessmentservices.com. More on the star rating question in our FAQ.

What the assessor is not looking for

It is worth being clear about what Sense of Place assessment does not require — because the misconception that pursuing a higher star rating means significant capital investment stops many hosts from acting on something that is actually straightforward and low-cost.

The assessor is not looking for expensive renovation. They are not looking for bespoke furniture, custom wallpaper or professionally designed interiors. The official VisitEngland standards are explicit: the assessment is objective and is not based on style or personal taste. What it assesses is quality and intention — and intention can be expressed through coordinated, themed decorative pieces that cost a fraction of what most hosts assume.

The assessor is also not looking for extravagance. The word in the four-star criteria is coordinated, not expensive. Four cushion covers in nautical designs on a double bed, combined with a coastal bedside rug and a wall feature, demonstrate coordination whether they cost £20 or £200 per piece. The effect on the assessor’s impression is determined by the coherence, not the price tag.

What the assessor is looking for — and this matters — is evidence of deliberate thought about the guest experience. That deliberate thought is what transforms an anonymous room into one that gets the score it deserves.

One final thought

The host whose story opened this piece received an assessor’s observation that his rooms did not tell visitors where they were. He took it as vague feedback about atmosphere — the kind of thing that felt true but also felt impossible to act on.

It was not impossible to act on. It was, in retrospect, very specific. His rooms had no local imagery, no coordinated soft furnishings, no visual reference to the coastal town his property was situated in. Every piece of feedback the assessors gave him, across three consecutive visits, pointed to the same gap.

The phrase “doesn’t tell me where I am” is VisitEngland’s way of saying: this room could be anywhere, and that is a quality score I cannot give you points for.

The room that tells the assessor where they are — through a coordinated set of deliberate, coherent choices that cost far less than most hosts assume — is the room that earns the score it is capable of. Often, it is only a fishing net, four cushion covers and a bedside rug away.

Give your room the score it deserves.

The KittedStay Coastal Kit — 8 coordinated pieces aligned with VisitEngland, VisitWales and VisitScotland assessment criteria. Transforms any anonymous room in under 10 minutes. Delivered across the UK within 48 hours.

Get Your Kit from £79

Frequently Asked Questions

The questions UK BnB and holiday let owners ask most about VisitEngland star ratings, Sense of Place and how official assessments work.

Assessment fees vary depending on the type of property and the scheme. For serviced accommodation such as BnBs and guest houses, VisitEngland Assessment Services publishes current fees on its website — these typically start at around £150 for smaller properties and increase with the number of bedrooms and rooms assessed.

The fee covers an annual on-site assessment by a trained quality advisor, access to the official star rating mark for use in marketing, and inclusion in the VisitEngland quality-assured directory. For properties that charge a premium nightly rate, the marketing benefit of a verified star rating typically exceeds the assessment cost within a single booking season.

VisitWales and VisitScotland operate similar schemes with comparable fee structures for properties in Wales and Scotland respectively. All three schemes award ratings on a consistent basis, though the specific criteria weightings vary slightly between nations.

VisitEngland operates an annual assessment cycle — enrolled properties are assessed once per year. The assessment is typically conducted as an unannounced or semi-announced visit, depending on the scheme and property type. For serviced accommodation, inspectors usually make initial contact to arrange a convenient time, but the specific day of arrival may not be confirmed far in advance.

This approach is intentional — it ensures that the assessment reflects the property's typical standard rather than a specially prepared state. The practical implication is that the room should be maintained at its assessed standard consistently, not only when an inspection is expected. A well-styled room with a coherent theme that is maintained between stays will always be assessment-ready.

Between annual assessments, the star rating remains valid and can be used in all marketing materials. Properties can request a reassessment if they have made significant improvements that they believe warrant a higher rating, though this is subject to the scheme's terms.

The star ratings reflect the overall quality of the guest experience across multiple criteria — not just physical facilities. A 3-star rating indicates a good quality property meeting all core requirements. A 4-star rating requires a higher overall standard across all areas, with particular attention to quality of furnishings, décor and the overall atmosphere of the property.

A 5-star rating requires an exceptional standard throughout — exceptional cleanliness, exceptional hospitality, exceptional décor and a guest experience that is genuinely memorable. The Sense of Place criterion becomes increasingly important at the higher star levels: a 5-star property is expected to feel specifically like this place, not a generic comfortable room that could be anywhere.

For most BnB and holiday let owners, the practical goal is the move from 3 to 4 stars, or from 4 to 5. Room styling and a coherent theme contribute directly to this move, because they address the criteria — décor quality, atmosphere, Sense of Place — where the difference between adjacent star ratings is most significant. We cover the specific improvements that inspectors look for in detail in the main article above.

Yes — through several distinct mechanisms. The most direct is filtering: guests searching on booking platforms and the VisitEngland quality-assured directory can filter by star rating, which means higher-rated properties appear in a reduced and more motivated pool of search results. A guest filtering for 4-star properties is already expressing a willingness to pay more for higher quality.

The second mechanism is credibility. A VisitEngland star rating is an independent, third-party endorsement of quality — it tells the prospective guest that the property has been assessed by a trained professional, not just reviewed by previous guests who may have varying standards. This credibility supports a higher nightly rate and reduces the price sensitivity of the booking decision.

The third mechanism is the marketing value of the quality mark itself. VisitEngland-assessed properties can display the official quality mark in all marketing materials, including their listing descriptions on Airbnb and Booking.com. This mark signals quality to guests who may not be familiar with the detailed assessment criteria but recognise the VisitEngland brand as a trusted indicator.

Yes. VisitEngland's quality assessment schemes are available to serviced accommodation properties of all sizes, including single-room BnBs and small guest houses. The assessment criteria are scaled appropriately — a single-room BnB is not expected to offer the facilities of a larger property, but it is assessed on the quality of what it does offer, including the room's décor, the welcome it provides and the overall guest experience.

For single-room or very small properties, the Sense of Place criterion is particularly achievable and particularly impactful. A single well-styled room with a coherent coastal or countryside theme can score strongly on this criterion regardless of the property's size. The investment required — a coordinated decoration kit and thoughtful local touches — is proportionally accessible for small operators.

The process begins with registering with VisitEngland Assessment Services, which will confirm eligibility and provide current fee information for your property type. VisitWales and VisitScotland operate equivalent registration processes for properties in those nations.

VisitEngland operates a formal feedback and appeals process for properties that wish to challenge their assessment outcome. After each assessment, the quality advisor provides a written report detailing the criteria assessed and the scores awarded against each criterion. This report gives the property owner specific, actionable feedback on where the rating was limited and what improvements would be required to achieve a higher rating.

If the property owner believes the assessment was conducted incorrectly or that specific criteria were misapplied, they can raise this formally with VisitEngland Assessment Services. Grounds for appeal typically relate to factual errors in the assessment rather than disagreements about quality judgements, which are inherently subjective within defined criteria.

The more useful approach in most cases is to use the assessment report as a roadmap for improvement. Inspectors are trained to be specific about what would need to change for a higher rating — and the Sense of Place feedback in particular often provides very clear guidance on what decorative or atmospheric changes would make the difference. A subsequent assessment after implementing those changes frequently results in an upgraded rating.