Scotland holidays
From Edinburgh's dramatic hilltop castle to the remote West Highland steam train, a Scotland holiday is a trip through an untamed landscape and noble history. Picturesque fishing ports with pastel-hued houses and the Shetland Islands heather-coated hills bring peace and tranquillity. Glasgow’s Georgian and Art Nouveau architecture keeps urbanites happy.
Fly from London City Airport
Located in the heart of London, City airport is the perfect starting point for your trip to Scotland.
There is only one terminal at London City airport so travelling is quicker than at other London airports. Enjoy the benefits of checking in and passing through security up to 20 minutes before your flight departs.
Save time at the airport by using Manage My Booking to check in 24 hours before your flight and print your boarding pass at home. If you need to print your boarding pass at the airport, you can collect it from a check-in kiosk or desk. If you have baggage to check-in, you can print your tags at a check-in kiosk before taking your tagged baggage to a Bag Drop desk.
Carefully-selected holidays in Scotland
Scotland holiday FAQs
- Hire a car from Edinburgh and explore Dumfries and Galloway’s sandy coves, or take the Fife Coastal Route, which runs 85 miles (136 km) through picturesque villages of East Neuk, with their distinctive red pantiled roofs, right up to the historic town of St Andrews - the Home of Golf and the seat of Scotland's oldest university. From Glasgow take a leisurely drive around Loch Lomond and discover the beautiful rural countryside. Or from Aberdeen follow the 118 mile (189 km) Highland Tourist Route to Inverness.
- Take your loved one's hand to climb Edinburgh’s extinct volcano Arthur’s Seat for sunset city views. It’s easy to find romantic solitude in the remote Orkney Islands, where you can explore the lonely Neolithic landmarks. In noble, granite-clad Aberdeen, take a romantic stroll alongside the beach Esplanade, then dine on haute cuisine along the Castle Trail.
- Kids will love the hands-on exhibits at Glasgow Science Centre, its titanium curves gleaming on the banks of the Clyde. Edinburgh’s summer festivals are packed with family entertainment, from street theatre on the medieval cobbles, to the pipers and drummers at the Military Tattoo. Try and spot the chirruping dolphins and basking seals off Aberdeen’s coast.
- The modern game of golf is attributed to Scotland, and of course the legendary St. Andrews. Our flights to Edinburgh will have you within driving distance (no pun intended) from the historic home of golf. For those more adventurous, the Highlands offer some fantastic golf amidst glorious lochs and sublime mountains.
Wee toons, big mountains, and four seasons in one day. With their gorgeous glacial curves and heather-purpled hills, the Scottish Highlands are a sight to behold. Walkers come to bag Munros, golfers come for fresh undulating greens and dreamers come ghost hunting. Hire a car with Avis, and get a natural high in the highlands.
Highlights of the North Coast 500
- First things first, get there: fly into Inverness with British Airways. This pretty inlet city acts as the gateway to the highlands – and the sea: it has a pod of resident bottlenose dolphins. Inverness is a good place to take stock and prepare for outdoor adventures. Buy supplies here, or simply check your coat’s waterproofing ability. From the city, you can take the famous North Coast 500, a 500-mile driving loop that takes in northern Scotland’s highlights.
- For a minor deviation from the North Coast Route, follow the River Ness inland just half an hour to reach Loch Ness, Inverness’s famous neighbour. This quiet, deep gorge has a suspiciously calm surface and a 13th Century history on its bank: the atmospheric Urquhart Castle. If you don’t see the legendary Loch Ness monster, the scenery more than makes up for any disappointment. Walkers can join the Great Glen Way from Inverness. This 79-mile route to Fort William takes in the sight of big Ben Nevis, the UK’s highest mountain.
- Strike up a conversation about golf in an Inverness bar, and you’ll swiftly discover that the Scots invented the sport. Golfers head straight out of Inverness and on to Dornoch, home to the country’s most atmospheric courses. The famous Scottish golf courses are all here, set around gorgeous manor houses and castles. These courses (including Royal Dornoch Golf Club, Tain Golf Club, Golspie Golf Club, Bonar Bridge) are referred to as ‘links’ the Old Scots term for a course.
- From Dornoch, the North Coast 500 route begins in earnest, taking in the ragged coast of Sutherland. This is area is both beautiful and remote – it was, after all, the last place wolves were found in the British Isles. Driving around here is notoriously tricky. The main road, the A9, takes you along the coast with fiendish dips and bends and leads to John O’Groats, the northernmost tip of mainland Scotland.
- The northern edge of mainland Scotland contains some of the area’s best beaches. Drive along the A387 to reach the scenic Achmelvich beach (accessible only by single track road) and Oldshoremore beach (only accessible by hikers). The cute little coastal town of Ullapool serves as a hiking base, and many visitors take a windswept climb up Quinag – a forbidding three-peaked mountain. Inland roads lead to Ribigill and the foothills of Ben Loyal, the lonely ‘Queen of Scottish Mountains’.
The west coast and the Hebrides
- Start in Glasgow to drive up the coast to Fort William and beyond, stopping at smokerys for seafood along the way. After the grizzled charms of Glasgow, hire a car to drive up Scotland’s west coast. It’s just a 40-minute drive from Glasgow to Loch Lomond, and what a drive it is. At the top of Loch Lomond, you can climb to a viewpoint at An Ceann Mor that shows you the whole of the Trossachs National park. From here, Loch Fyne Restaurant and Oyster Bar is the best place to sample seafood.
- Glencoe is the seat of the world’s most spectacular scenery. However, the bare, hulking hills that surround Glencoe still carry the weight of history: the 1692 Massacre of Glencoe is remembered in the area by a solemn monument. Glencoe’s natural attractions include Aonach Eagach, the site of a hair-raisingly narrow ridge walk, and The Devil’s Staircase, a ravaged rockface in the valley. The formation attracts daring mountain bikers and hikers. The Pap of Glencoe is another local highlight, found on the 96-mile West Highland Way, which runs from Milngavie to Fort William.
- Known more for its location than its looks, Fort William is the activity capital of the Highlands. Sitting at the foot of Ben Nevis, it attracts plenty of climbers. From Fort William, you can take a fantastic drive to Mallaig along the so-called Road to the Isles. Otherwise, embark upon the same route by the Jacobite Train. The train crosses the viaduct at Glenfinnan that featured in the second Harry Potter film. On the way you’ll also pass Neptune’s Staircase, an impressive series of locks that lifts the Caledonian Canal over the highlands. Fort William marks one end of the newly-established East Highland Way, which offers a gentler valley walk than the West Highland Way. The path takes you through ancient forest and marshland.
- You can see the Isle of Skye from the ferry port of Mallaig. It rises like a crown on the horizon, thanks to its circlet of peaks. Take a half-hour ferry from Mallaig to reach it (or drive round the A87, and cross the Skye Bridge). If you’ve got a car, drop in on Morar, where Local Hero was filmed. Here you can visit Camusdarach beach, a big, dune-backed stretch of sand ringed by holiday cottages. Once you make it over the sea to Skye, you’ll find a ruggedly beautiful wilderness. Fairy pools grace the hillside and Kilt Rock waterfall cascades straight into the sea. The island’s best challenging hike takes place along the famous Cuillin Ridge, or you can walk to visit the Old Man of Storr, a jagged rock that juts from the hillside like a snaggle tooth. Afterwards, check out why Skye has a Michelin star, thanks to the seafood at Loch Bay at Stein.
A road into the Cairngorms
- A true Scot knows that Aberdeen is in the Lowlands, not the Highlands; but you can fly in to Aberdeen to pick up a car and drive into the Cairngorms. Before you set off, enjoy the city’s Glenfidditch distillery and piles of castles. (There are 300 located in the county of Aberdeenshire alone.) Less rainy than the western highlands, this northern coastal town sparkles when the sun comes out, thanks to quartz in the stone, a shining sea and silvery beaches. Nearby, the River Dee is one of the best places in Scotland for spring salmon fishing. Watch them leap!.
- Drive to the little town of Aviemore to explore the Cairngorms, Britain’s largest national park. It’s surprisingly well-connected, and the Caledonian Sleeper Train from London stops right at Aviemore station. During the winter, this area is the closest the British Isles gets to a ski resort. Cairn Gorm Mountain, with ten lifts and one unusual funicular railway, sits just 9 miles outside of town. Here, you’ll find the UK’s only wild herd of reindeer. Once you come off the mountain for the day, hole up in the Old Bridge Inn back in Aviemore for ‘scran’ by the fireplace.
- Outside of ski season, this magnificent national park offers challenging walking routes. Be warned: you’ll need the right footwear. After all, intrepid trekkers hike here, specifically to train for the Himalayas. Ice Age glaciers carved out the local scenery, including four out of five of the UK’s highest mountains. There are 34 Munros (Scottish mountains over 3,000 feet) to ‘bag’, including the fearsome Ben McDui. South of the Cairngorms, you’ll find Balmoral – where the Royal Family spend snowy Christmases. You can visit when it’s ‘Royalty-free’ in the summer.
The Shetlands
- If you want to get away from it all, or boast about how far your hotel was from the mainland, then the Shetland Isles are for you. Your 12-hour ferry from Aberdeen crosses over 200 miles of open water to reach dry(ish) land. Lerwick – the capital of Shetlands, could be described as bustling – but only if you’re comparing it to the rest of the extraordinarily peaceful and remote islands. The Shetlands are flat, not like mountainous Skye; and diminutive but wilful native Shetland ponies keep the hillside grass cropped short. The food is organic and local, normally served alongside campfire retellings of Viking legends. In the Shetlands, you’re close enough to Norway for invasion.
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