Edinburgh travel guide

A medieval Old Town, a Georgian New Town, an extinct volcano in the middle of the city, and the gateway to the Highlands.

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Country
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland
Currency
British Pound (GBP)
Language
English
Climate
Oceanic
Best months
May–Sep
Airport
EDI (Edinburgh Airport)

Why visit Edinburgh

Edinburgh is the most visually dramatic capital in Europe. The castle sits on volcanic rock 80m above the Old Town. Arthur's Seat, an extinct volcano you can hike in 90 minutes, rises 250m in the middle of the city. The medieval Royal Mile and the Georgian New Town sit side by side, separated by a railway gorge. The whole thing is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and you can walk every meaningful part in three days.

August transforms Edinburgh — the Edinburgh International Festival and the Fringe (the world's largest performing arts festival) bring 2.5 million extra people and 3,000+ shows over four weeks. Hotels triple in price and book out a year ahead. If you want festival energy, August is unrivaled. If you want Edinburgh as a city, come in May, June, or September instead.

It's also the natural gateway to the Highlands. Stirling Castle is 50 minutes by train. Glasgow is 50 minutes. Day-tour buses to Loch Ness and Glencoe leave daily. A 7-10 day Scotland trip almost always starts or ends here.

Hidden gems in Edinburgh

Beyond the obvious highlights, here are six spots locals actually use and most guidebooks miss:

Dean Village
Dean Village · Hidden riverside hamlet
A picturesque former milling village along the Water of Leith, 10 minutes' walk from the New Town but feels like a different century. Riverside walk leads to the Royal Botanic Garden. Almost nobody finds this without being told.
Calton Hill at sunrise
Calton Hill · Sunrise viewpoint
The classic Edinburgh skyline shot — Arthur's Seat, the castle, the city — from a hilltop you can reach in 15 minutes from Princes Street. Sunrise in summer (4:30am) is empty and golden. Bring coffee.
Stockbridge Sunday Market
Stockbridge · Local weekend market
Every Sunday 10am-5pm in Jubilee Gardens. Scottish craft cheese, oysters, fresh-baked sourdough, and the kind of mostly-local crowd Edinburgh markets rarely have. 15 minutes walk from the city center.
Sandy Bell's
Forrest Road · Real Scottish folk pub
Live folk music sessions every night since the 1940s. Tiny back room, fiddlers and pipers turning up to play together. No cover, no fuss. The pub where folk musicians actually play, not the touristy pubs on the Royal Mile.
Arthur's Seat from Duddingston side
Duddingston · Quieter hike route
Most people start from Holyrood Park's main entrance. Start from Duddingston Village instead — past the loch, up the gentler back slope, fewer people, better views of the city on the descent.
Royal Botanic Garden views
Inverleith · Free garden + skyline view
Free admission to one of the world's great botanic gardens. The viewing terrace at the south end has the best free panoramic view of the Edinburgh skyline. Locals' picnic spot on any sunny day.

Want more? Our AI Hidden Gems tool generates fresh picks for any neighborhood in Edinburgh →

Best time to visit Edinburgh

Edinburgh has a oceanic climate. Here's the month-by-month breakdown:

Jan4°C · cold + grey
Feb4°C · cold + grey
Mar6°C · wet spring
Apr8°C · warming
May11°C · perfect
Jun14°C · long days
Jul16°C · peak summer
Aug15°C · Festival peak
Sep13°C · perfect
Oct10°C · mild fall
Nov6°C · cool + wet
Dec4°C · cold + lights

Our pick: May, June, or September for Edinburgh-as-a-city — warm dry-ish weather, long daylight, manageable crowds, normal hotel rates. August if you want Festival energy (and have booked accommodation 6+ months in advance). Avoid November-March unless you specifically want grey, atmospheric Edinburgh with proper rain gear.

Getting to Edinburgh

Edinburgh Airport (EDI) is 30 minutes from downtown by Airlink 100 bus (£5.50) or tram (£7). Taxi is £25-35. From London: 1-hour direct flight £40-150 RT, or 4.5-hour LNER train (£60-150 advance, scenic). From US East Coast: 7-hour direct (Edinburgh, NYC, Boston routes), $400-800 RT. From the rest of Europe: 2-3 hour direct, €80-250 RT.

✈️ Find flights to Edinburgh

Where to stay

Old Town (Royal Mile, Grassmarket) for atmosphere and walkability — small medieval streets, every attraction in reach. New Town for Georgian elegance and easier walking. Stockbridge for residential calm + cafés. Leith for waterfront and the Royal Yacht Britannia. Avoid hotels right on the Royal Mile for nighttime noise (especially August).

🏨 Compare Edinburgh hotels

Things to do

Headline acts: Edinburgh Castle, the Royal Mile walk, Arthur's Seat hike (90 min round trip), a whisky flight at the Scotch Whisky Experience, the National Museum of Scotland (free, excellent), a literary pub tour. For day trips: Stirling Castle and the Wallace Monument (50min by train), Glasgow (50min, very different feel), Rosslyn Chapel (30min by bus), the Borders abbeys.

🎫 Browse Edinburgh tours & activities

Plan your Edinburgh trip with our tools

Free, no signup required. Each tool below is pre-configured for Edinburgh — just click and it opens with your destination already loaded.

💎
Hidden Gems for Edinburgh
AI-generated non-touristy spots by neighborhood and vibe.
🗺️
3-Day Edinburgh Itinerary
AI itinerary with day-by-day plans and routing.
🎒
Edinburgh Packing List
Auto-tuned for oceanic climate.
💶
GBP Currency Tracker
Live rates, spending tracker, common-purchase quick reference.
💬
English Phrasebook
25 must-know phrases with audio pronunciation.
🛂
Scotland Visa Check
Visa rules by nationality, instant.

Frequently asked questions

When is the best time to visit Edinburgh?

May, June, or September for the city itself — warm-ish, long days, manageable crowds. August for the Edinburgh Festival and Fringe (book accommodation 6+ months in advance, expect triple normal hotel rates). Avoid November-March unless you want grey atmospheric winter Edinburgh.

How many days do you need in Edinburgh?

Three days is the sweet spot — Castle + Royal Mile, Arthur's Seat + Calton Hill, one neighborhood (Stockbridge or Dean Village) + a Festival show if August. Add 2-4 days for Glasgow + Highlands day trips. Edinburgh is usually the start or end of a Scotland trip.

Is Edinburgh expensive?

Comparable to London prices in August (festival inflation); 30-40% cheaper in other months. Hotels £100-250 in shoulder season, £300-500 in August. Restaurants £20-40 per main. Pints £5-7. Many great experiences (Arthur's Seat hike, Royal Mile walk, National Museum) are free.

Is the Edinburgh Festival worth it?

If you love performing arts, absolutely — three weeks of nonstop comedy, theatre, dance, music. The Fringe alone is 3,000+ shows. Mitigation: book accommodation by January, plan to see 2-3 shows per day, expect chaos. If you want quiet Edinburgh, come in June or September.

What's the difference between Edinburgh and Glasgow?

Edinburgh is the postcard — medieval Old Town, castle, festivals, tourism. Glasgow is the working city — architecture, music scene, edgier nightlife, better food at lower prices. Many travelers do both (50 min between them by train). They feel like different countries.

Can you do day trips to the Highlands from Edinburgh?

Yes — day-tour buses (Rabbie's, Highland Explorer) run daily to Loch Ness, Glencoe, Stirling, and the Cairngorms. But the Highlands deserve more than a day. The better approach: Edinburgh 2-3 days, then rent a car or take a multi-day Highlands tour.