Isle of Skye
United Kingdom · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
Park at the signed Storr car park on the A855 and start the climb straight up the new gravel zigzag — the pinnacles loom larger with every switchback. At dawn the basalt towers face east into the rising sun, and the Sound of Raasay glows pale gold behind them; by 09:00 four coach loads will be on this same path, so the empty first hour is the whole point of getting up. Walk through the upper sanctuary clockwise around the Old Man for the classic straight-on silhouette with the loch as the backdrop.
Tip: The official car park fills by 08:30 even in May — arrive by 06:15 and you'll get a spot at the foot of the trail. Go up via the new gravel path on the left (longer, gentler) and descend the old eroded path on the right — the descent is where the magic head-on photograph of the pinnacles waits.
Open in Google Maps →Drive 30 min north up the A855, then west over the Bealach Ollasgairte single-track pass — the cliffs of the Trotternish landslip rear up on your left the whole way, and the car park sits right on the saddle. From here take the ridge path north (right) — within 20 min you're traversing one of the largest active landslips in Europe, with the Prison rock pillar, the Needle, and the hidden plateau called the Table all opening up. Mid-morning light hits the eastern cliffs square-on, lighting up every fold of green basalt against the sea.
Tip: Don't stop at the first viewpoint where everyone clusters — push on 30 min uphill to the foot of the Prison; the crowds thin to nothing and the angle back toward the Needle is the shot. Wear waterproof boots: the path is permanently boggy regardless of weather, and there is genuinely no mobile signal past the pass.
Open in Google Maps →Drive 35 min south on the A87 back to Portree, park along the harbor, then walk 3 min uphill up Quay Brae — Café Arriba is above a tartan shop, accessed by a narrow stair. This is where Portree's hill-walking guides, fishermen, and gallery owners actually eat lunch: a small bright room with harbor windows and a daily-changing chalkboard built around whatever came in off the boats that morning. The signature is their hot hand-raised pies (£8) — order the haggis & black pudding or the daily seafood pie — paired with the Cullen skink soup (£7) if the morning has chilled you through.
Tip: The pies sell out by 13:30 in season — arrive by 12:30 sharp or call ahead to reserve one. Sit at the long window table upstairs for the harbor view; the small two-tops by the bar turn over fastest if you're being seated and want speed.
Open in Google Maps →Drive 35 min south on the A87 then west into Glen Brittle — at the Sligachan junction the Black Cuillin appear straight ahead, and Sgùrr nan Gillean's serrated ridge is reason enough to pull into the layby for a 2-min photo stop. Park at the official Glen Brittle car park, then follow the well-trodden path 15 min downhill to the river. Skip the first pool everyone photographs and keep walking upstream — the third and fourth tiers have the natural rock arches and the impossible turquoise that the postcards promise, and the afternoon sun is now angled to light them straight through.
Tip: Keep walking 20 min past the famous arch pool to the fifth tier — it's where locals actually swim, and you'll lose 95% of the day-trippers. If you're going to wade in, bring a microfibre towel and a dry layer; the water sits at 8°C even in August and the wind off the Cuillin is unforgiving.
Open in Google Maps →Drive 1 hour northwest via Dunvegan — the final 10 minutes narrow to single-track with passing places, and the road just ends at a tiny clifftop car park above the Atlantic. The path drops sharply down concrete steps, then climbs out to the headland where the white lighthouse sits on a hexagonal columnar basalt platform with the Outer Hebrides floating on the horizon. This is the most westerly point on Skye; the light at this hour rakes the cliffs from the side and turns the basalt cliffs molten orange.
Tip: Skip walking all the way down to the lighthouse — the iconic shot is from the cliff path 200 m past the white gate looking back at the sea-stack against the sun. Do not stop in the laybys before the official car park: they are now ticketed by enforcement (£100 fine) and the official car park is only 500 m further on.
Open in Google Maps →Drive 15 min back east on the same single-track to Colbost — a row of low whitewashed crofter's cottages on the shore of Loch Dunvegan, and the one with the chimneys is the restaurant. Inside it is candlelit, low-beamed, and roughly the size of a sitting room; this is the Skye institution every chef on the island bows to. The hand-dived Sconser scallops with cured pork (£24) and the native Loch Bracadale lobster (£62) are the unmissables — or commit to the seven-course tasting menu (£130) if you want the full statement.
Tip: Book at least three months ahead — they are fully reserved by late winter for the whole summer. If you can't get a table, walk next door to The House Over-By bar: same kitchen, walk-ins only, half the price, and the langoustines are the order. One Skye-wide warning: the petrol station in Dunvegan is your last fuel for 50 km in any direction, top up there before driving back — running dry on a single-track at midnight is the Skye day-tripper's classic mistake.
Open in Google Maps →Start at the upper car park off the A855 at the very beginning of the day. The 1-hour climb zigzags through Scots pine plantation before opening onto a basalt amphitheatre dominated by the 50-metre pinnacle. Reaching the foot of the Old Man around 09:00 means the eastern sun rakes across his face from the side — arrive at 11:00 and two coach-loads of day-trippers will be jostling for the same shot.
Tip: Park in the upper (second) car park if there is space — it cuts 15 minutes off the climb. Wear actual hiking boots, not trainers: the steep section above the tree line turns to slick black clay even when it hasn't rained for days.
Open in Google Maps →20-minute drive north on the A855 from the Storr lay-by — the single-track road clings to the cliff edge with the open sea to your right. A short paved path from the car park leads to the railing-edge platform, where Mealt Falls drops 60 metres straight into the Sound of Raasay against columnar basalt cliffs that genuinely resemble a pleated kilt. The northeast-facing cliffs are still well-lit at this hour; by mid-afternoon they fall into deep shadow.
Tip: Walk 30 metres to the left of the main viewing platform — there's a small grass spur where you can frame the waterfall and the basalt cliff in one shot without the metal railing across the foreground.
Open in Google Maps →7-minute drive northwest from Kilt Rock — the road dips inland past the crofts of Staffin and rises onto open moor. This black timber shack between Kilmaluag and Duntulm is a working coffee roaster and bakery run by two locals who shut everything else they did to focus on this one room. The smoked-mackerel toastie on their own sourdough (£11.50) and a flat white pulled from beans roasted out the back is the lunch people on Skye drive 30 miles for.
Tip: Seating is 16 chairs and they take cash or card at the counter. Order inside, then carry everything to the picnic bench facing north over the moor — the carrot cake (£5) sells out by 14:00 most days.
Open in Google Maps →10-minute drive south on the single-track road that climbs over the spine of Trotternish — pull into the high pass car park at the top. The walk traverses the inner cliffs to The Prison and The Needle, about 1.5 hours out-and-back along a level grass shelf. Afternoon light now hits the eastern faces you're walking under, lighting the green terraces against the dark basalt above — this is the exact angle every Skye landscape print you've ever seen was shot from.
Tip: Do not attempt the full circular loop unless you have a map, proper boots and no fear of exposure — the scramble down from the Table has had fatalities. Walk in as far as the Needle, then return the same way; you will already have seen every postcard view.
Open in Google Maps →35-minute drive south back along the A855 to Skye's tiny capital — you pass beneath the Old Man's silhouette from the opposite side. The row of painted cottages along Quay Street — pink, ochre, blue, mustard — curves around a deep-water harbour where small fishing boats unload langoustine straight onto the quay. Late afternoon light flatters the warm pigments; by 19:00 the whole terrace falls into shadow and stops photographing well.
Tip: For the classic harbour shot, walk past the painted houses and up the path to The Lump — the grass headland behind the Royal Hotel — and frame the row from above looking northwest. From street level the terrace looks crooked; from The Lump it looks like a painting.
Open in Google Maps →4-minute walk back into town from The Lump — head down Bosville Terrace and you'll spot the small white sign on the first floor of a terraced house. This 22-seat dining room is run by chef Calum Munro using fish landed in the harbour below; the five-course tasting menu (£70) leans on hand-dived Sconser scallop, Glendale halibut and Skye lamb hogget. They run one sitting per night and reservations open three months in advance.
Tip: Tourist-trap warning: most of the "seafood" places along the harbour wall charge £24 for frozen scampi and tinned chowder — walk past every one of them. The only two restaurants on Skye worth a £30+ bill are Scorrybreac here in Portree and Three Chimneys near Dunvegan; everything else at that price will leave you furious.
Open in Google Maps →Drive into Glenbrittle for the car park opening. The 30-minute walk in crosses open moor with the jagged Black Cuillin rising ahead, then the river Brittle threads down through a string of cobalt plunge pools and miniature waterfalls. Arriving at 08:30 means the first three pools are yours alone; by 10:30 there will be two hundred people queuing to photograph the same single waterfall.
Tip: Skip the first pool everyone stops at — keep walking upstream past the second waterfall to the larger turquoise pool with the underwater stone arch. It's only ten minutes further along the path and almost no day-tripper bothers; you'll likely have it to yourself.
Open in Google Maps →20-minute drive north over the Glenbrittle pass to Carbost on the shore of Loch Harport — the whitewashed warehouse complex sits right on the water. The standard 60-minute tour walks you through the mash tuns and copper stills before ending with a tasting of three drams of the peat-smoked, brine-touched single malt. It is the only working distillery on Skye and the only place on earth where you can buy the Distillery Exclusive bottling.
Tip: Book the tour online the night before — walk-ins are turned away most summer days. After the tour, order the Distillery Exclusive at the bar tasting room (£18 a dram); it cannot be bought anywhere else and they won't ship it.
Open in Google Maps →3-minute walk straight up the hill behind the distillery — follow the brown wooden signs. This corrugated-iron shed on a hillside above Loch Harport is a working shellfish farm with a tiny ordering hatch; you queue at the window and carry your food to picnic tables looking down over the loch you are about to eat from. Half a dozen Loch Harport oysters (£12) and the buttered langoustine roll (£14) are the only reason to come and the only thing to order.
Tip: They close at 16:00 sharp and don't take reservations or large groups. Order an extra portion of oysters with your first round — by the time you're halfway through the langoustine roll you'll wish you had, and the queue at the hatch by then is 20 minutes long.
Open in Google Maps →35-minute drive northwest along the shore of Loch Bracadale — the road threads between sea-lochs the whole way and crosses Fairy Bridge. The seat of the MacLeod clan for 800 years sits on a basalt outcrop above its own sea inlet, making it the oldest continuously inhabited castle in Scotland. Inside, find the Fairy Flag — their 4th-century silk battle banner — and the bottle dungeon; behind the keep the walled water gardens are what most visitors actually remember.
Tip: Skip the £12 boat trip to the seal colony — you will see better seals for free from the cliff path at Neist Point in three hours. Spend the saved time on the rhododendron walk behind the water garden; it is the only formal garden on Skye that survived the last winter intact.
Open in Google Maps →25-minute drive west on the single-track B884 to the literal end of the road — Skye's westernmost point. From the car park, a steep concrete path drops down the cliff, then a grassy headland leads out to the white lighthouse perched 43 metres above the Minch. Arriving 90 minutes before sunset is deliberate: the cliffs face due west, and the sun drops over the Outer Hebrides directly behind the lighthouse — this is the photograph you came to Skye to take.
Tip: Don't walk all the way out to the lighthouse — the best photograph is from the cliff path on the way down, where you can frame the lighthouse against the layered basalt headland behind it. Stop at the wooden bench halfway down and shoot from there; ten metres further and the angle falls apart.
Open in Google Maps →15-minute drive back east along the B884 to Colbost — a row of white croft houses along the loch. A converted 18th-century crofter's cottage with low ceilings and peat-stained beams; head chef Scott Davies builds a tasting menu (£95) around what Skye produced that week — Sconser scallop, Glendale lamb, sea buckthorn from the cliffs you stood on an hour ago. Three Michelin Plates and the late seating runs until 22:00 to catch summer sunset diners.
Tip: Tourist-trap warning: this year fake QR-code parking signs have appeared at Glenbrittle and Neist Point car parks, sending payments to a scammer's account. The real parking is an honesty box or a card terminal mounted on the wooden information board — pay there only, ignore any QR sticker. Book Three Chimneys at least three months ahead; they will not hold a table without a deposit.
Open in Google Maps →From your Portree base it is a 15-minute drive north up the A855 — leave by 07:30 to grab a space in the lower car park before the coach tours descend. The trail climbs steadily through replanted forest for about a kilometre before opening onto a ridge where basalt pinnacles erupt from the hillside, dominated by the 49-metre Old Man himself. Catch the eastern face just after sunrise: the rock lights up amber while the corries below still hold last night's mist.
Tip: Wear proper hiking boots — the path turns to greasy slabs after rain and trainers slip. From the main viewpoint take the unmarked footpath branching right just before the Old Man; five extra minutes brings you to the Sanctuary, the natural amphitheatre between the pinnacles, where 90% of visitors never bother to walk.
Open in Google Maps →Driving back south on the A855 brings you into Portree in 20 minutes; park on Somerled Square and climb the stairs off Quay Brae — Arriba sits on the first floor and is easy to miss. This is where the lifeboat crew and harbour fishermen actually eat: an unpretentious bistro built on tight relationships with Skye's smokers and shellfish boats. The chalkboard changes daily, but order the Skye crab open sandwich (around €17, sweet meat on rye, no padding) and the day's Cullen skink (around €11, properly smoky).
Tip: They do not take reservations and the dozen window tables are the prize — they look down over the harbour to the Cuillin in the distance. Arrive at 12:15 sharp; by 12:45 you will be queuing on the stairs.
Open in Google Maps →From Portree it is a 30-minute drive back north on the A855 to a small clifftop car park signposted 'Kilt Rock'. A 200-metre boardwalk leads to a railing where you first hear the falls — the Mealt River does not trickle, it launches 60 metres clean off the cliff into the Sound of Raasay. The cliff itself is the spectacle: columnar dolerite stacked like the pleats of a kilt, banded with sandstone, dropping 90 metres straight to the sea. Afternoon light hits the face full-on; mornings keep it in shadow.
Tip: On a windy day, stand near the metal fence on the south side and listen — the wind funnels through the railings and makes them sing. Locals call it 'the Skye flute'. Do not bother walking to the actual headland for a side view of the falls; you cannot legally cross the fence and the official platform is the photographer's shot anyway.
Open in Google Maps →Continue north on the A855 for 20 minutes, then take the single-track road from Brogaig that climbs sharply over the spine of Trotternish — the road itself is part of the experience, the entire eastern coast unspooling behind you as you climb. From the saddle car park the well-worn path traverses below the cliffs for about 2 km, with the Needle, the Prison and the Table appearing in sequence on your left. By 5 p.m. the coach tours have left and the western sun rakes across the landslip, throwing 100-metre shadows over grass that looks almost lurid green.
Tip: Walk out and back as far as the Table — about an hour return — rather than the full circuit. The loop requires scrambling an unmarked scree gully that has injured walkers every season, and the views from the upper plateau are not materially better. Watch the time: the single-track road back to Portree is unlit and shared with sheep after dusk.
Open in Google Maps →Drive back down to Portree (35 minutes); Scorrybreac sits on Bosville Terrace, two doors from the Bosville Hotel, with a half-flight of stairs leading up to a tiny twelve-seat room. Calum Munro grew up on the croft just above town and his cooking is exactly that — eight unannounced courses built on what came off the boats that morning, the venison off the family hill, foraged greens off the cliffs you walked today. Expect hand-dived Sconser scallop with smoked roe (the showstopper) and slow-cooked saddle of Skye venison. Tasting menu around €88; optional wine pairing adds €60.
Tip: Book the moment you confirm your Skye dates — tables release exactly two months in advance and disappear within days. Ask specifically for the front-window two-top: it overlooks the harbour and you will watch the sky turn ink-blue while you eat. Pitfall warning: avoid the Royal Hotel restaurant across the square — same price, half the cooking, twice the coach-tour clientele, and aggressive front-desk pressure to upsell their in-house tour packages.
Open in Google Maps →From Portree drive south on the A87 then west on the B8009 through Carbost — about 45 minutes — and park at the Glumagan na Sithichean pay-and-display lot. Cross the wooden footbridge and walk 20 minutes up the Allt Coir' a' Mhadaidh, a chain of pale-blue plunge pools stepping down from the flank of the Black Cuillin. At 09:30 you arrive between the dawn swimmers and the lunchtime bus crowds, the light still soft enough to keep the water that surreal turquoise the photographs promise.
Tip: The third pool from the bottom is the deep one — the round basin where the water actually clears blue. Skip pools one and two, which look murkier and stay crowded. If you brought trainers, change at the car park: the path has three rocky burn crossings that will soak street shoes within ten minutes.
Open in Google Maps →Coming back over the moor from the Pools, the road drops you into Carbost in 15 minutes; the Oyster Shed sits 300 m up the brae above the village (signs hand-painted). There is no dining room — you order at a hatch from a converted seafood store, then eat outside on weathered picnic tables looking down Loch Harport to Talisker Bay. Half a dozen native Loch Harport oysters run around €18; the lobster roll on brioche is around €27 and worth every cent. Service stops at 3 p.m. sharp.
Tip: Bring a fleece even in summer — it is an exposed picnic-table setup and the wind off the loch bites. Buy two extra oysters wrapped to go and take them down the brae: Talisker pairs Talisker 10 with these same oysters on the tour, and the local tradition is to crack one yourself with a dram in your other hand at the distillery pier.
Open in Google Maps →A 5-minute walk back down the brae from the Oyster Shed brings you to the distillery gates on Loch Harport's edge — you smell the malting first, then see the whitewashed walls and the loading pier where they used to ship casks out by puffer. Book the 'Made by the Sea' experience: 75 minutes through the still house and warehouses, ending with three drams pulled directly from the cask in the tasting room. The peat-and-brine character is unlike anywhere else on the island — this is the only operating distillery on Skye for now, and the whisky tastes of where you are standing.
Tip: Book online at least two weeks ahead — walk-ins are almost never available May to September. Ask the host to swap the standard 10-year-old finishing pour for the Distillery Exclusive instead: it is only sold here and shows what Talisker tastes like before the marketing department gets involved.
Open in Google Maps →Drive 70 minutes north and west from Carbost — through Dunvegan, then out the long single-track road to Glendale and the very end of the road at Waterstein. From the car park a paved path drops steeply for 20 minutes (concrete steps and railings) to the lighthouse buildings on the headland. This is the westernmost point of Skye, and on a clear evening you can see the Outer Hebrides on the horizon. Arrive by 5 p.m. and the cliff colour is already turning amber; by 21:00 in midsummer the sun sets directly behind the lighthouse from the eastern viewpoint — the single best frame on the island.
Tip: For the postcard photograph, do NOT walk down to the lighthouse — instead, climb the small grassy hill immediately south of the car park (a 5-minute scramble). From there you get the lighthouse, the full headland and the cliffs in one frame, and you save your knees for the climb back up. The path down is steeper than it looks and brutal coming back tired.
Open in Google Maps →From Neist drive back through Dunvegan and turn off for Stein, a single row of 18th-century whitewashed cottages on a sheltered sea-loch — 35 minutes total. Loch Bay occupies one of the cottages: 24 seats, one Michelin star, and a no-deviation focus on seafood landed within sight of the front door. The seafood tasting menu is around €100; on it you will find langoustines fresh that morning from Loch Pooltiel and grilled over charcoal, and hand-dived Bracadale scallops with seaweed butter. Last orders are at 21:30 and they will not stretch it.
Tip: Book three months out — this is the toughest reservation on Skye after Three Chimneys. The drive back to Portree afterwards is 50 minutes on unlit single-track; either nominate a non-drinking driver or stay in one of the three guest rooms above the inn next door. Pitfall warning: skip the 'McLeods Tables sunset cruise' the Dunvegan kiosks push at you on the way in — overpriced, herd-loaded, and you will see better light from your dinner table window.
Open in Google Maps →A 5-minute walk down Quay Brae from anywhere in town drops you onto the harbour quayside, where the famous row of pink, blue, ochre and yellow cottages curves around the inlet. Most travellers photograph from the slipway, which is fine but flat; instead walk the Lump — the wooded peninsula just south, a 15-minute amble up signposted from the pier. From the Apothecary's Tower at its summit you get the coloured houses, the harbour and the Cuillin on the southern horizon in a single composition, with the morning light favouring the houses' eastern side.
Tip: The Lump is also where the Skye Highland Games are held on the first Wednesday of August — if your dates align, push your itinerary by a day to be in Portree for it. The Aros Centre on the south edge of town gets pushed hard by hotels; it is a tired audiovisual exhibition not worth your time.
Open in Google Maps →Drive west out of Portree on the A87 then the A863 along Loch Bracadale — about 45 minutes through some of the island's softer scenery — until you reach Colbost on the shore of Loch Dunvegan. The Three Chimneys is a low whitewashed crofter's cottage with the eponymous trio of chimneys, sat beside the Colbost folk museum. The lunch tasting (four courses, around €60) is an easier reservation than dinner and still delivers the signature dishes: seared Sconser scallops with cured Mangalitsa, and the Marmalade Pudding with Drambuie custard that has been on the menu since 1985.
Tip: Specifically request the right-hand dining room (they call it 'the byre') over the conservatory — it is the original cottage room with the open fire, and on a cool day they will light it. Be honest with them at booking about dietary needs; the kitchen flexes the menu around what you say, but only if you give them 48 hours' notice.
Open in Google Maps →From the Three Chimneys it is a 10-minute drive around the head of the loch to Dunvegan Castle, seat of Clan MacLeod for 800 years — the longest continuously inhabited castle in Scotland. Two and a half hours covers the castle interior (where the Fairy Flag is displayed in its glass case — the silk relic the clan carried into battle for a thousand years) and the surprisingly tender walled gardens that drop down through avenues of rhododendron to the loch. Do not skip the loch-side path: it leads to a hidden waterfall most visitors miss completely.
Tip: Skip the seal-watching boat the castle pier sells. The boats are overcrowded and the seals haul out on rocks you can clearly see from the shoreline path for free — bring binoculars instead. In the gun room, ask the warden to point out the Dunvegan Cup (medieval Irish drinking vessel) — it is on display but unlabelled and most visitors walk straight past it.
Open in Google Maps →Leave Dunvegan, drive south through Portree and east across the Skye Bridge — about 90 minutes — and Eilean Donan appears at the mouth of three lochs the moment you crest the rise. Park at the visitor centre and walk the arched stone footbridge to the castle islet; the interior takes 45 minutes, but the real prize is the angle from the lay-by 300 m east of the bridge — the postcard shot of the castle reflected in still water against the hills behind. By late afternoon the light is full-west onto the castle face and the visitor coaches have already left for the day.
Tip: Last interior admission is 30 minutes before closing — call ahead to confirm seasonal hours, which contract sharply from October. Most tour buses photograph from inside the castle car park; instead drive 300 m east past the bridge and pull into the lay-by signposted Carr Brae. From there the castle, the bridge and the three lochs line up perfectly.
Open in Google Maps →From Eilean Donan it is a 3-minute drive (or 15-minute walk along the loch) to the village of Dornie; Clachan sits on the main street with windows looking back across the water to the castle. After three days of fine dining this is exactly the right ending — a country pub kitchen run by people who fish their own creels, doing what they do well without pretending to be Loch Bay. Order the Loch Duich langoustines (whole, in the shell, around €28) and the slow-cooked haggis bon-bons (around €12); both come from within five miles of where you are sitting. Two courses around €45.
Tip: Reserve a window table specifically — at 21:00 in summer the castle floodlights come on and you will watch them from your plate. Pitfall warning: avoid the much-touristed Dornie hotel restaurant next door (same view, twice the price, visibly cut corners), and ignore any local who waves you into a 'paid' lay-by between Eilean Donan and the Skye Bridge — every lay-by on that stretch of the A87 is public and free, and the 'fee' is a scam.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Isle of Skye?
Most travelers enjoy Isle of Skye in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Isle of Skye?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Isle of Skye?
A practical starting point is about €180 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Isle of Skye?
A good first shortlist for Isle of Skye includes Old Man of Storr, The Quiraing, Neist Point Lighthouse.