Salisbury
Royaume-Uni · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
Take a £25 taxi from Salisbury station up to the Larkhill end of Byway 12 — the public chalk track that brushes the north flank of the stones. At sunrise the plain glows pink, skylarks lift off the grass, and the 5,000-year-old sarsens throw long shadows toward you — you'll have it almost to yourself, four hours before the visitor centre opens and the coaches arrive. Stay the full 90 minutes; the light changes by the minute and every shift of angle gives a different photograph.
Tip: May sunrise is 05:15 — arrive by 05:00. Walk 500 m down the chalk byway from the parking layby and the stones are only ~250 m from the public right-of-way fence (closer than the audio-tour loop). Don't pay the £23.50 visitor-centre fee for a one-day visit — the byway view is closer than the official walking path. Wear waterproof boots; the chalk is sticky and cold after dew.
Open in Google Maps →From the stones, follow the bridleway south along the Stonehenge Avenue — roughly 10 km of empty footpath cutting through chalk farmland, Bronze Age barrow fields, and the broad Avon valley. Old Sarum is the original Salisbury: Iron Age hillfort, Norman castle, and the first cathedral — abandoned in 1219 when the bishops walked downhill and founded the new one. Climb the outer rampart and look south: the new cathedral's spire pierces the horizon exactly 3 km away, in a clean line drawn by an 800-year-old grudge.
Tip: The outer earthworks and ramparts are free; entrance to the inner Norman motte costs £7.20 (English Heritage). Skip the motte — the photographic shot is from the southeast corner of the outer bailey, where Stonehenge Plain to the north and Salisbury spire to the south sit in the same panorama. Refill water at the small kiosk by the car park — there's nowhere else until the cathedral close.
Open in Google Maps →Descend Old Sarum's outer bailey and walk Castle Road south for ~45 minutes — the spire grows from a needle to Britain's tallest (123 m) as you enter the medieval city. Approach the Close through the 14th-century High Street Gate, where the spire appears to rise from the arch itself as you pass beneath. Circle the cathedral exterior clockwise on the largest cathedral close in Britain (32 hectares) — the lawn on the north side gives the classic vertical-spire photograph the building was designed for.
Tip: Enter the Close via the High Street North Gate, not the South Gate — it's the only approach where the spire frames inside the arch. The cathedral interior is free (suggested £10 donation), and the Chapter House holds one of four surviving 1215 Magna Carta originals — if you must dip inside, the Magna Carta queue is shortest 12:00-12:30 when tour groups break for lunch. Cloister yew tree is the photographer's spot; tripods need a £5 permit but handheld is free.
Open in Google Maps →Exit the Close through the High Street Gate and turn right into Butcher Row — 3 minutes on foot, past the medieval Poultry Cross. Reeve has been raising Wiltshire pasties on this row since 1929 — the steak-and-Stilton (£4.80) is the order, paired with a slice of their lardy cake (£2.20) for the climb back into the meadows. Eat it standing in Market Square by the Poultry Cross on a stone bench — that's the local move and the bench dates from 1335.
Tip: Reeve closes at 16:30 sharp and the steak pasties sell out by 14:00 on weekends — go before 13:30 if it's Saturday. Skip the Stonehenge-shaped shortbread (a tourist gimmick) for the lardy cake — it's a 200-year-old Wiltshire recipe you can't get anywhere outside the county. They prefer cash for under £5 — bring coins.
Open in Google Maps →Walk west across the Close lawn, exit through Bishop's Walk Gate, cross Crane Bridge and pick up the Town Path on the south side — a raised causeway running across the water meadows toward Harnham. About 250 m west of the bridge is the exact spot John Constable painted the cathedral from in 1831 — the Avon in the foreground, dairy cattle in the meadow, the spire framed by elms. Linger here at 16:00 in summer: the sun is southwest, golden hour hits the west face of the spire, and the cows are still exactly where Constable put them.
Tip: The exact Constable viewpoint is marked by a small stone plaque on the south edge of the path, 250 m west of Crane Bridge — most tourists miss it entirely and shoot from the wrong angle. Wear waterproof shoes; even in summer the path floods after rain and the meadow grass stays sodden. The cattle are dairy and friendly but never get between a cow and her calf — they will charge.
Open in Google Maps →The Mill stands at the very end of Town Path, straddling the Nadder where it joins the Avon — a 12th-century fulling mill turned riverside restaurant, with the millrace still rushing audibly under the dining-room floor. Order the wild Wiltshire trout (£24, line-caught from the same river running below your table) or the slow-cooked Wiltshire lamb shoulder (£28); both are sourced within 20 km of your plate. Average £40-50 per person with a glass of wine — and the spire view from the riverside window table at dusk is the picture you'll send home.
Tip: Reserve the riverside window table two weeks ahead — they fill nightly in summer and the inland tables don't see the spire. Order the trout (caught that morning by the kitchen) rather than the beef (sourced from further afield). Pitfall: avoid the chain restaurants clustered on High Street directly outside the North Gate — they coast on tourist traffic and serve microwaved food at premium prices. Locals walk the extra 10 minutes to Old Mill, or in town to Anokaa (Indian, Catherine Street) and Allium (modern British, Sarum College). Last train back to London Waterloo is 21:48 from Salisbury station — a 12-minute uphill walk; budget 20.
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in Salisbury?
Most travelers enjoy Salisbury in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit Salisbury?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for Salisbury?
A practical starting point is about €110 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in Salisbury?
A good first shortlist for Salisbury includes Stonehenge (Sunrise from Byway 12), Old Sarum.