You can stop the car, step out, and stand inside the picture: this is Glencoe. Scotland's most dramatic glen is a 10-mile, U-shaped glacial valley flanked by the Three Sisters, Buachaille Etive Mòr and the knife-edge Aonach Eagach ridge — and almost all of it can be seen for free from the A82, one of the classic Highland journeys. Towering mountains rise straight out of the roadside; even if you never leave your car, the views alone make it unforgettable.

Glencoe is famous for three intertwined reasons: the brooding 1692 Massacre, when 38 MacDonalds were killed by government soldiers they had hosted for twelve days; a roll call of film fame from Skyfall and Harry Potter to the Outlander opening credits; and world-class hiking, photography and winter climbing. It sits squarely on the A82 between Loch Lomond and Fort William, so it's also the single most-combined stop on a Highland day tour.

Quick Facts

Where: Lochaber, on the A82

The glen: a ~10-mile glacial valley

Cost: free to drive & view

NTS Visitor Centre: £4 per car (members free)

From Glasgow: ~2.5 hr (Fort William 30 min)

From Edinburgh: ~3–3.5 hr

Headline stop: Three Sisters viewpoint (free lay-by)

Time needed: half a day minimum, 2 nights ideal

Weather: very wet (~2,081 mm/year) — pack waterproofs

Dogs: very dog-friendly (on lead)

Our top pick — Glencoe & the Highlands from Edinburgh

From Edinburgh: Loch Ness, Glencoe & Scottish Highlands Tour

No car or no licence? Glencoe is the single best stop on a Highlands day tour, and this is one of the most-booked of them all — a long, well-run day from Edinburgh through Glencoe to Loch Ness with the classic photo stops and friendly guides. The easiest way to stand beneath the Three Sisters without driving the A82 yourself.

The Hairy Coo | From $75 per person | Free cancellation | 4.7/5 from 11,913 reviews

Pоwered by GetYourGuide

The Landscape & the Films

The dramatic mountains of Glencoe rising above the glen

The headline view is the Three Sisters — three towering ridges of the Bidean nam Bian massif rising straight out of the A82, reachable from a free roadside lay-by with no walking required. At the eastern entrance, the pyramidal Buachaille Etive Mòr with the tiny white Lagangarbh cottage at its foot is often called Scotland's most photographed mountain, especially at sunrise. The whole glen is the eroded remains of a 420-million-year-old collapsed supervolcano, later carved into its U-shape by Ice Age glaciers.

Glencoe's film roll call is real but worth pinning down. Skyfall (2012) used the A82 below the Buachaille and the single-track Glen Etive road for the Bond-and-M Aston Martin scene; Harry Potter built Hagrid's Hut above Torren Lochan opposite the Clachaig Inn; the Outlander opening credits are unmistakably Glen Coe; and Monty Python's "Bridge of Death" was filmed at the Meeting of Three Waters. Two honest expectation-setters: the Hagrid's Hut sets were removed in 2003 (only the hillside remains), and the "Skyfall Lodge" house was a set built in Surrey.

The Massacre of Glencoe, 1692

The glen's emotional weight comes from one dawn. After the 1689 Jacobite rising, William III demanded that clan chiefs swear allegiance by 1 January 1692; Alasdair MacIain of the MacDonalds was five days late through no fault of his own, and the government chose to make an example of his clan. About 120 soldiers under Captain Robert Campbell of Glenlyon were billeted with the MacDonalds as guests for some twelve days.

At dawn on 13 February 1692, under written orders to "put all to the sword under seventy," they turned on their hosts. The National Trust for Scotland records that 38 MacDonalds were murdered outright, including the chief, with many more dying of exposure in the snow as their homes burned. It became known as "murder under trust." Crucially, this was a government atrocity, not a clan feud — only about a dozen of the soldiers were actually Campbells; the "no Campbells" folklore is amplified by the famous tongue-in-cheek sign at the Clachaig Inn. Read the full massacre story →

Drive the Glen: The Key Stops

Independent travellers in their own car get vastly more out of Glencoe than coach visitors. Heading west on the A82, the stops that matter:

  • Kingshouse Hotel — historic coaching inn on Rannoch Moor's edge, where red deer wander right up to the car park (please don't feed them).
  • Buachaille Etive Mòr & Lagangarbh — the photographer's hero shot, best at sunrise.
  • Glen Etive ("the Skyfall road") — a 12.5-mile single-track detour to the Bond viewpoint and river pools (drive responsibly; see below).
  • Three Sisters viewpoint — the headline stop and the trailhead for the Lost Valley; the large Coire Gabhail lay-by is free, the smaller one is now reserved for coaches.
  • Meeting of Three Waters — waterfalls and pools beside the lay-by, and Monty Python's "Bridge of Death" gorge.
  • NTS Glencoe Visitor Centre — orientation, the Glen Revealed film, the Highland Coo Café and a reconstructed 17th-century turf house (£4 per car).
  • Glencoe Lochan & the village — easy family forest trails, the Folk Museum and the Massacre Monument at the western end.

Parking tip: the Three Sisters lay-bys and Glen Etive fill by 9am in July–August. The A82 is a Clearway, so illegal verge parking is enforced — arrive early or come by tour.

The Walks, by Difficulty

Easy: the Glencoe Lochan loops, Signal Rock through birch woodland, and the Visitor Centre's Orbital Path are all flat-ish, family-friendly and need no mountain experience.

Moderate: the Lost Valley (Coire Gabhail) is the signature half-day — about 2.5 miles return over 3–4 hours from the Three Sisters car park, with a river crossing and some easy scrambling. It's intensely dramatic but rough; boots and waterproofs are essential and it shouldn't be underestimated. The Pap of Glencoe rewards a steep, boggy climb with one of the West Highlands' best summit panoramas.

Serious: the Buachaille, Bidean nam Bian and the Aonach Eagach ridge are for experienced scramblers only. The Aonach Eagach is a committing Grade 2 scramble with no safe escape — three people died there in August 2023 — so hire a guide if you're unsure, and always check the mountain weather before going high.

By Car or By Tour?

How you visit shapes how much of Glencoe you actually get. Here's the trade-off.

  Drive the glen yourself Guided day tour Multi-day Highlands tour
What you get Every lay-by, a walk, sunrise/sunset, your own pace The Three Sisters photo stop plus Loch Ness and the Highlands Glencoe en route to Skye, Loch Ness and more over 2–3 days
Cost Free (just fuel; £4 visitor-centre parking) From ~$61–94 for a day From ~$240+
Time at Glencoe As long as you like Usually 1–2 hours of photo stops A stop on day one, sometimes with a short walk
Best for Photographers, walkers and flexible travellers No-car day-trippers from Edinburgh or Glasgow Travellers pairing Glencoe with Skye and the north
Visit Responsibly

Glen Etive & Leave No Trace

Glen Etive has been under real pressure since Skyfall — littering, fly-tipping and abandoned tents. If you drive it, remember it's single-track with passing places, no overnight parking on the road, and Leave No Trace is essential: take everything out, no fires, and pitch away from buildings if you wild-camp (the National Trust for Scotland asks people not to wild-camp at the Lost Valley). It's a small thing that keeps one of Scotland's most beautiful side-roads worth the detour.

More Ways to Visit

Best Tours Through Glencoe

A hand-picked selection from the leading operators — day trips from Edinburgh and Glasgow, options that include a scenic walk in the glen, and a multi-day Skye tour. Prices are per person; reconfirm details on GetYourGuide before booking.

Edinburgh: Loch Ness, Glencoe & the Scottish Highlands Tour

The most-reviewed tour in our entire dataset — a proven full-day Edinburgh run through Glencoe to Loch Ness, with the classic photo stops.

Timberbush Tours | From $94 | 4.6/5 from 19,072 reviews

Check availability

Edinburgh: Loch Ness, Glencoe & The Highlands

The best-value Edinburgh option — a top-rated full day taking in Glencoe and Loch Ness at the lowest starting price in our list.

Stewart.Tours | From $61 | 4.8/5 from 2,039 reviews

Check availability

From Glasgow: Oban, Glencoe, Highland Lochs & Castles Tour

Rabbie's top-rated Glasgow small-group day — Glencoe paired with Oban, west-coast lochs and castles, in a smaller vehicle than the big coaches.

Rabbie's Small Group Tours | From $79 | 4.9/5 from 2,385 reviews

Check availability

Glasgow: Glencoe, Scenic Walk & Scottish Highlands Tour

For travellers who want to actually get out and walk — a Glencoe-focused day from Glasgow with a guided scenic walk in the glen rather than just a photo stop.

Experience Scotland's Wild | From $114 | 4.9/5

Check availability

From Glasgow: Loch Ness, Glencoe and the Highlands Tour

The best-reviewed Glasgow Loch Ness day — Loch Lomond, Glencoe and Loch Ness on one long day for travellers starting in the west.

Timberbush Tours | From $86 | 4.6/5 from 1,844 reviews

Check availability

From Edinburgh: Glencoe & the Glenfinnan Viaduct Day Tour

Pairs Glencoe with the Harry Potter viaduct at Glenfinnan — a Rabbie's small-group day for travellers chasing the West Highlands' two most cinematic sights.

Rabbie's Small Group Tours | From $85 | Free cancellation

Check availability

Edinburgh: Loch Ness, Scenic Walk, Glencoe & Whisky Day Tour

A fuller Edinburgh day that adds a guided scenic walk and a whisky stop to the Glencoe-and-Loch-Ness route — more time on your feet, less on the coach.

Experience Scotland's Wild | From $121 | 4.8/5 from 568 reviews

Check availability

Glasgow: Loch Ness, Glencoe and Highlands Tour with Cruise

Rabbie's flagship Glasgow day with a Loch Ness cruise built in, stopping in Glencoe along the way — a smaller-group alternative to the big operators.

Rabbie's Small Group Tours | From $132 | Cruise included | 4.8/5 from 1,817 reviews

Check availability

From Edinburgh: 3-Day Isle of Skye & The Highlands Tour

The best multi-day upgrade — three days across Skye, the Highlands and Loch Ness, with Glencoe as a relaxed stop on day one rather than a rushed photo halt.

The Hairy Coo | From $242 | 4.8/5 from 2,642 reviews

Check availability

Glencoe FAQ

The questions visitors ask most before they go.

Why is Glencoe famous? +
For three things at once: the 1692 Massacre of Glencoe; the dramatic landscape — a 10-mile glacial valley carved through the remains of a 420-million-year-old collapsed supervolcano; and a roll call of film fame from Skyfall and Harry Potter to the Outlander opening credits and Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
What happened at the Massacre of Glencoe? +
On 13 February 1692, government soldiers under Captain Robert Campbell of Glenlyon — billeted with the MacDonalds as guests for about 12 days — turned on their hosts at dawn under orders to "put all to the sword under seventy." The National Trust for Scotland records 38 MacDonalds murdered outright, including the chief, with many more dying of exposure. It's known as "murder under trust," and it was a government atrocity, not a clan feud — only about a dozen of the soldiers were Campbells.
Can you drive through Glencoe, and is it free? +
Yes — the A82 runs the entire 10-mile glen with no charge, and parking at the major lay-bys (including the Three Sisters) is free. Only the National Trust for Scotland Visitor Centre car park charges (£4 per car, free for members). Almost all the headline views are at roadside lay-bys, so you can experience Glencoe without walking.
Where was Skyfall filmed, and where is the James Bond road? +
The Skyfall driving sequence is on the A82 below Buachaille Etive Mòr, and the Bond-and-M Aston Martin scene is about halfway down the single-track Glen Etive road, which turns off the A82 just east of the Three Sisters (12.5 miles to Loch Etive). The "Skyfall Lodge" house itself was a set built in Surrey — only the landscape is real.
Where is Hagrid's Hut? +
The Hagrid's Hut set was built on the hillside above Torren Lochan, opposite the Clachaig Inn, in 2003. The sets were all removed that same year, so there's nothing physical to see — only the recognisable hillside view, a 5–10 minute walk uphill from the inn.
Is Glencoe in Outlander or Braveheart? +
Glencoe appears in the Outlander opening credits of every episode, but isn't a filming location for actual scenes. Braveheart's main Scottish filming was in neighbouring Glen Nevis, with Glencoe and Loch Leven providing sweeping landscape backdrop shots.
How hard is the Lost Valley walk? Can beginners hike here? +
The Lost Valley is moderate but rough — about 2.5 miles return over 3–4 hours, with a river crossing and some easy scrambling; boots and waterproofs are essential and it's not a casual stroll. Beginners are better served by the easy Glencoe Lochan loops, Signal Rock, or the Visitor Centre's Orbital Path. Avoid the Munros and the Aonach Eagach unless experienced.
How long do you need, and when is the best time to visit? +
Allow at least half a day to drive the glen and stop at the key lay-bys; two nights is ideal to add a walk. May, June and September give the best mix of long days, fewer midges and lighter crowds; July–August is busiest with parking full early; October brings dramatic autumn colour. Glencoe is one of Britain's wettest places (~2,081 mm of rain a year), so bring waterproofs even in summer. For a full trip-planning walkthrough, see our complete guide to Glencoe.

Stand Beneath the Three Sisters

No car? Glencoe is the best stop on a Highlands day tour — our top pick from Edinburgh brings you through the glen and on to Loch Ness, with no driving required.