Perched on a rocky promontory jutting into Loch Ness, Urquhart Castle (say "URK-ert") is the most photographed castle ruin in the Highlands — a ragged, lochside silhouette of the five-storey Grant Tower mirrored in Britain's most famous body of water. It's the third most-visited Historic Environment Scotland site after Edinburgh and Stirling castles, and the substance matches the setting: a thousand years of Pictish forts, St Columba, the Wars of Independence, Robert the Bruce, the MacDonald Lords of the Isles and Clan Grant, ending with the dramatic 1692 slighting that left it the ruin you see today.

One honest expectation-setter before you go: this is a ruin, not a furnished, intact castle. The Grant Tower is the most complete part; the rest is roofless stone shells, foundations and rubble, rounded out by a superb introductory film, an exhibition and a full-sized working trebuchet. Go in expecting atmosphere, history and one of Scotland's iconic views — and pre-book, because both entry and parking sell out in summer.

Quick Facts

Location: By Drumnadrochit, IV63 6XJ (A82)

From Inverness: ~13–17 miles, 25–35 min by car

Operator: Historic Environment Scotland

Adult ticket: £14 online / £16 walk-up

Opening: 9.30am daily (last entry 7.15pm Apr–Aug)

Typical visit: 1.5–2.5 hours

Pre-booking: entry slot and parking required

Dogs: assistance dogs only

Visitors: 442,761 in 2023

Closed: 25–26 December

Our top pick — cruise & castle from Inverness

From Inverness: Loch Ness Cruise and Urquhart Castle

The smartest way to do Urquhart without driving: a Loch Ness by Jacobite cruise that sails you down the loch, lands you at the castle for a proper visit, then cruises you back — with castle entry included. You get the iconic approach from the water plus real time on site, far more than a rushed coach stop allows. (Confirm exactly what's included for your date before booking.)

Loch Ness by Jacobite | From $76 per person | Castle entry included | Free cancellation | 4.7/5 from 2,327 reviews

Pоwered by GetYourGuide

A Thousand Years of Drama

The ruins of Urquhart Castle on the shore of Loch Ness

There's evidence of a Pictish fort here from the 6th century — the era of St Columba's celebrated encounter with a "water beast", the first written hint of the Loch Ness Monster lore that now defines the area. The castle proper was built up after the 1230s, captured by Edward I in 1296, recaptured by Robert the Bruce, repeatedly raided by the MacDonald Lords of the Isles, then granted to Clan Grant in 1509 — who built the iconic five-storey Grant Tower.

Its end was explosive. Garrisoned by government forces in 1689–92, it was deliberately blown up ("slighted") by the departing soldiers in 1692 to stop the Jacobites using it; a storm finished off much of the Grant Tower in 1715. What makes it a superstar today is the combination of that layered history with an unbeatable setting — and the fact that Urquhart Bay sits right beside Loch Ness's deepest trench, the single most-reported spot for Nessie "sightings".

What You'll See on Site

  • The visitor centre — built into the embankment with parking on the roof; gift shop, the Lochview Café, an exhibition with the medieval Urquhart Ewer, and a scale model of the castle as it was.
  • The introductory film (~8–10 min, six languages) — famous for its finale, where a curtain pulls back to reveal the real castle through a panoramic window.
  • The trebuchet — a full-sized working replica of the 13th-century siege engine, the photogenic centrepiece on the lawn.
  • The Gatehouse — partly intact, with murder holes and visible damage from the 1692 slighting.
  • The Grant Tower — the five-storey tower house, climbable via tight spiral stairs to a viewing platform with the killer Loch Ness panorama.
  • The baileys — the Nether Bailey's Great Hall and chapel foundations, and the Upper Bailey with the earliest motte at the south end.

The walk down from the centre to the ruin is a long, steep terraced path with steps or a gradual ramp — the most-complained-about feature, and the reason mobility scooters and wheelchairs can be borrowed from the shop.

Visiting Independently: Tickets, Parking & Hours

Urquhart is run by Historic Environment Scotland, and you must pre-book both an entry timeslot and a parking bay online — online prices are cheaper than walking up, and the small car park regularly shows "full" for those who haven't booked.

Ticket (2025/26) Online Walk-up
Adult (16–64)£14.00£16.00
Concession (65+)£11.00£13.00
Child (7–15)£8.50£9.50
Family (2 adults + 2 children)£40.50£46.00
HES membersFree entry

Parking is free for ticket-holders but must be booked with your slot. The audio guide (on your own phone) is included. If you're touring several castles, an HES membership (£60/year) or Explorer Pass quickly pays for itself.

Opening: daily from 9.30am, with last entry 7.15pm (Apr–Aug), 5pm (Sept), 4pm (Oct) and 3.30pm (Nov–Mar); closed 25–26 December.

Best time to beat the crowds: be there for the 9.30am opening to catch the empty first hour before coaches arrive (~10–10.30am), or come after 4.30pm once the tour groups leave — in midsummer the castle stays open till 8.15pm, which is also the best golden-hour light over the loch. Shoulder season (April–May, late September) is the sweet spot for weather, light and lower crowds. Note: dogs are not allowed (assistance dogs only).

Drive, Cruise, or Take a Coach Tour?

Three ways to reach the castle, depending on whether you have a car and how much time you want on site.

  Drive yourself Cruise + castle from Inverness Full-day coach from Edinburgh/Glasgow
What you get Your own pace, any time of day Loch Ness cruise plus a proper castle visit A Highland day — Glencoe, Loch Ness and the castle
Cost £14 HES ticket + fuel/parking From ~$76 (castle entry included) From ~$74–94 + castle/cruise add-on
Time on site As long as you like (1.5–2.5 hr typical) ~1 hour at the castle plus the cruise Often just 1–2 hours, and it can feel rushed
Best for Drivers who want to dodge the coach crush Non-drivers based in or near Inverness A one-day Highland taster with no car
Outlander Country

Make It a Day on Loch Ness

A quick myth-buster: Urquhart wasn't filmed in Outlander (the show used Doune, Midhope and Blackness) — but it's referenced in the novel and sits in the heart of "Outlander country". Pair it with Culloden Battlefield, the 4,000-year-old Clava Cairns (the inspiration for Craigh na Dun) and Beauly for a real one-day Highland circuit from Inverness. Other easy add-ons: the refurbished Loch Ness Centre in Drumnadrochit, a Loch Ness cruise, the Falls of Foyers, and the stunning Glen Affric.

More Ways to Visit

Best Tours Including Urquhart Castle

A hand-picked selection from the leading operators — Loch Ness cruises and day tours from Inverness, full-day trips from Edinburgh, and multi-day options. Note whether castle entry is included or payable separately on the day, and reconfirm details on GetYourGuide before booking.

Inverness: Loch Ness Cruise, Castle & Outlander Tour

A great-value full day from Inverness pairing a Loch Ness cruise and Urquhart Castle (entry included) with Outlander-country stops and a whisky theme.

Highland Explorer Tours | From $67 | Castle entry included | 4.7/5 from 734 reviews

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From Inverness: Loch Ness Small-Group Day Tour with Cruise

Rabbie's well-loved small-group day — a relaxed Loch Ness circuit with a cruise and Urquhart Castle entry included, in a smaller vehicle than the big coaches.

Rabbie's Small Group Tours | From $106 | Castle entry included | 4.8/5

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From Inverness: Loch Ness and the Highlands Day Trip

A top-rated, efficient Inverness day trip to Loch Ness and the surrounding Highlands. Castle entry is an optional extra you add on the day.

Timberbush Tours | From $74 | Castle entry optional | 4.8/5 from 682 reviews

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Edinburgh: Loch Ness, Glencoe & the Scottish Highlands Tour

The most-reviewed option in our data — a classic full-day Edinburgh run through Glencoe to Loch Ness, with the castle and cruise available as an add-on.

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

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Edinburgh: Loch Ness, Glencoe, Coos & the Highlands Day Tour

A friendly, well-reviewed Edinburgh day trip that adds Highland-cow photo stops to the Glencoe-and-Loch-Ness route; castle entry optional on the day.

Highland Experience Tours | From $74 | Castle entry optional | 4.6/5 from 2,639 reviews

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Loch Ness & Highlands Adventure

The budget entry point from Edinburgh — a highly rated, low-priced Loch Ness and Highlands day with a stop at the castle.

NMC Tours | From $55 | 4.8/5

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Inverness: Glenfinnan Viaduct, Mallaig & Loch Ness Day Tour

Combine two Highland icons — the Glenfinnan Viaduct and Loch Ness — on one top-rated Inverness day, with a stop at the castle.

Timberbush Tours | From $88 | 4.8/5 from 487 reviews

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From Edinburgh: 2-Day Loch Ness, Inverness & Highlands Tour

Give the Highlands room to breathe — an overnight from Edinburgh that reaches Loch Ness and Inverness without the punishing single-day dash. Castle stop included.

Timberbush Tours | From $172 | 4.9/5 from 201 reviews

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

The best multi-day upgrade — three days across Skye, the Highlands and Loch Ness, so the castle is a relaxed stop rather than a rushed coach halt.

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

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Urquhart Castle FAQ

The questions visitors ask most before they go.

Is Urquhart Castle worth visiting? +
Yes, if you go in expecting a dramatic ruin with a knockout Loch Ness setting, 1,000 years of history and superb views — not a fully restored castle. It rates around 4.5/5 on TripAdvisor. The common gripes are crowds, the price for "just a ruin", and the coach-tour bottleneck between roughly 11am and 3pm — all avoidable by arriving at opening or after 4.30pm.
How much are tickets, and do I need to book ahead? +
Historic Environment Scotland prices are £14 adult / £11 concession / £8.50 child online (£2 more walking up), with families £28–£48; HES members are free. You must pre-book both your entry timeslot and a parking bay online — the car park regularly shows "full" for those who haven't, and in peak summer slots can sell out a week ahead.
How long do you need at Urquhart Castle? +
HES suggests 1–2 hours; independent visitors usually find 1.5–2.5 hours comfortable for the centre, film, ruins, the Grant Tower climb, café and photos. Coach-tour visitors typically get only 60–90 minutes, which most reviewers say feels rushed.
How do you get there from Inverness? +
By car it's about 13–17 miles (25–35 minutes) on the A82. By bus, Scottish Citylink 919 stops in the castle car park (~30 min from Inverness Bus Station). By boat, Loch Ness by Jacobite cruises run from Clansman Harbour, 9 miles south of Inverness. The nearest train station is Inverness.
Can you see the Loch Ness Monster from the castle? +
Urquhart Bay sits beside Loch Ness's deepest trench (around 230 m / 755 ft) and is the single most-reported area for "sightings", including the disputed 1955 McNab photograph taken from near the castle tower. More sightings are claimed here than anywhere else on the loch — but nothing has ever been proven.
Was it in Outlander or Harry Potter? +
No — neither show filmed at Urquhart. Outlander used Doune, Midhope, Blackness, Falkland and Culross; Harry Potter's Hogwarts Express scenes are on the Jacobite Steam Train over the Glenfinnan Viaduct. Urquhart is referenced in the Outlander novel and sits in "Outlander country" near Culloden and Clava Cairns, but it isn't a TV filming location.
Can you climb the Grant Tower? +
Yes — the Grant Tower has tight spiral stairs up to an upper viewing platform with the iconic Loch Ness panorama. It's steep and narrow, with handrails on one side, and is not wheelchair accessible.
Is it dog-friendly and accessible? +
Dogs are not allowed (assistance dogs only). The visitor centre, café and film theatre are fully accessible; the path to the castle is a long, steep ramp, and mobility scooters and wheelchairs can be borrowed from the shop. The Grant Tower interior and Great Hall vaults are not reachable for most wheelchair users.

See Urquhart Castle the Smart Way

Skip the parking scramble and arrive from the water — our top-pick Loch Ness cruise from Inverness lands you at the castle with entry included.