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Ardnamurchan: A Guide to Britain’s Most Westerly Mainland

Let me introduce you to the Ardnamurchan Peninsula, one of Scotland’s true hidden gems. Here are my things to do in Ardnamurchan.

trip to Scotland - things to do Ardnamurchan

Ardnamurchan is one of those places I keep going back to.

The most westerly point of mainland Britain, beyond the road to Skye, beyond the Corran ferry, beyond all the big-ticket Highland names. 50 square miles of single-track road, white sand beaches, two whisky distilleries, a lighthouse at the end of the world, and a population of about 2,000. You will sometimes drive for 30 minutes without seeing another car.

It is wild, slow, and properly remote. I love it.

Don’t miss Ardnamurchan

  • Walk to Sanna Bay from Portuarik – the Ardnamurchan Peninsula might have a contender for the very best beaches in Scotland and the walk around the headland to Sanna Bay is one of my favourite coastal walks in Scotland.
  • Visit Castle Tioram – pronounced “Cheerum”, Tioram Castle might now be in ruins but its position on Eilean Tioram (the Dry Island) was a formidable position to control.
  • Drive to Ardnamurchan Point and Ardnamurchan Lighthouse – the most westerly point of mainland Britain to spot dolphins and whales off the coast.
  • Visit the distilleries – the West Highland Peninsulas have two whisky distilleries – Ardnamurchan and Nc’nean which you can tour.
  • Climb up Ben Hiant – the Ardnamurchan Peninsula’s highest mountain Ben Hiant might be just 528m high but with views across the whole peninsula, it is well worth your time.
  • Climb Ben Resipol – Sunart’s highest hill is the Corbett, Ben Resipol, standing 845m above the peninsula and has stunning views.
  • View the Small Isles – Eigg, Rum and Skye – on a clear day, the dramatic An Sgurr and the Rum Cuillin are clearly visible from Ardnamurchan
  • Watch the Jacobite Express and visit Loch Shiel – from Spring to Autumn, the Jacobite Steam Train crosses the Glenfinnan Viaduct – a must for Harry Potter fans!
Ardnamurchan Glenborrowdale

How long do you need

Ardnamurchan is small but slow. The peninsula is only 50 miles end to end but the road is single-track for most of it, and you will not be driving fast.

  • A long weekend (3 nights) is the minimum and gets you Sanna, the lighthouse, one distillery, and a hill walk if the weather plays.
  • 5 nights is the sweet spot. Time to climb Ben Hiant, both distilleries, both beaches, Castle Tioram, and a slow drive without rushing.
  • A week lets you settle in properly, with day trips to Mull on the Kilchoan ferry and time to do the Singing Sands walk from Glenuig.

The biggest mistake first-time visitors make is treating Ardnamurchan as a day trip from Fort William. It can be done that way, but you’ll spend most of the day driving and miss the point.

When to go

May, June and September are best. Long days, drier weather, fewer midges (though Ardnamurchan is a midge hotspot in the wrong conditions, so bring repellent regardless).

July and August get busier than you’d expect, particularly around Sanna in school holidays. Book accommodation well ahead.

October is excellent for autumn colour and quieter roads. Many of the smaller cafes start closing for winter from late October onwards.

Winter is dramatic but limiting. The Corran ferry runs but has weather cancellations. Most accommodation outside Strontian closes. The single-track roads with no passing-place visibility in heavy rain are no fun in the dark.

things to do Ardnamurchan

What to do on Ardnamurchan

Walk to Sanna Bay from Portuairk

Sanna Bay at the very end of the peninsula is genuinely one of the best beaches in Scotland. White sand, turquoise water, views straight across to Rum, Eigg and Muck on a clear day.

You can drive to Sanna directly, but my favourite way is to walk in from the hamlet of Portuairk along the coastal path. Portuairk holds the claim to being the most westerly settlement on the British mainland and the crofting cottages perch above the rocks in spectacular positions. Walking from there means you arrive at Sanna high above the bay, where the view across the beach reveals sea so blue it needs no editing.

The path leads down onto the white sand, and from there you can wander as far along the bay as your tide allows.

Walk Portuairk to Sanna Bay.

Drive to Ardnamurchan Lighthouse

The most westerly point of mainland Britain. To get here you tackle 30 miles of single-track road from Strontian, including the UK’s most westerly traffic lights (yes, really, on a single-track section near the lighthouse).

The lighthouse itself was designed by Alan Stevenson (of the Stevenson lighthouse family) and opened in 1849. Built from Mull granite quarried on the island of Erraid, the same stone Robert Louis Stevenson used as the setting for Kidnapped.

You can climb the 152 steps and two ladders to the top for the view, or stay below at the foghorn and look out across to Coll on a clear day. The exhibition centre and Stables Coffee Shop are open from April 1st to October 31st, 10am to 5pm. Book the tower tour ahead in summer.

Visit Ardnamurchan Distillery

Opened in 2014 at Glenbeg, Ardnamurchan Distillery is the most westerly distillery in Scotland. Independent, family-owned (by Adelphi), and producing genuinely distinctive single malt.

The first bottling was released in 2020 and it has been winning awards ever since. Tours run daily and include a dram. If you’re a whisky person, this is a properly different experience from the bigger Speyside distilleries: small, hands-on, and a long way from anywhere.

Adelphi also produce a rare independent bottling selection, so you might find something interesting on the tasting flight.

Visit Nc’Nean Distillery

Nc’Nean opened in 2017 and is on the Drimnin Estate on the Morvern peninsula (technically not Ardnamurchan but easily combined as part of the same trip). The first organic whisky distillery in the UK, and the first to reach net zero in production.

Female-founded by Annabel Thomas. The bottles are beautiful, the whisky is excellent, and the visit feels like nothing else in Scotland. Tours run weekdays only — closed weekends. Worth booking ahead.

Castle Tioram Ardnamurchan

Visit Castle Tioram

At the village of Salen, take the road north to Loch Moidart for Castle Tioram (pronounced Cheerum). Once owned by the MacDonalds of Clanranald, the ruined castle sits on Eilean Tioram, the Dry Island, a tidal island only accessible at low tide. A formidable defensive position.

Walk from the castle along the Silver Circuit, a 19th century estate path named after a hoard of silver coins found during construction. The 2 to 3 hour walk has views across to Eigg, Muck and Coll on a clear day.

Check the Loch Moidart tide times before you go — you can get cut off on the island at high tide.

Walk the Silver Circuit.

Ardnamurchan Ben Resipol

Climb Ben Hiant

Ardnamurchan’s highest mountain, at 528 metres, is small by Highland standards but punches well above its weight on views. From the summit you see the entire peninsula, the Small Isles, and on a clear day the Cuillin on Skye.

A 4 to 5 hour walk in total. Steep in places but no scrambling. The path starts at a layby on the B8007 east of Kilchoan.

For a much shorter alternative, you can admire Ben Hiant from Camas nan Geall beach a few miles east, which has its own neolithic cairn and a Bronze Age standing stone.

Climb Ben Hiant.

Climb Ben Resipol

Sunart’s highest hill, the Corbett Ben Resipol (845m), takes around 5 to 6 hours. Steeper, longer, and more rewarding than Ben Hiant. The summit views down Loch Sunart to Glenborrowdale and out to the islands are some of the best in the West Highlands.

Climb Ben Resipol.

Walk to the Singing Sands from Glenuig

A lesser-known walk that’s genuinely magical. From the tiny village of Glenuig, a coastal path leads to Camas an Lighe, the Singing Sands, a beach where the dry sand actually squeaks under your feet on a hot day.

3 miles each way, easy walking, perfect for a half day. The Glenuig Inn does excellent lunch on your return.

things to do Ardnamurchan

View the Small Isles

The Ardnamurchan Peninsula sits in the middle of the Lochaber Geopark, with rocks dating to 60 million years ago. Across the water, the small isles of Eigg, Rum and Muck are even more dramatic.

On a clear day, the dramatic An Sgùrr on Eigg and the Rum Cuillin are clearly visible from anywhere along the south coast of the peninsula. From Sanna you can see across to Skye.

If you want to go to the islands, the small CalMac ferry to the Small Isles runs from Mallaig, not Ardnamurchan. Day trips work to Eigg and Rum in summer.


Honest things to know before you go

1. Single-track roads. The A861 from Strontian to Salen is two-lane. Everything west of Salen is single-track for 30+ miles. Use passing places. Pull in for oncoming traffic. Plan for 25 mph average, not 50.

2. Fuel. There is petrol at Salen and at Kilchoan. That is it on the peninsula. Fill up before you cross at Corran. The Kilchoan pump is sometimes closed.

3. Cell signal. Patchy at best, non-existent in places. Don’t rely on Google Maps loading on the move. Download offline maps before you go.

4. The Corran Ferry. The fastest route in. Check the Corran ferry timetable before you set off — it stops running around 9.30pm and there are weather cancellations in winter.

5. Wildlife. Pine martens, otters, golden eagles, sea eagles, deer everywhere. Drive slowly at dusk and dawn.

Ardnamurchan Ferry

How to get there

The journey is part of the experience. There are three ways in:

The Corran Ferry from Onich is the fastest route from Fort William or the south. The five-minute crossing of Loch Linnhe runs every 20 minutes from early morning until 9.30pm. £11 single for a car. Cash or card. From the ferry, you’re in Ardgour and the road to Strontian and Ardnamurchan opens out in front of you.

The Road to the Isles (A830) from Glenfinnan turns south at Lochailort onto the A861. A long, winding, properly scenic drive that takes about 2 hours from Fort William but covers some of the best Highland scenery. Worth it if you have time.

The CalMac ferry from Mull runs from Tobermory to Kilchoan. Useful if you’re combining Ardnamurchan with a Mull trip. Book the ferry.

Ardnamurchan

Where to stay

The Glenuig Inn on Moidart is my top recommendation. The tiny village of Glenuig has rocky inlets, ever-changing light, and far more sheep than people. The inn perches right on the bay, serves great food, and the rooms are comfortable. Free overnight motorhome parking in the pub car park if you’re touring. Book directly.

The Kilchoan Hotel is the only proper hotel at the western end of the peninsula. Owned by the Ardnamurchan Estate, good for lunch, and convenient for the Mull ferry. Book online.

Rudh Dubh is a self-catering crofting cottage perched above Sanna Bay. Genuinely the most remote private accommodation on the peninsula. Book directly at rudhdubh.com.

For camping: Ardnamurchan Campsite at Kilchoan has the best location. Resipole Farm Holiday Park is family-friendly with hookups. Sunart Camping is the wild option.

Further afield: Fort William is a reasonable base for a day trip onto the peninsula, though you’ll be in the car for hours.

Read more: Highland accommodation guides and slow holidays in Scotland.


FAQs

Is Ardnamurchan worth visiting?

Yes, if you like remote places, single-track roads and big skies. Ardnamurchan is genuinely the most westerly point of mainland Britain and feels properly off the map. It’s not a quick stop — you need at least 3 nights to do it justice — but it’s one of the most rewarding parts of the West Highlands.

How long do you need on Ardnamurchan?

Three to five nights is the sweet spot. A long weekend gets you Sanna, the lighthouse, one distillery and a hill walk. Five nights gives you both distilleries, both beaches, Castle Tioram, Ben Hiant, and time to sit and breathe. Don’t try to do Ardnamurchan as a day trip from Fort William.

Can you drive to Ardnamurchan?

Yes, but it takes longer than you think. Most visitors arrive via the Corran Ferry from Onich (a five-minute crossing of Loch Linnhe), or via the long Road to the Isles from Fort William through Glenfinnan and Lochailort. From the ferry, allow two hours to drive west to Kilchoan or Sanna. The roads are mostly single-track.

Is there phone signal on Ardnamurchan?

Patchy. Reliable around Strontian, Salen and Kilchoan, weak or non-existent in many other parts of the peninsula. Download offline maps before you arrive. Most accommodation has WiFi.

What is the most westerly point of mainland Britain?

Ardnamurchan Point on the Ardnamurchan Peninsula in Scotland is the most westerly point of mainland Britain, marked by the Ardnamurchan Lighthouse which opened in 1849. It is more westerly than Cornwall’s Land’s End, despite Land’s End often being claimed as such.

Are there midges on Ardnamurchan?

Yes, particularly between late May and early September. The peninsula’s mix of damp, sheltered inlets and dense vegetation is classic midge habitat. Bring Smidge or Skin So Soft repellent. Avoid still, cloudy evenings near water and in low-lying areas. East coast wind keeps them away.


Love, from Scotland x



31 responses to “Ardnamurchan: A Guide to Britain’s Most Westerly Mainland”

  1. Mary Mayfield avatar

    This is one of those areas that I love but haven’t been to for years (mainly because of the out-on-a-limb location). I must admit we’ve always taken the lazy way of driving to Sanna beach rather than walking, but we did climb all the steps in the lighthouse where you we told we might spot whales! We didn’t but the views are fantastic. I’d also recommend the visitor centre near Glenborrodale for wet weather. Plenty to occupy young children, including a crawl-through wild cats’ den. (As I say though, it’s some years since we’ve been and I’m assuming it’s still open)

  2. melchaddphotos avatar
    melchaddphotos

    This was already on my ever growing list of places to visit and now I want to go NOW! Hahaha

    Sounds stunning and you’ve taken some really lovely photos too. Always a bonus when you get a furry travel companion too.

  3. ~ Dawn-Marie ~ avatar

    Beautiful photos! I miss it there and need to go back soon. It’s a wild remote paradise! Did you stay at the Rudh Dubh? What a view to wake up to 🙂

  4. Stacey avatar

    Oh wow those white sand beaches could rival Barbados’ ones. I can’t believe that is Scotland. Absolutely stunning scenery

  5. CreativeTravelGuide (@CTGTravelGuide) avatar

    I live in the south of England and every year I tell myself I will go to Scotland. These pictures contribute to my yearly promise that I will make true in 2017!!

  6. taylormfuller avatar
    taylormfuller

    your photos are so pretty. I haven’t been to Scotland before. Definitely on the list!

  7. leahshoup avatar
    leahshoup

    Goodness, these photos are stunning! I’ve always wanted to go to Scotland, but I had never heard about anyone’s personal experiences in the area. Need to get there ASAP 🙂

  8. Sasha avatar

    Wow, it looks like such a beautiful part of the country! I plan on visiting Scotland again next year to see more of the rural areas like this so I’m definitely going to try and visit Ardnamurchan too!

  9. California Globetrotter avatar

    Looks sooo incredibly peaceful! I really would love to find somewhere where nobody knows it and just unplug!

  10. Tanja avatar

    I enjoy your Scottish posts #farawayfiles

  11. Bonnie Ward avatar
    Bonnie Ward

    Thank you for sharing your pictures, I have not been to Scotland, although my Grandparents were from there. You really have made me want to pack up and go.

  12. lydia@lifeuntraveledl avatar

    Wow – I agree this place is truly amazing! Thanks for sharing a part of Scotland I had no idea about. So many places to see in this big world!

  13. katy@untoldmorsels avatar

    Oh my goodness I cant wait to see what else you have in store for us as this is truly amazing scenery. The kind you could get lost in forever. I’m feeling my Scottish heritage stirring in me and telling me to head north sooner rather than later. Incredible. Thanks for sharing this beauty with us on #FarawayFiles

  14. youngandundecided avatar

    Absolutely amazing! I have never heard of this place before! I am planning a West coast Road Trip up to John O Groats possibly next summer and I will definitely add Ardnamuchan to my list! Love seeing posts about Scotland 🙂

  15. Kreete avatar

    This really looks amazing! How awesome that you have to put in a bit of effort to visit. These are the kind of places I love! That castle on an island and accessible on low tide is super cool too! This makes me want to go to Scotland ha! Love the photos!

  16. Ruth avatar

    Oh my! What a beautiful place! It has most of the elements I enjoy in landscapes. I hope to visit one day (finger crossed I visit on a sunny day like you).

  17. Kassie avatar

    Wow this looks beautiful! I never knew that Scotland had such beautiful beaches. The Scottish Highlands are high on my list for next years travels so I’m excited to read through your posts and make my itinerary!

  18. Courtney @ Adelante avatar

    It looks so dreamy! I’m seriously swooning over your photos!

  19. Clare Thomson avatar
    Clare Thomson

    How do you do it, Kate? Every week you show us yet another wonderful undiscovered gem of Scotland, every post more beautiful than the last. Ardnamurchan looks absolutely beautiful. Delighted to have you share it with us on #FarawayFiles

  20. Notmyyearoff avatar

    Oh my goodness, what a stunning place. It sounds so beautiful and you’ve got the pictures to match. Have you ever seen the northern lights from there? I keep trying to figure out where might be a good place in Scotland!

  21. afamilydayout avatar

    This is on my bucket list! We nearly went last year but didn’t make it – it looks as beautiful as I expect (and you had great weather!)

  22. Ali May avatar

    You’ve just shown me a new part of Scotland that I must see. Those images are stunning, and the fact that Adnamurchan is tricky to get to only makes it more appealing – worth the effort I’d say!

  23. oregongirlaroundtheworld avatar

    So delicious these landscapes. Love them – dying to explore. Thanks for sharing with #FarawayFiles this week, cheers from Copenhagen – Erin

  24. seemah@pandareviewz avatar

    lovely.. am definetly going to do these things in my visit to ardnamurchan 🙂

  25. Holiday Highlands (@holidayhighland) avatar

    It’s been a few years since I’ve been to Ardnamurchan but it is such a beautiful place and feels wonderfully wild and isolated. Your beautiful photos have taken me back there 🙂

  26. Alex Wilson avatar
    Alex Wilson

    We just did the walk from Portuairk to Sanna and were joined by the same dog! I know it’s the same one because we also thought he was a Lion! He led the way and forced his way through the 2 gates!

    1. Love from, Smidge avatar
      Love from, Smidge

      That’s amazing, I’m glad to hear the dog is still taking people on walks, he is a beauty!

  27. Notta Holiday avatar

    Such torture living so very far away. I wish we were back in beautiful Scotland…

  28. Bill Frew avatar
    Bill Frew

    We are coming up in 4 weeks. Cant wait. We have hired a log cabin overlooking loch Sunart. We are staying at Acharacle. Watch this space.

    Bill.

  29. David Gorring avatar
    David Gorring

    We drove from the Corran Ferry. It was spring but it was cold. This was my first experience of driving on Scotland’s single-track roads, though we came to know many more later. Everything that they say about Ardnamurchan is true, or as Jim Crumley writes, “Ardnamurchan is still a place set aside, still wilder than much of the West Highlands.” After a tortuous drive we reached the causeway at Ardnamurchan Point. The sea was wild and choppy, the wind was blowing strongly from the west. Then a mixture of hail and snow had us running towards the car and soon the the windows were all covered in white. But it did not last long and it was all just part of an unforgettable experience.
    David

  30. Scarlett Trafford avatar
    Scarlett Trafford

    Is there a church in Ardnamurchan? I think my Great Grandfather grew up there and left to join the army. We would like to have evidence of this and hope for Church records to show Birth.

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hello from scotland!

Welcome to Love from Scotland – your guide to exploring Scotland. Whether you’re planning your first trip to Scotland or your fiftieth, I’m here to help you have a fabulous time.

Kate – Love from Scotland x

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