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Hillwalking

Scotland's hills, properly covered.

Munros, Corbetts, Grahams, Donalds and skills guides. Honest about conditions, kit and what each hill is actually like.

Where to start

Hill lists, route guides and skills articles. Pick the list that suits where you live and how far up the learning curve you are.

Latest hillwalking guides

Route writeups, skills articles and gear opinions.

All hillwalking articles

Walks near Scottish towns

Hills, routes and trailheads within reach of Scotland's main towns — with drive times, public transport options and walk grading.

Walking in Scottish glens

Glen-by-glen walking guides — hills, access, OS maps and what each valley is actually like to walk in.

Tools to plan with

Build a kit list, track your bagging, compare two routes side by side.

Common questions

What is a Corbett, exactly?
A Scottish hill between 2,500ft (762m) and 3,000ft (914m) with a drop of at least 500ft (152m) on all sides. There are 222 of them, named after John Rooke Corbett who compiled the list in the 1920s.
Are Grahams the same as Fionas?
Same hills, different names, same height bracket (2,000–2,500ft). Originally compiled by Fiona Torbet (née Graham). The SMC adopted "Graham" but Fiona is sometimes used in older guidebooks.
Do I need winter skills for Scottish hills?
Above 600m, between roughly November and April, you should expect winter conditions. That means ice axe, crampons, the skills to use them, and the judgement to read avalanche forecasts. Our winter hillwalking guide covers the kit and skills in detail. Without those, stick to lower hills until you have taken a course.
Where should I start as a beginner?
A Donald or a low Corbett close to where you live. Get the navigation and kit dialled on a half-day before you commit to an eight-hour Munro day. If you are in Glasgow, our beginner hills guide has 10 options by public transport. We also have 282 Munro pages with route info when you are ready to progress.