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Edinburgh · New Town & Princes Street

Princes Street Gardens

Park & Garden

Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh · New Town & Princes Street
Category
Park & Garden
Duration
1h 30m
Best Time
Any time
Entry
Free
Rating
4.7 (26,827)
The place

About Princes Street Gardens

Princes Street Gardens stretches for half a mile through the valley that once held the Nor Loch, creating Edinburgh's most central green space between the medieval Old Town and Georgian New Town. You'll find yourself walking on what was once the bottom of a drained lakebed, with Edinburgh Castle looming above on one side and Princes Street's shops on the other. The Scott Monument dominates the eastern section at 61 meters tall, while the western half contains the Ross Bandstand where major outdoor concerts happen year round.

The experience splits naturally into two sections divided by The Mound. The eastern gardens feel more formal with manicured flowerbeds, memorials, and that towering Gothic Scott Monument that you can climb for £5. The western section opens up around the Ross Bandstand with wider lawns where locals actually picnic and play football. During summer you'll hear live music drifting from the bandstand, while winter brings Christmas markets that transform the space completely.

Most visitors rush straight to the Scott Monument and miss the western gardens entirely, which is backwards thinking. The monument's cramped spiral staircase isn't worth £5 unless you're obsessed with Walter Scott or Victorian Gothic architecture. Instead, spend your time in the western section where the views back toward the castle are better and free. The gardens close at dusk year round, so don't plan evening visits outside summer months.

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The place

Getting there

Address
Princes St., Edinburgh EH2 2HG, UK
Neighborhood
New Town & Princes Street
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Enter from the western end near the railway bridge where crowds are thinner and you get the best castle views immediately

Skip the Scott Monument climb and head to the free viewpoint on The Mound instead for better panoramic shots without the claustrophobic stairs

Visit during Edinburgh Festival in August when the Ross Bandstand hosts free lunchtime concerts that most tourists never hear about

Plan for about 1h 30m.

Princes Street Gardens is in the New Town & Princes Street neighborhood of Edinburgh. The address is Princes St., Edinburgh EH2 2HG, UK. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Comfortable shoes are recommended. Check the weather forecast and dress in layers, especially in shoulder seasons.

Around the corner

Nearby in New Town & Princes Street

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Scottish National Portrait Gallery
Museum

Scottish National Portrait Gallery

This striking red sandstone palace houses Scotland's definitive portrait collection, spanning 500 years from medieval monarchs to modern celebrities. You'll see Mary Queen of Scots looking defiant before her execution, Robert Burns in romantic poet mode, and yes, Sean Connery looking suave in his Bond years. The building itself, completed in 1889, showcases Scottish baronial architecture with Gothic revival flourishes that make it feel more like a castle than a typical gallery. The moment you step inside, the soaring atrium takes your breath away. Natural light floods down through the glass roof onto portraits arranged chronologically around the walls. You'll climb the main staircase past larger than life paintings while the processional frieze above tells Scotland's story in carved figures. The galleries flow logically from medieval times to contemporary Scotland, and the acoustics mean you can actually have quiet conversations without disturbing others. Most visitors rush through in 45 minutes, but you're missing the point if you don't slow down. The contemporary section gets overlooked, yet it's where you'll find the most surprising portraits of modern Scots you actually recognize. Skip the audio guide at £4, the wall texts are excellent and more flexible. The cafe does proper Scottish tablet and decent coffee, making it worth the slight markup over street prices.

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