City Breaks In Edinburgh
day trips & tours from edinburgh
Subscribe to About Edinburgh's newsletter which includes special offers and last minute promotions for hotels in Edinburgh.


Portland Hotels Scotland

Edinburgh Tourism Organisation

Hotel Review Edinburgh Scotland

Edinburgh Breaks
Edinburgh Hotels On A Map
Search for Edinburgh Hotels, Self catering accommodation and Bed & Breakfasts in Edinburgh with this user friendly map of Edinburgh. Edinburgh Hotel Map
Edinburgh Restaurants
The definative guide to Edinburgh's hottest restaurants offers the most indulgent private dining venues and completely suptuous places to stay. Edinburgh Restaurants
Edinburgh Museums & Art Galleries
The museums, galleries and monuments which comprise the City of Edinburgh Museums and Galleries range from a series of historic buildings strung along the crowded medieval Royal Mile. Museums & Galleries
Edinburgh Haunted vaults tours
Walking tours around Edinburgh’s Old Town featuring the most haunted locations, the scariest stories and most spectacular candlelit underground vaults. Haunted Vaults Tours
Edinburgh Princes street Gardens
The most accessible and obvious park to head for if you are on Princes Street, and just five minutes walk from the High Street. A wonderful place to admire Edinburgh castle, during Hogmanay and during the Festival in August to watch the fireworks. Princes Street Gardens
Shopping in Edinburgh
Edinburgh is now a shopper's paradise, and the range of goods on offer in the Edinburgh shops, is as diverse as the City of Edinburgh itself. Edinburgh Shopping

museums & galleries
edinburgh's character & history

Edinburgh Weekend Breaks

The museums, galleries and monuments which comprise the City of Edinburgh Museums and Galleries range from a series of historic buildings strung along the crowded medieval Royal Mile, to the spacious grounds of Lauriston Castle overlooking the river Forth at Crammond. The distinctive heritage of the maritime communities of Queensferry and Newhaven are celebrated. The city centre skyline is dominated by the Scott and Nelson Monuments. A stone's throw from the main thoroughfare, Princes Street, the City Art Centre is both home to an outstanding collection of Scottish art and Scotland's premier temporary exhibition venue. Highlights: -

The National Museum of Scotland
Welcome to the National Museum of Scotland – two iconic buildings, one amazing museum.  Our collections in the landmark Museum of Scotland building tell you the story of Scotland its land, its people and culture.  The Royal Museum building, with its magnificent glass ceiling, houses international collections covering nature to art, culture to science. We cover life, the universe and everything in it.  Some exhibits are millions of years old, others less than a decade. Your journey of discovery starts here

National Gallery of Scotland
The National Gallery of Scotland, oldest of the five Galleries, is situated in the heart of Edinburgh on The Mound, between the ancient Old Town and the Georgian New Town. It is home to Scotland's greatest collection of European paintings and sculpture from the Renaissance to Post-Impressionism, and is one of the very finest galleries of its size in the world. Known today as the Royal Scottish Academy Building, and a major venue for exhibitions, the Gallery also boasts the largest and most comprehensive collection of Scottish paintings in the world.

The City Art Centre
Located in the heart of the capital, with six exhibition galleries, the City Art Centre, which opened in 1980, is Scotland's emporium of the visual arts. It is both home of the City's collection of Scottish Art, and one the UK's leading temporary exhibition spaces. The scale and range of the programme has made the gallery one of Britain's most visited exhibition centres. The City's fine art collection consists of around 3,500 works of Scottish art: paintings, watercolours, drawings, prints, photographs, sculpture and tapestries, including works by McTaggart, Fergusson, Peploe and Eardley.

Edinburgh Museum
The Museum of Edinburgh is home to important collections relating to the history of Edinburgh, from prehistoric times to the present day. If you know the story of ' Greyfriars Bobby ', you will be thrilled to see his collar and feeding bowl, and the original plaster model for the bronze statue in Candlemaker Row.

One of the museum's great treasures is the National Covenant, signed by Scotland's presbyterian leadership in 1638, while the collections of Scottish pottery and items relating to Field Marshal Earl Haig are of national importance.