📍Departure: Hotel Pick-Up (Edinburgh)
🕒 Duration: 3 Days
📅 Availability: Year-round
💷 Price: £2,595 per private group (max 7 guests, hotel not included)
Scotland is a land of romance, rebellion, and resilience—a place where the past lingers in the glens, where ancient stones hold secrets, and where love and war are bound by fate. This three-day journey is more than a tour; it is a pilgrimage into the landscapes and legends that shaped both Outlander and Scotland’s real history.
Walk where Jamie and Claire walked, stand where Jacobite dreams rose and fell, and immerse yourself in a world where truth and fiction entwine like the roots of the Highland pine.
Lallybroch/Broch Tuarach (Midhope Castle) – Jamie Fraser’s ancestral home
Fort William (Blackness Castle) – The stronghold of Black Jack Randall
Wentworth Prison (Linlithgow Palace) – The site of Jamie’s darkest hours
Castle Leoch (Doune Castle) – The seat of Clan MacKenzie
Inverness (Falkland) – The town where Claire’s journey begins
Cranesmuir (Culross) – The home of Geillis Duncan
Le Havre (Dysart Harbour) – The French port from Season 2
Culloden Battlefield – The heart of the Jacobite Uprising
Clava Cairns – The inspiration for Craigh na Dun
Dalwhinnie Whisky Distillery – A taste of Scotland’s liquid gold
Meet & Feed Highland Cows – A delightful encounter
Highland Folk Museum – A window into 18th-century life
Loch Ness & Urquhart Castle – The mystery of Scotland’s deepest loch
Glenfinnan Viaduct & Monument – The call to the Jacobite cause
Glencoe – Scotland’s most dramatic valley
✅ Bespoke private tour with an expert guide
✅ Onboard cooler stocked with chilled water, soft drinks, and fine Scottish snacks
✅ A dram of whisky to savour along the way
✅ Assistance finding the right accommodation for you (if required)
✅ Expert advice of the best food spots along the way
All our tours include exclusive use of a top-of-the-range, comfortable and spacious vehicle, complete with a complimentary hamper filled with Scottish-themed snacks and treats. Premium bottled water and soft drinks are available throughout the day from our onboard cooler. At select scenic stops, guests are also invited to enjoy a dram of one of Scotland’s finest whiskies—our signature Highland touch.
Enjoy a taste of Scotland’s finest with our luxury private tour, Scottish Treats. Thoughtfully packed in a classic wicker basket with a soft tartan blanket, it features a selection of premium Highland whiskies served in elegant glasses, refreshing still Scottish spring water, and a variety of popular soft drinks. Complementing these are traditional Scottish delights like buttery shortbread, rich fudge, honeycomb chocolate, and crisp potato snacks, alongside fresh strawberries and tempting sweets. Every element is carefully chosen to offer an authentic and indulgent experience, perfect for savoring amidst the stunning Scottish landscapes.
We begin at Midhope Castle, known to the world as Lallybroch or Broch Tuarach —a place of love, loyalty, and loss. The ancestral home of Jamie Fraser, where laughter once rang through the courtyard, and shadows of the past linger in the air. Stand in the doorway, gaze across the land, and hear the whisper of vows made beneath these ancient stones.
From the warmth of Lallybroch/Broch Tuarach, we descend into darker territory—the forbidding walls of Fort William, where Captain Black Jack Randall’s cruelty knew no bounds. The ominous Blackness Castle, standing grimly against the Firth of Forth, bears witness to both Outlander’s horrors and Scotland’s real history of battles and betrayals.
Kinneil Rail Station became the backdrop for a pivotal moment in Outlander. It was here, amidst the steam and the clatter of the tracks, that Claire and Frank parted ways at the train station, their futures uncertain, their fates about to be rewritten by time itself. The station, with its vintage charm and old-world elegance, stands as a gateway between past and present—both in the show and in the echoes of Scotland’s railway history.
Further still, we reach Linlithgow Palace, once a jewel of the Scottish crown, now forever remembered as Wentworth Prison, where Jamie Fraser faced his greatest torment. Walk the corridors where the past still clings to the walls, and imagine the weight of chains, the echoes of footsteps, and the silent pleas of those lost to time.
No journey through Outlander is complete without stepping into the world of Clan MacKenzie. Doune Castle, with its towering battlements and winding staircases, was the perfect choice to portray Castle Leoch. The stone passageways lead you back through centuries, where alliances were made, loyalties tested, and the future of Scotland shaped by those who called this place home.
Behind the grand façade of Callendar House, history and fiction entwine in a moment of reckoning. Within these very walls, Murtagh Fraser delivered swift vengeance, bringing an end to the Duke of Sandringham in one of Outlander’s most dramatic scenes. The house itself, steeped in real history, has witnessed centuries of Scotland’s past—yet for Outlander fans, it remains the place where justice was served with a swing of a blade.
We return to Edinburgh for the night, reflecting on a day of love, loss, and fate.
In the heart of Culross, time stands still. This perfectly preserved 17th-century village becomes Cranesmuir, where Geillis Duncan’s secrets unraveled, where whispers of rebellion stirred, and where Claire’s healing hands once tended the herb garden behind Culross Palace. As you wander the winding cobbled streets, past white-harled houses and the iconic Mercat Cross, you step not just into Outlander’s world, but into a Scotland untouched by time.
We arrive at Dysart Harbour, transformed into Le Havre in Outlander’s second season. Here, the scent of salt and sea fills the air, the waves whisper against the pier, and the ships creak at their moorings. Claire and Jamie arrived in France upon these very waters, stepping into a world of danger and intrigue.
Finally, our journey now takes us to Falkland, the charming town that stood in for Inverness in Outlander. It was here, among these very streets, that Claire and Frank walked before fate intervened. At the Bruce Fountain, time itself seemed to bend as Jamie’s ghost watched over the woman he could not yet know. Wander through the cobbled lanes, step inside the old guesthouse, and feel the strange and beautiful pull of destiny in the air.
Time rewinds further as we visit the Highland Folk Museum, where the 18th century breathes again. The thatched crofts, smoky hearths, and simple wooden tools paint a vivid picture of Highland life before Culloden, before change, before war. It is here that Claire first found her place among the Highlanders—among a people both fierce and kind, whose way of life was soon to vanish.
No Highland adventure is complete without a taste of Scotland’s liquid gold. At Dalwhinnie, the highest whisky distillery in Scotland, sip a dram, breathe in the peaty aroma, and raise a toast to Jamie and Claire, to Scotland, to stories that endure.
Near Culloden lies Clava Cairns, the ancient standing stones that inspired Craigh na Dun. Step into this prehistoric landscape, place your hands upon the weathered rock, and feel the weight of centuries pressing against time itself.
We stay overnight in Inverness, the true gateway to the Highlands.
The ground is sacred at Culloden, where the Jacobite cause was crushed in 1746. Stand before the Clan Fraser stone, where history and fiction collide, and listen as your guide recounts the final charge of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s doomed army.
Finally, our journey now takes us to Falkland, the charming town that stood in for Inverness in Outlander. It was here, among these very streets, that Claire and Frank walked before fate intervened. At the Bruce Fountain, time itself seemed to bend as Jamie’s ghost watched over the woman he could not yet know. Wander through the cobbled lanes, step inside the old guesthouse, and feel the strange and beautiful pull of destiny in the air.
See the Jacobite steam train cross the Glenfinnan Viaduct, a sight familiar to Outlander fans and Harry Potter lovers alike. Nearby, the Glenfinnan Monument stands in solemn tribute to the men who fought for a prince and lost their nation’s future.
The road leads through Glencoe, Scotland’s most dramatic glen, where betrayal and massacre stained the land forever. Yet, its beauty is unmatched—a place of raw, untamed majesty.
Before we return, a final delight—an encounter with Scotland’s gentle, shaggy-haired Highland cows. Feed them, photograph them, and bid farewell to a journey like no other.
As we journey home, the echoes of Outlander will remain—in the hills, in the stones, and in the stories you now carry with you.