Explore the intriguing side of Edinburgh's Old Town on this self-guided audio tour. Wander through hidden closes, merchant courts, and burial sites that reveal the city’s darker history. Starting at the Castle Esplanade, you'll navigate through 3.2 km of narrow streets, hearing tales of the past from your audio guide. Visit Greyfriars Kirkyard, ascend the Vennel for stunning views, and end your journey in the historic Grassmarket. Perfect for history buffs and curious travelers alike, this tour offers flexibility and in-depth insights into Edinburgh's secrets.
- Duration: Approximately 1 hour and 45 minutes
- Self-guided with premium audio narration in English
- Explore at your own pace with clear guidance and safety notes
Edinburgh Castle Esplanade, the broad stone forecourt below Edinburgh Castle at the top of the Royal Mile.
Grassmarket, west end
Begin below Edinburgh Castle on the broad stone forecourt at the top of the Royal Mile. This open civic space introduces the walk’s theme: Edinburgh as a city of layers. Pause at the Witches' Well memorial near the Esplanade wall, then start walking downhill toward Castlehill and the Lawnmarket with the castle at your back.
Stand on the Lawnmarket and look up at Edinburgh’s towering Old Town tenements — the “lands” where different social classes lived stacked in the same buildings. Learn how vertical density, crowded streets, and life before modern sanitation shaped the city. Spot the narrow closes branching off the Royal Mile — the hidden passages that lead deeper into the Old Town.
Step off the busy Royal Mile into this quiet cobbled close. At the back stands Lady Stair's House (Writers' Museum), linked to Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, and Robert Louis Stevenson. In the courtyard, Makars' Court sets quotations from Scottish writers into the paving — literature embedded in the stones under your feet.
Enter this historic courtyard off the Royal Mile — a surviving example of Edinburgh’s stacked urban life, with stair towers, galleries, and rooms layered above one another. The court is associated with wealthy merchant John MacMorran and the dramatic 1595 Royal High School siege that ended in his death. A compact window into power, privilege, and violence in late 16th-century Edinburgh.
Pause in Parliament Square beneath the crown spire of St Giles' Cathedral — one of Edinburgh’s defining skyline shapes. On the pavement lies the Heart of Midlothian, marking the site of the Old Tolbooth prison and civic authority. Nearby stands Parliament Hall, built in the 1630s when Scotland’s parliament still met in Edinburgh before the 1707 Union.
Stand outside the City Chambers on the Royal Mile, where 18th-century civic architecture sits above buried Old Town streets. Below and behind the building lie the remains associated with Mary King's Close — a street partially sealed when the Royal Exchange was built over it. Hear how plague memory, later legend, and modern tourism layered onto one of Edinburgh’s most famous underground stories. (Underground visit to The Real Mary King's Close is separate and not included.)
From South Bridge, look down toward the Cowgate and discover one of Edinburgh’s great structural tricks: a street that is also a bridge. Completed in 1788 with nineteen arches — most now hidden inside surrounding buildings — it created the South Bridge vaults below. The Cowgate beneath was historically tied to cattle routes, overcrowding, and the harder underside of Old Town life.
Explore one of Edinburgh’s most storied graveyards at your own pace. Highlights include the area associated with Covenanters' Prison after 1679, iron mortsafes built to protect fresh graves from body-snatchers, the Greyfriars Bobby tradition near the gate, and gravestones visitors link to Harry Potter names. A dense mix of documented history, memorial culture, and modern legend.
Climb the historic stone stair of the Vennel for one of Edinburgh’s best framed views of the castle between Old Town walls. Beside the stair survives a section associated with the Flodden Wall, built after Scotland’s defeat at Flodden in 1513. A short climb with a strong visual payoff — wear shoes with grip in wet weather. (Steep stairs; step-free detour available via Heriot Place / Lauriston Place.)
Finish in the Grassmarket, the historic market and public square below Castle Rock. Once a place for trade, gossip, and public execution — including associations with Covenanter executions and the survival story of Maggie Dickson (1724) — it is now a lively square of pubs, cafés, and castle views. The tour ends here; take time to look back up at the castle from a new angle.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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