Edinburgh is not one city. It is seven, each with its own rhythm, architecture, and character. Most visitors spend their time on the Royal Mile — that famous stretch running from Edinburgh Castle to the Palace of Holyroodhouse — and leave thinking they’ve seen the capital. They haven’t. The real Edinburgh is in the streets that branch off from the main drag, in the neighbourhoods that most tourists never reach.

This guide covers seven Edinburgh neighbourhoods that each reward a closer look. Some are five-minute walks from the castle. Others require a bus or a longer stroll. All of them are worth the effort.
1. The Old Town — Medieval Edinburgh at Its Densest
The Old Town is where Edinburgh started, and it still carries the weight of that history. The buildings here are tall and tightly packed — a result of the city growing upward rather than outward for centuries, hemmed in by city walls and the natural geography of the ridge it sits on.
The closes — the narrow alleyways cutting off the Royal Mile — are the real draws. Advocates’ Close, Dunbar’s Close, and White Horse Close each open into small courtyards or passages that most visitors walk straight past. Victoria Street, with its curved terraced shops and colourful facades, is worth a proper wander. The Grassmarket below it has been a public space since the 15th century: market, place of execution, and now a stretch of bars and independent shops.
Greyfriars Kirkyard, just off Candlemaker Row, is one of the most historically dense spots in the city — the gravestones date back to the 1560s, and the churchyard played a role in several turning points in Scottish history. The famous statue of Greyfriars Bobby stands at the entrance to the churchyard.
2. The New Town — Georgian Order and Grand Streets
Cross Princes Street from the Old Town and the city changes entirely. The New Town was built in the second half of the 18th century to a grid plan, and it shows. Wide streets, symmetrical Georgian terraces, and private gardens that are still accessible only to keyholders give this part of Edinburgh a very different feel from the organic growth of the Old Town.
Charlotte Square is considered one of the finest examples of Georgian urban design in Britain. George Street runs parallel to Princes Street and has shifted over the decades from banking headquarters to bars and restaurants, though the grand architecture remains. The Scottish National Portrait Gallery on Queen Street is free to enter and well worth a couple of hours.
The New Town is also where you’ll find Multrees Walk and St Andrew Square — the more upmarket shopping end of the city, if that’s relevant to your visit.
3. Stockbridge — Village Pace Inside the City
Stockbridge sits north of the New Town, in a dip of land along the Water of Leith. It has the feel of a village that has been absorbed into a city but hasn’t quite accepted the fact. The main street has independent delis, bookshops, a weekend farmers’ market, and the kind of coffee shops where people actually stay for an hour.
Circus Lane is the street that tends to appear on Instagram feeds — a curved cobbled lane with flower boxes at the windows and a church tower visible at the far end. It is genuinely as attractive in person as in photographs, particularly in the morning before foot traffic picks up.
The Water of Leith Walkway passes through Stockbridge and connects several of the city’s neighbourhoods along a riverside path. It’s one of the better ways to move between Stockbridge, Dean Village, and Leith on foot, with minimal road crossings.
4. Leith — The Port Edinburgh Once Overlooked
Leith was a separate town until it was absorbed into Edinburgh in 1920, and it has never entirely forgotten that fact. The port district has its own strong identity — historically working class, recently resurgent, and now home to some of the best restaurants in Scotland.
The Shore, the stretch along the Water of Leith as it reaches the sea, has a concentration of good pubs and restaurants that rivals anywhere in the city centre. The Royal Yacht Britannia is moored at nearby Ocean Terminal — worth visiting for the insight it gives into mid-20th century royal life as much as the yacht itself.
Leith Market on weekends is a genuine local market rather than a tourist attraction. The neighbourhood has a visible arts scene, and the regeneration of the docks area has brought new architecture alongside the Georgian commercial buildings that line Bernard Street and Constitution Street.
5. Morningside — Leafy, Quiet, and Distinctly Edinburgh
Morningside sits on the south side of the city, uphill from the Meadows, and it is the kind of neighbourhood that has a clear reputation within Edinburgh. It’s prosperous, quiet, and residential — with good independent shops along its main street and easy access to the Braid Hills and the Hermitage of Braid nearby.
The Hermitage of Braid is a nature reserve running through a wooded valley with a burn at the bottom — a genuinely peaceful walk that feels nothing like a major European capital. The Blackford Hill nature reserve sits adjacent and gives clear views back across the city.
Morningside is a good base if you’re looking for accommodation away from the noise of the Old Town, with good transport connections to the centre. It has the practical infrastructure — supermarkets, pharmacies, cafés — that the more tourist-heavy parts of the city sometimes lack.
6. Dean Village — A Mill Town Frozen in the City
Dean Village occupies a gorge carved by the Water of Leith, just ten minutes on foot from the west end of Princes Street. It was a milling community for centuries — the carved sheaves of wheat on the old granary buildings are still visible — and the conversion of those mill buildings into flats has preserved the streetscape in unusual detail.
The village sits well below the level of the surrounding city, which gives it a sense of seclusion that’s hard to explain until you’re standing in it. The footbridge over the Water of Leith, the stone buildings, and the mill pond create a setting that is very different from anything else in Edinburgh.
The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art is a short walk uphill from Dean Village and is free to enter. The grounds have large-scale sculpture installations and are worth a look even if the galleries aren’t a priority.
7. Marchmont — Georgian Bones, Student Energy
Marchmont is the kind of Edinburgh that doesn’t make it onto the tourist maps. It’s a residential neighbourhood built in the late 19th century with solid tenement flats and tree-lined streets, running south from the Meadows. It has a high student population — the University of Edinburgh is close by — which gives it an unpretentious, functional character.
The Meadows themselves are central to Edinburgh life in a way that visitors often miss. The wide open park sits between the Old Town and Marchmont, and on any dry afternoon it’s busy with cyclists, dog walkers, families, and students. It’s the kind of public space that tells you how a city actually uses its green areas.
Marchmont Road and Roseneath Street have a good selection of independent cafés, an old-fashioned hardware shop, and a handful of second-hand bookshops. It’s a useful part of the city to understand if you’re trying to get beyond the Edinburgh that’s been packaged for visitors.
How to Move Between Neighbourhoods
Most of these neighbourhoods are reachable on foot from the city centre, though some require more time than others. Leith is around 30 to 40 minutes on foot from the Old Town, or 10 minutes by bus (the 16, 22, or 35 from Princes Street). Morningside is roughly 40 minutes on foot from the Meadows, or a short ride on the 11 or 15 bus. Dean Village and Stockbridge are both walkable from the New Town in under 20 minutes.
The Water of Leith Walkway connects Balerno in the west to the docks at Leith in the east, passing through Dean Village, Stockbridge, and several other neighbourhoods along the way. It is well-maintained, clearly signposted, and one of the better ways to see Edinburgh at a slower pace.
Lothian Buses run a comprehensive network across the city and are reliable enough to plan around. A day ticket covers unlimited travel and is reasonably priced. The Edinburgh Trams line runs from the airport through the city centre to Newhaven near Leith.
Edinburgh is a city built for walking. The neighbourhoods here each have distinct personalities, and the easiest way to understand that is to walk between them — up through the Old Town, down into Stockbridge, along the river to Dean Village, then back up through the New Town. A half-day circuit covers four of the seven. The other three take more time, but they’re worth building into a longer visit.
Secure Your Dream Scottish Experience Before It’s Gone!
Planning a trip to Scotland? Don’t let sold-out tours or packed attractions dampen your adventure. Iconic experiences like exploring Edinburgh Castle, cruising along Loch Ness, or wandering through the mystical Isle of Skye often fill up fast—especially during peak travel seasons.

Booking in advance guarantees your place and ensures you can fully immerse yourself in the rich culture and breathtaking scenery without stress or disappointment. You’ll also free up time to explore Scotland's hidden gems and savour those authentic moments that make your trip truly special.
Make the most of your journey—start planning today and secure those must-do experiences before they’re gone!
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DISCLAIMER Last updated May 29, 2023
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