They stand in a boggy moor, two hours from Glasgow by ferry and a walk across rough heathland. Nobody greets you. There are no crowds, no café, no ticket booth. Just ancient red sandstone pillars rising out of the grass, older than memory.
Machrie Moor is one of Scotland’s most remarkable prehistoric sites. And almost nobody goes there.
What Are the Machrie Moor Stone Circles?
Spread across a remote moorland on the west side of Arran, the Machrie Moor site contains six main stone circles, along with standing stones, burial cairns, and traces of ancient hut circles.
They date from the Neolithic period into the Bronze Age — roughly 2000 to 3500 years before Christ.
Nobody agrees on exactly why they were built. Astronomers, archaeologists, and dreamers have each offered their theory. The truth is still out there on the moor.
The Stones That Stop You in Your Tracks
The site’s most striking feature is a group of tall red sandstone pillars. They soar up to five and a half metres above the heather — taller than two men standing on each other’s shoulders.
Weathered by millennia, they glow orange-red in evening light. Other circles are lower and quieter: small granite boulders arranged in rings half-buried in peat. Some are almost hidden in the grass.
Walk slowly here. You will find more than you expect.
The Walk Across the Moor
Getting to Machrie Moor takes effort. That is part of what makes it feel untouched.
From the A841 coast road, a footpath leads roughly two kilometres across open moorland. The path can be boggy after rain — bring proper walking boots and waterproofs.
On a clear day, the walk rewards you with views of Kintyre across the water and the wild silhouette of Arran’s granite peaks behind. On a grey day, the moor feels ancient in a way that sunshine does not allow. Mist suits this place.
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Why Arran Has So Much to Offer
Machrie Moor is just one reason Arran earns its nickname: Scotland in Miniature.
Within a single island you will find highland and lowland scenery, castles, distilleries, beaches, and prehistoric sites spanning thousands of years. If you are planning your first visit, our guide to the Isle of Arran will help you make the most of your time there.
And if stone circles fascinate you, the standing stones at Callanish on the Isle of Lewis offer a very different but equally powerful experience.
The People Who Built This
Who stood here five thousand years ago? That question hangs over Machrie Moor more than any other.
We know they were farmers and builders. We know they shaped and dragged enormous stones across difficult terrain for reasons important enough to dedicate generations of labour. We know they buried their dead here.
We do not know what they believed. We only know they built something remarkable — and it is still standing.
Practical Tips for Visiting Machrie Moor
Arran is reached by ferry from Ardrossan on the Ayrshire coast. The crossing takes just under an hour. Here is how to plan your first trip to Arran.
Once on the island, the car park for Machrie Moor lies off the A841 on the west coast, between Blackwaterfoot and Machrie. From the car park, the path to the circles takes around 30–40 minutes on foot.
There is no entry fee. Visiting in late spring and summer gives you longer daylight and wildflowers across the moor.
What are the Machrie Moor standing stones?
The Machrie Moor standing stones are a group of prehistoric stone circles on the Isle of Arran, Scotland. Dating from around 2000–3500 BC, they include six main circles plus burial cairns scattered across open moorland on the west side of the island.
How do you get to Machrie Moor on Arran?
Take the ferry from Ardrossan to Brodick on Arran (about 55 minutes). Drive along the A841 coast road to the Machrie Moor car park, then walk roughly 2km across the moor to the circles — allow 30 to 40 minutes each way.
When is the best time to visit Machrie Moor?
Late spring to early autumn (May–September) offers the best walking conditions and longest daylight hours. Early mornings give you the best chance of having the site to yourself. Wear waterproof walking boots year-round as the moor is often boggy, even in dry weather.
Standing at Machrie Moor, you feel the weight of time differently from anywhere else in Scotland. These stones were here before written language, before kingdoms, before the island had a name anyone would recognise. They were built by people who believed something mattered enough to make it last.
Whatever they believed, they were right. It did last.
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