More people are working remotely from the Scottish Highlands than ever before. Fibre broadband has reached villages that felt completely off-grid a decade ago. Rents are a fraction of Edinburgh or Glasgow costs. And the views do something to your productivity that a city co-working space simply cannot.
This guide covers everything you need to know before you pack up your laptop and head north. We look at the real connectivity picture, the villages worth shortlisting, and what remote life actually costs.
Does the Scottish Highlands Have Reliable Internet for Working Remotely?
This is the question every remote worker asks first. The honest answer is: it depends on where you go.
Highland connectivity has improved enormously since 2020. The Scottish Government’s Reaching 100% (R100) programme has extended fibre broadband to thousands of addresses that previously relied on slow copper lines. By 2025, most large Highland villages had superfast broadband (24Mbps+). A growing number had full-fibre connections reaching 100Mbps or more.
That said, the Highlands cover a vast area. A village with 800 residents on the A9 corridor will have far better connectivity than a hamlet of 40 people on a sea loch in Sutherland.
Fibre Coverage in the Main Highland Villages
The most reliably connected areas include:
- Aviemore and the Cairngorms: Full-fibre available from BT Openreach and alternative providers. Speeds regularly reach 300-900Mbps.
- Inverness and surrounding towns: Near-city infrastructure. Most addresses have full-fibre.
- Fort William: Superfast broadband widely available. Some streets have full-fibre.
- Portree, Isle of Skye: Superfast broadband available through BT Openreach.
- Ullapool: Superfast broadband throughout the village. 4G also strong via EE and Vodafone.
Before you commit to any address, check your specific postcode on the Ofcom Connected Nations tool. Coverage maps can understate gaps in rural areas.
What to Expect in Very Remote Areas
If you are drawn to the far northwest – Torridon, Kinlochbervie, Durness – be realistic. Some locations still rely on slower connections. Starlink has changed the situation for truly remote properties. It delivers 100-200Mbps almost anywhere in Scotland for around £75 per month. Many remote workers in the Highlands now use Starlink as their primary connection.
If uninterrupted connectivity is critical for your work, choose a village on this list rather than a remote lochside cottage. If you can work around occasional limitations, satellite options make even the wildest corners of Scotland viable.
The Best Scottish Highlands Villages for Working Remotely
Connectivity is only part of the picture. You also want community, decent amenities, and somewhere you actually want to live. These four villages come up most often when remote workers talk about life in the Highlands.
Aviemore
Aviemore sits in the heart of the Cairngorms National Park. It is probably the easiest transition for someone coming from a city. It has a supermarket, a gym, several cafes with decent Wi-Fi, and reliable full-fibre broadband.
The outdoor activities make burnout much harder to sustain. Skiing in winter. Hiking and cycling year-round. Rent for a two-bedroom flat runs £700-£950 per month. The A9 dual carriageway gives fast road access to Inverness (45 minutes) and Perth (90 minutes). Remote workers who need occasional office days in a city use Aviemore as their base for exactly this reason.
Ullapool
Ullapool is a fishing village on Loch Broom in Wester Ross. It has a secondary school, a hospital, several restaurants, and a well-stocked Co-op. The ferry to Stornoway on the Isle of Lewis leaves from the pier. Superfast broadband is available throughout the village, and 4G coverage is reliable.
Rents are lower than Aviemore. A two-bedroom flat runs £550-£750 per month. The village has a strong creative community. Writers, artists, and musicians have lived here for years. That makes it less isolating than its remote setting might suggest.
Portree, Isle of Skye
Portree is the main town on the Isle of Skye. It functions as a proper service hub for the island, with a hospital, a secondary school, several supermarkets, and independent shops. Broadband speeds are adequate for most remote work, and 4G coverage is strong in the town itself.
The trade-off is that Portree is on an island. You cross the Skye Bridge to reach the mainland at Kyle of Lochalsh, and single-track roads in summer can slow things down. For the right person – someone who values dramatic scenery and a genuine island community – Portree is exceptional. The best things to do on the Isle of Skye guide gives a thorough picture of what the island offers.
Rents in Portree run £750-£1,000 for a two-bedroom property.
Tongue, North Coast 500
Tongue sits on the north coast, a village of around 500 people at the head of the Kyle of Tongue sea loch. It has attracted a notable number of remote workers in recent years. Rents are low: two-bedroom houses from £500-£650 per month. The landscape is extraordinary.
Broadband in Tongue has improved under the R100 programme. The village has a post office, a pub, a hotel, and a primary school. Secondary schooling requires a drive to Thurso. This is a real trade-off if you have or plan to have school-age children.
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The Real Cost: Highlands vs Edinburgh
Edinburgh is one of the most expensive cities in the UK outside London. The Highlands offer a very different financial picture.
Here is a rough monthly cost comparison for a single professional:
- Rent (2-bed flat): Edinburgh £1,400-£1,800 vs Highlands £550-£950
- Council Tax (Band C): Edinburgh £245 vs Highlands £185-£210
- Groceries: Edinburgh £280-£320 vs Highlands £290-£340
- Utilities: Edinburgh £150-£200 vs Highlands £180-£240
- Internet: Edinburgh £35-£50 vs Highlands £35-£75
- Transport: Edinburgh £100-£150 vs Highlands £80-£120
Rural shops charge slightly more for some items – Co-ops and Spar franchises replace larger supermarkets in smaller villages. Heating costs are higher in older stone properties. Factor both in when budgeting.
The rent saving alone – typically £600-£900 per month less than Edinburgh – more than offsets the other cost increases. Most remote workers who make the move report spending 25-35% less overall.
If you are seriously considering a longer-term move, our complete Move to Scotland guide covers visas, banking, healthcare, and the practicalities of setting up a life here in detail.
What You Get for Your Money in the Highlands
The cost comparison above understates the quality of life difference. In Edinburgh, £800 per month buys you a small studio flat, likely far from the centre. In Aviemore, £800 per month buys a two-bedroom flat with a car park, often with mountain views included in the rent.
The outdoor access is unmatched anywhere in Europe at this price point. Scotland’s Land Reform Act gives you the right to access almost all land for non-motorised recreation. You can walk out the door and be on a mountain within 20 minutes. Wild swimming, cycling, kayaking, and hillwalking become part of daily life rather than occasional weekend trips.
The rural communities here have a texture that cities do not offer. If you are curious about what working and living on the land looks like, crofting life in Scotland gives a sense of the agricultural traditions that still shape these communities today.
The Practical Side: Getting Set Up
Before you arrive, sort out the following.
Tax and National Insurance
If you are already employed and fully remote, nothing changes. If you are self-employed or starting a new contract from Scotland, register with HMRC as usual. Scottish Income Tax rates differ slightly from England – the Scottish Government sets its own rates – but the filing process is identical.
Banking
UK banks work the same across Scotland. The only practical difference is that some Scottish banks – Royal Bank of Scotland, Bank of Scotland, Clydesdale – still issue Scottish banknotes, which are legal tender throughout the UK.
Healthcare
You register with a local GP surgery. NHS Scotland is a separate health service from NHS England. Aviemore and Fort William have well-resourced practices. For retirement-specific healthcare details, the guide to retiring in Scotland covers what the NHS offers retirees and expats.
Getting Around
You will almost certainly need a car. Outside Inverness, public transport is infrequent. The Caledonian Sleeper connects Inverness, Fort William, and various Highland stops to London overnight. It is useful for occasional city trips, but not a daily commute. If you want to explore the wider Highlands before committing to a village, the Scottish Highlands road trip itinerary covers the key routes and stops.
Schools and Childcare
Village primary schools in the Highlands are often excellent. Small class sizes, close community ties, and strong Gaelic provision in some areas. Secondary schooling can require boarding or long bus journeys in very remote locations. This is the most significant practical constraint for families.
Frequently Asked Questions
What internet speed can I expect working remotely in the Scottish Highlands?
In most Highland towns and larger villages, you can expect superfast broadband at 30-80Mbps. Some areas have full-fibre reaching 300-900Mbps. Very remote properties may need Starlink satellite broadband (100-200Mbps, around £75 per month). Always check the specific postcode before signing a lease.
Which Highland village is best for remote workers without a car?
Aviemore is the only Highland village with genuinely usable public transport for remote workers. It sits on the Inverness-Edinburgh rail line and has regular buses. All other villages on this list assume you have or will get a car.
Is it cheaper to live in the Highlands than in Edinburgh?
Yes, significantly. Rent is typically £600-£900 per month less than an equivalent Edinburgh property. Overall living costs are 25-35% lower for most remote workers, despite slightly higher grocery and heating expenses in some areas.
How do I find rental properties in Highland villages?
The main lettings sites – Rightmove, Zoopla, and Citylets for Scottish-specific listings – all cover Highland properties. Local Facebook community groups often list properties before they go online. The rental market moves quickly in popular villages like Aviemore and Ullapool, so set up alerts and be ready to act fast.
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