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What No Guidebook Will Actually Tell You About the West Highland Way

There is a moment, standing outside the railway station in Milngavie with a rucksack on your back, when the whole thing feels slightly unreal. Behind you: the Glasgow suburbs. Ahead: 96 miles of moorland, mountain, and loch. The West Highland Way begins in the most ordinary place imaginable and ends, eight to ten days later, somewhere else entirely.

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Scotland’s Greatest Walking Route

The West Highland Way opened in 1980 as Scotland’s first official long-distance route. It runs from Milngavie, north of Glasgow, to Fort William at the foot of Ben Nevis. Most walkers cover it in seven to ten days, though some push hard over five or take it slowly across twelve.

The route isn’t technically difficult. There are no serious scrambles and no specialist gear required. What it demands is sustained effort, reasonable fitness, and the ability to keep moving when the weather turns — and it will.

Each day brings a different Scotland. The wooded loch shores of the south give way to open moorland in the middle, then narrowing glens and serious mountains as the route pushes north.

The Loch Lomond Stretch

The first major section follows the eastern shore of Loch Lomond — Scotland’s largest freshwater loch. This is walking at its most beautiful: still water, wooded islands, hills that grow steadily more serious the further north you go.

Balmaha is the first proper stopping point on the loch. It’s a small village with a National Park visitor centre, a jetty, and a pub. Most walkers sit here and look south at where they’ve come from.

North of Rowardennan, the path becomes rougher — rocky, root-riddled, demanding your full attention. The views reward the effort. But anyone who calls this section easy hasn’t walked it.

Rannoch Moor — Where the Route Changes You

Beyond Tyndrum, the West Highland Way enters the section most walkers remember longest.

Rannoch Moor is around 50 square miles of open bog, heather, and sky. There is almost no shelter. On a grey day it can feel relentless. On a clear day it is breathtaking in the most literal sense — the vastness stops you mid-stride.

Most people hit this stretch on day five or six, when the body has settled into a rhythm and the noise of ordinary life has quieted. That combination — physical tiredness, open space, silence — does something to the head that’s hard to explain and impossible to fake.

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Glencoe and the Final Push

After Rannoch Moor, the route descends past the edge of Glencoe — one of the most dramatic valleys in Britain. The mountains crowd in on both sides, and on a moody morning the whole glen can be wrapped in low cloud.

This is the section most photographed and least prepared for. Many walkers have read about Glencoe without ever having stood inside it on foot. The scale is different to anything a photograph communicates.

From here it’s two more days to Fort William: through Kinlochleven, over the Devil’s Staircase (the route’s highest point at 548m), and then down the long final glen to the town.

The statue of a weary walker at the end of the route in Fort William doesn’t need explanation. Most walkers don’t photograph it. They just stand in front of it for a while.

Practical Tips Before You Go

Accommodation along the route books up months ahead, particularly in June and July. May is the best window for quieter paths and midges that haven’t hit their summer peak.

Wild camping is permitted on most of the route, but the loch-side section requires a permit during peak season. Waterproof everything: boots, jacket, pack cover. Not water-resistant — waterproof.

If you’re planning the wider Scottish trip around your walk, this complete guide for visitors from the US covers transport, logistics, and what to see before and after.

How hard is the West Highland Way for beginners?

It’s challenging but achievable for most reasonably fit people who train beforehand. The daily distances — averaging 12 to 16 miles — are more demanding than the terrain itself. A few weeks of regular long walks before you go makes a significant difference.

What is the best time of year to walk the West Highland Way?

May and early June offer the best balance of good light, manageable midges, and quieter paths. July and August are busier but have more accommodation options available at short notice.

How long does the West Highland Way take to complete?

Most walkers take seven to ten days. Seven days is fast-paced. Nine or ten days allows time to rest, explore stopping points, and actually take in what you’re walking through.

Do you need a guide or can you walk it independently?

The route is well-marked throughout and entirely manageable without a guide. Waymarker posts with the thistle logo appear regularly. A good paper map and a downloaded offline GPS backup are all you need.

By the time most walkers reach Fort William, something has shifted. The scenery was the reason they came. The silence was what they didn’t expect. Somewhere on Rannoch Moor, between the bog and the open sky, they stopped counting the miles still to go and started simply walking.

That’s what no guidebook can tell you before you set out. You have to find it yourself.

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