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Why Scotland Leaves Its Mountain Shelters Unlocked for Complete Strangers

Somewhere in the Scottish Highlands, a stone shelter sits empty tonight. The door is unlocked. There is firewood stacked beside the hearth. And if you walk far enough to find it, you are welcome to stay — no booking, no payment, no questions asked.

Photo: Shutterstock

What Is a Bothy?

A bothy is a basic mountain refuge — usually a converted shepherd’s cottage or stalker’s hut — left unlocked and open for anyone to use. Most have a fireplace, bare wooden floors, and little else. No electricity. No running water. No Wi-Fi.

They sit in some of Scotland’s most dramatic landscapes. Tucked into glen walls, perched beside remote lochs, hidden beneath ridge lines that take hours to reach on foot.

The word itself comes from the Scots and Gaelic both — a small dwelling or hut. For centuries, farm labourers lived in bothies during the harvest season. Today, they serve a different kind of traveller: walkers, climbers, and people who simply want to disappear into the wild for a while.

The Unwritten Code That Keeps Them Open

There is no formal contract when you use a bothy. But there is an unwritten code, passed down quietly through the walking community for generations.

Leave the shelter cleaner than you found it. Bring firewood, or cut your own and leave some for the next person. Don’t stay more than two or three nights — it is a refuge, not a home. Pack out all waste. Never leave litter behind.

Be respectful if other walkers arrive after dark. The unwritten rule is always to make room. Bothies have no maximum capacity.

This code has no enforcement. No wardens. No cameras. No fines. It works entirely on trust — and somehow, it always does.

The Volunteers Who Keep the Doors Open

Most of Scotland’s bothies are maintained by the Mountain Bothies Association (MBA), a volunteer-led charity founded in 1965. Its members — more than 5,000 of them — give their own time to repair roofs, clear drainage, replace doors, and carry building materials on their backs to places no van can reach.

The MBA maintains around 100 bothies across Scotland, with further shelters in England and Wales. None of it is funded by government. It runs on memberships, donations, and sheer goodwill.

If you ever use a bothy and want to give something back, joining the MBA for the cost of a coffee a month is all it takes.

Getting There Is Part of the Experience

Scotland’s right to roam means you can reach almost any bothy on foot without trespassing. That freedom — unique to Scotland — is what makes the whole system possible.

Most bothies require a walk of several miles. Some take a full day. A few can only be reached by sea. That journey is not a barrier — it is the point. By the time you arrive, you have earned the shelter. The warmth of a bothy fire feels entirely different when you have walked for it.

If you are new to spending nights in the Scottish wild, brushing up on wild camping in Scotland first will help you prepare for what lies ahead.

What Happens Inside a Bothy at Night

People talk about bothy nights the way others talk about life-changing holidays.

Strangers arrive from different directions and end up sharing a fire. Whisky appears from someone’s pack. Stories are told. Plans are made. By morning, the people who arrived as individuals have become something like a temporary community.

There is something about being genuinely remote — no signal, no comfort, no distraction — that strips people back. Conversations go deeper. Silences feel easier. The Highland glens surrounding Scotland’s most-loved bothies are worth visiting in their own right, and a Scottish Highlands road trip can bring you close to some of the best.

Scotland keeps its bothy doors open because it trusts people to do the right thing. And mostly, they do. That says something important about Scotland — and something hopeful about the rest of us.

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