Find a cycling tour by searching for your favourite location or key words

Scotland – Cairngorms & Speyside Self-Guided

  • Overview
  • Itinerary
  • Key Places
  • Essential Info
  • Accommodation
  • Book Now
E-bike Option
7 Day Tour
From: £1095

Scotland Cairngorms and Speyside Self-Guided Cycling Holiday

The Cairngorms & Speyside self-guided cycling tour explores one of Scotland’s most scenic and historic regions. Beginning in Inverness, the route winds through quiet…

Scotland Cairngorms and Speyside Self-Guided Cycling Holiday

The Cairngorms & Speyside self-guided cycling tour explores one of Scotland’s most scenic and historic regions. Beginning in Inverness, the route winds through quiet backroads past Culloden Battlefield and Clava Cairns before entering the vast landscapes of Cairngorms National Park. Soaring mountains, ancient forests and heather-clad moorland provide a constantly changing Highland backdrop.

Following the Speyside Malt Whisky Trail, riders pass iconic distilleries, Ballindalloch Castle and the riverside town of Grantown-on-Spey before reaching the Moray Firth coastline. With visits to Elgin, Forres and Cawdor Castle, this tour blends history, wildlife and exceptional scenery with relaxed, rewarding cycling through one of Scotland’s sunniest regions.

Cycling Difficulty

4/10 – Moderate

No. of Cycling Days

5 days of cycling

Avg. Daily Distance

64 kilometers
/ 39.8 miles

Avg. Daily Ascent

552 meters
/ 1,811 feet

Accommodation Grade

Premium

Included Meals

All breakfasts

redspokes’ Cairngorms & Speyside self-guided cycling tour is a journey through one of the most scenic and historic parts of Scotland. The Cairngorms is the largest national park in the UK with a hugely diverse landscape – from soaring mountains and dense forests to wild heather moorlands, interspersed with trickling streams and rushing rivers. Speyside boasts more distilleries than anywhere else in the nation. Its fertile farmlands are perfect for growing barley, which produce exceptional malt whisky when combined with soft spring water from the surrounding mountains. A wee dram is highly recommended after a day in the saddle.

Your Scottish cycling holiday begins in Inverness, the beautiful capital of the Highlands. Leaving the city, the first stage of the ride is packed with history, culture and stunning scenery. You cycle on quiet back roads past the famous battlefield at Culloden and the Bronze Age cemetery at Clava Cairns en-route to Grantown-on-Spey. Located at the northern edge of Cairngorms National Park, this picturesque town overlooks the River Spey which is central to the country’s salmon and whisky industries.

The ride continues along the Speyside Malt Whisky Trail, taking in Ballindalloch Castle, and Glenlivet and Glenfiddich distilleries along the way. Heading north from the world’s malt whisky capital of Dufftown, you arrive at Spey Bay. This river estuary is one of the best places in the UK to watch dolphins and home to the Scottish National Dolphin Centre.

Other highlights of your cycling tour in Speyside include the town of Elgin – where you may want to climb the majestic cathedral for panoramic views – and visit Forres which lies on the south coast of the Moray Firth. The final day of cycling back to Inverness takes you past castles – including the imposing Cawdor Castle immortalised by Shakespeare in Macbeth – coastal towns and championship golf courses.

Ancient woodlands, whisky distilleries, historic landmarks and scenic backroads all come together in redspokes’ Cairngorms and Speyside self-guided cycling tour. We look forward to welcoming you on this spectacular adventure through one of the driest and sunniest parts of Scotland.

Tour Features

  • Learn about Scottish history at the Culloden Battlefield
  • See the striking natural beauty of the Scottish Highlands
  • Cycle through Cairngorms National Park
  • World's malt whisky capital of Dufftown
  • Photograph the imposing Cawdor Castle immortalised by Shakespeare in Macbeth

What's Included

  • Luggage transfers
  • Accommodation
  • All breakfasts
  • GPS route directions and maps
  • Waterproof bike phone holder
  • Portable power bank
  • GPX tracks uploaded to your phone
  • Emergency support (which may be at extra cost)
  • Pre-booked evening meal reservation at each location

What's Not Included

  • Airport transfers
  • Support vehicle
  • Single supplement (rate available on request)
  • Visa fees (where applicable)
  • Travel insurance
  • Bike hire (available if required)
  • Entry fees to any tourist sights en route

Brodie castle

A grand ancestral home of the Brodie clan for over 400 years. Now managed by the National Trust, inside there are impressive art collections, decorative ceilings and fine furniture. Outside, you can explore beautifully landscaped gardens and a nature trail.

Cairngorms National Park

Cairngorms National Park is a national park in northeast Scotland, established in 2003. It was the second of two national parks established by the Scottish Parliament, after Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park, which was set up in 2002. The park covers the Cairngorms range of mountains, and surrounding hills. Wikipedia

Cawdor Castle

Mythologized by Shakespeare as home to the Thane of Cawdor, the fort was in fact not built until the 14th Century. Cawdor was constructed on the ruins of an ancient medieval fort built around a holly tree. The remains can still be seen within the building.

Clava Cairns

A well-preserved Bronze Age cemetery complex of passage graves; ring and kerb cairns and standing stones in a scenic location. Around 2000 BC a row of large cairns was built, three of which remain today. Use of the cemetery resumed about 100 years later; new burials were placed in some of the existing cairns. Three smaller monuments were built including a ‘kerb cairn’. Remains of a smaller cemetery can also be seen at Milton of Clava, a short distance away. Archaeological excavations have found evidence of farming on the site before any of these monuments were built.

Culloden Battlefield

“Marking the spot of the last major battle on British soil, the wild moor at Culloden is the resting place of 1,500 Jacobite and 50 Government soldiers who fought and died here in 1746. Today, you can walk along the battle lines and see the graves of the soldiers beside the memorial cairn in the centre of the battlefield.

Flags represent the front lines of both armies and show the vast scale of the battle, whilst in the centre clan markers indicate the graves of the fallen.

As part of our continued conservation of the site, we work hard to try and restore the land, as closely as possible, to how it would have looked in the 18th century. Working alongside our Facilities team, we have goats and Shetland cows who graze the land just as they would have years ago.

The unique landscape of Culloden is also home to a rich variety of wildlife, including skylarks (who both live and breed on the battlefield) and garden tiger moth caterpillars – these have been in decline since the 1970s but have found a space at Culloden.

The Culloden roof garden and wildflower meadow is a lovely space. Ox-eye daisies, ragged robin and vetches blow in the breeze as you take in the 360-degree views of the battlefield.” The National Trust for Scotland.

Elgin Cathedral

Described as the ‘Lantern of the North’ this majestic medieval ruin has two towers: West Front and Chapter House that remain intact. Climbing to the top of one of these towers you will be rewarded with magnificent views of the area.

Inverness

Inverness lies at the north-eastern end of the Great Glen (Gleann Mòr). The city is the area’s largest metropolis and regarded as the capital of the Highlands. Meaning ‘mouth of the river Ness’ in Gaelic, the city is located where the Ness River flows out of Loch Ness into the Moray Firth (famous for its resident pod of Bottlenose dolphins). Inverness is near to two key historic battle sites: the 11th-century battle of Blàr nam Fèinne against Norway which took place on The Aird to the west of the city and the 18th-century Battle of Culloden (the last battle fought on British soil). Inverness Castle now stands were, legend has it, was once the seat of 11th Century Gaelic king Mac Bethad Mac Findláich who murdered king Donnchad Mac Crinain, as fictionalised by Shakespeare in ‘the Scottish play’.

There are many other historic buildings, notably in the Old Town and Victorian Market. St Andrew’s Cathedral, built from Red Tarradale stone, with a nave of five bays, divided by columns of Peterhead granite, has an imposing position on the River Ness. You can take a circular walk from the castle along the river and through the Ness Islands. Other attractions in the city include Inverness Museum & Art Gallery, tropical gardens at Inverness Floral Hall and a Titanic Inverness Maritime Museum.

Above the city lies Craig Phadrig, an ancient hill fort and once the stronghold of Pictish Kings. From here you can enjoy forest walks and magnificent views of the Moray Firth.

Itinerary

Day 1: Inverness Expand

Your redspokes’ self-guided cycling tour begins in the Highland capital, Inverness. Flights to Inverness are routed from destinations across the UK and Europe. There are also good coach and rail links to Inverness. From the airport, coach and rail station taxis are readily available to take you to your hotel. For details see Essential Information as well as your Joining Instructions. On arrival, you have a free afternoon to explore the area. You could visit Inverness Old Town, the Victorian Market or St Andrew’s Cathedral or take a circular walk from the castle along the river and through the Ness Islands.

We will have a bike fitting and tour briefing at 3pm. We will arrange a taxi transfer from your guest house to our office and ask that you bring with you any bike accessories you would like fitted to your bike.

Accommodation: Hotel/B&B (B)

Day 2: Inverness Expand

You begin your Cairngorms & Speyside self-guided adventure with a local ride this morning, taking a circular route down to Loch Ness and back to Inverness; this will stretch your legs and warm you up for the coming days. The first 10 miles of your cycle to the loch side are relatively flat. Reaching the hamlet of Dores on the banks of Loch Ness where there is a long shingle beach, you will have a spectacular view that stretches 22 miles down the narrow loch towards Fort Augustus, with the steep sides of the Great Glen fault rising over 1,000 feet on each side.

From Dores you head away from the loch beginning a steep climb over the next few miles, looking back you’ll have lovely views of the area. You skim the tip of Loch Ashie and then Loch Duntelchaig on your right, heading towards Essich on undulating terrain over about 8 miles. You will drop downhill again for the next 5 miles as you head back into Inverness. You’ll have some time to explore the city later today. You could visit the Old Town and Victorian Market or St Andrew’s Cathedral or you can take a circular walk from the castle along the river and through the Ness Islands.

Cycling Distance: 28 miles (61 km)
Total Ascent: 1,550 ft (602 m)
Total Descent:1,550 ft (602 m)
Accommodation: Hotel/B&B (B)

Cairngorms and Speyside Day 2: Inverness
Day 3: Inverness to Grantown-on-Spey Expand

Travelling out of Inverness you will soon arrive at the historic Culloden Battlefield, a significant period in Scottish history, where the Jacobite Revolution came to a dramatic end. Many of those that died in this horrific battle did so at the hands of other Clans who fought with Government soldiers. You will get an opportunity to visit the battlefield and experience its poignancy. There will also be an opportunity to visit the Culloden Exhibition Centre which features artefacts from both sides of the battle as well as interactive displays which explain the background to the conflict.

Nearby is Clava Cairns, a well-preserved Bronze Age cemetery complex of passage graves; ring and kerb cairns and standing stones in a scenic location. Around 2000 BC a row of large cairns was built, three of which remain today. Use of the cemetery resumed about 100 years later and new burials were placed in some of the existing cairns. Three smaller monuments were built including a ‘kerb cairn’. Remains of a smaller cemetery can also be seen at Milton of Clava, a short distance away. Archaeological excavations have found evidence of farming on the site before any of these monuments were built.

The route then follows a section of the military road, sometimes called General Wade’s Military Road that was constructed as part of an attempt by the British Government to bring order to a part of the country which had risen up in the Jacobite rebellions. A 13-mile (21km) undulating climb takes you to the Slochd Summit, a mountain pass before a superb 15-mile (24km) descent journeying to Grantown-on-Spey on the edge of the spectacular Cairngorms National Park. Here you can relax and visit one of the local hostelries for a wee dram. A just reward for our day of cycling.

Cycling Distance: 68km (42 miles)
Total Climb: 690 m (2,263 ft)
Total Descent: 480 m (1,574 ft)
Accommodation: Hotel/B&B (B)

Cairngorms and Speyside Day 3: Inverness to Grantown-on-Spey
Day 4: Grantown-on-Spey to Dufftown Expand

Today’s destination is Dufftown, the ‘Malt Whisky Capital’ of the world.

Your cycling starts with a 15-mile (24km) undulating ride to Ballindalloch Castle. Known as the ‘pearl of the north’, this 16th Century fortification is regarded as one of the best examples of a Scottish Baronial Castle – the well-maintained walled gardens are spectacular, a truly hidden gem.

You are now in the heart of the Speyside Malt Whisky Trail, an area with seven world-famous working distilleries. After a further 7 undulating miles you’ll reach the Glenlivet Distillery in the remote and secluded Livet valley. King George IV visited the still in 1822 for a discreet illicit tasting. Two years later, owner George Smith became the first legal distillery in the parish of Glenlivet much to the displeasure of his bootlegging counterparts. Glenlivet’s stills are lantern shaped with long, narrow necks, which help to produce a light flavour

If you’re a whisky lover and partial to a glass at the end of a long day in the saddle or just interested in discovering more about this ancient art, we would suggest visiting the Glenfiddich distillery after you arrive into Dufftown.

Cycling Distance: 56 km (35 miles)
Total Climb: 520 m (1,706 ft)
Total Descent: 550 m (1,804 ft)
Accommodation: Hotel/B&B (B)

Cairngorms and Speyside Day 4: Grantown-on-Spey to Dufftown
Day 5: Dufftown to Forres Expand

As you leave Dufftown, you’ll pass the 13th Century Balvenie Castle, it has a rich and at times bloody history, Mary Queen of Scots was a guest here in 1562. From there you cycle gradually north, riding along the River Spey, which is probably the most famous salmon & sea trout fishing river in the entire world.

On route you pass Gordon Castle, which has the oldest and largest walled kitchen gardens in Britain. Their café is a perfect place for lunch where most of the seasonal produce is grown in the garden

Before reaching Elgin there is a 2-mile detour to reach Spey Bay, a beautiful coastal reserve with the largest shingle beach in Scotland where the Scottish National Dolphin Centre is based.

From here you’ll head inland passing the Elgin Cathedral, described as the ‘Lantern of the North’ this majestic medieval ruin has two towers: West Front and Chapter House that remain intact. Climbing to the top of one of these towers you will be rewarded with magnificent views of the area.

From Elgin it’s a flat 25km ride to your accommodation in Forres, a small town that’s been the winner of the “Scotland in Bloom” award on several occasions.

Cycling Distance: 74 km (46 miles)
Total Climb: 490 m (1,607 ft)
Total Descent: 660 m (2,165 ft)
Accommodation: Hotel/B&B (B)

Cairngorms and Speyside Day 5: Dufftown to Forres
Day 6: Forres to Inverness Expand

Today you set off riding on flatter terrain staying parallel with the coast. After 11 km you reach the 16thC Brodie castle, a grand ancestral home of the Brodie clan for over 400 years. Now managed by the National Trust, inside there are impressive art collections, decorative ceilings and fine furniture. Outside, you can explore beautifully landscaped gardens and a nature trail.

You will then continue cycling on quiet flat roads to Nairn a tranquil seaside resort, with three beautiful beaches, and two championship golf courses. It’s one of the sunniest and driest places in Scotland.

From here there’s an 8km modest climb before a lovely descent to Cawdor Castle mythologized by Shakespeare as home to the Thane of Cawdor, the fort was in fact not built until the 14th Century. Cawdor was constructed on the ruins of an ancient medieval fort built around a holly tree. The remains can still be seen within the building.

The final 27km is on undulating quiet back roads to Inverness where your self-guided redspokes’ Cairngorms & Speyside cycling tour ends.

Cycling Distance: 63 km (39 miles)
Total Climb: 460 m (1,509 ft)
Total Descent: 461 m (1,512 ft)
Accommodation: Hotel/B&B (B)

Cairngorms and Speyside Day 6: Forres to Inverness
Day 7: Inverness Expand

Your self-guided Scottish cycling tour officially ends this morning.

(B)

Scotland Cairngorms and Speyside Map - SquareScotland Cairngorms and Speyside Map
Scotland Average Temperature Chart
Scotland Average Precipitation Chart

Essential Info

The Essential Information for this tour is currently unavailable.

Accommodation

This tour features hand-picked premium accommodation, selected for comfort, Highland character and exceptional Scottish hospitality. Each stay is chosen to offer a refined and relaxing base after a rewarding day on the bike, with welcoming hosts, quality facilities and beautiful natural surroundings.

You’ll stay in a mix of boutique hotels, charming country inns and high-quality guesthouses, all offering en-suite rooms, hearty breakfasts, and the warm, personalised service the Speyside and Cairngorms region is known for. Expect elegant lounges, cosy fireplaces, thoughtful touches, and peaceful settings close to rivers, forests and whisky country.

Most nights are spent in small, characterful properties that blend comfort with local flavour, from stylish village hotels to Highland country retreats, ensuring an authentic but elevated Scottish experience.

Expect:

  • Premium hotels, inns and guesthouses with high standards of comfort and service
  • Warm Highland hospitality — friendly hosts, local produce and a relaxed, welcoming atmosphere
  • Beautiful locations, from riverside settings to forested foothills and whisky-country villages
  • En-suite rooms throughout, with reliable facilities, quality bedding and modern amenities
  • Excellent breakfasts featuring local ingredients — ideal fuel for a day in the Cairngorms
  • Refined, peaceful stays that complement the scenery and spirit of the region

Dates & Prices

Start Date End Date
Price
Availability
 
06 May 2026 12 May 2026
£1,095
Fully booked
Full
06 Jun 2026 12 Jun 2026
£1,095
Fully booked
Full
05 Sep 2026 11 Sep 2026
£1,095
Fully booked
Full

*Package Total: £0

FLIGHTS:
redspokes holidays DO NOT include flights to and from the designated cycle tour countries, however, some bike tours contain internal flights that are included in the price. We recommend looking at www.kayak.co.uk or www.opodo.co.uk for an idea of times and prices.

PLEASE NOTE:
Please read through the Essential Information to see exactly what the price includes and excludes before making a booking.

AVAILABILITY MEANINGS:
Guaranteed to run (limited places) – trips are open for booking and confirmed to run but have a limited number of spaces available.
Guaranteed to run – trips are open for booking and confirmed to run.
Available 2 more to guarantee – trips are open for booking but not yet confirmed. 2 more bookings will guarantee the running of this tour.
Available – trips are open for booking but not yet confirmed.
Contact us – If you would like to book this tour, please contact us.
Fully Booked – trips now closed for booking.

Chat on WhatsApp