Scotland is one of the great horse riding destinations in Europe. Highland glens, white-sand beaches, ancient drove roads, and the longest unbroken bridleway tradition in Britain. Visitors can be on a Highland pony in the Cairngorms within four hours of landing at Edinburgh airport, or galloping on a beach beneath a castle ruin within twenty minutes of leaving the city centre.
The country splits naturally into four riding regions: Edinburgh and the Lothians for city-base visitors, the Highlands and Cairngorms for trekking and Highland pony heritage, the Borders for hunt country and serious cross-country, and the Ayrshire coast for beach gallops. This guide covers all four, the headline venues for visitors, and how to combine riding with the rest of a Scottish trip.
If you've only got a few hours and want one good Scottish ride, see Edinburgh and the Lothians. If you want the bucket-list beach gallop shot, jump to Seacliff Stables. If you want the Highland trekking experience, see the Highlands and Cairngorms.
Edinburgh and the Lothians
Edinburgh is the easiest entry point to Scottish riding for visitors. The city itself has limited stables but the surrounding Lothians are dense with proper schools and trekking centres, all reachable within 30 minutes by car or local train.
The standout for visitors is Tower Farm Riding Stables at Liberton, on the southern edge of Edinburgh and 15 minutes from the Royal Mile. BHS and ABRS double-approved, Tower Farm runs a full lesson programme alongside hacking, dressage and show jumping. The yard sits at the foot of the Pentland Hills, with bridleway access into the regional park. Lessons from £35 to £55 depending on group size and length.
Outside the city, Houston Farm Riding School at Broxburn (also BHS and ABRS approved) is the most polished operation in the Lothians, with full indoor and outdoor schooling. Edinburgh & Lasswade Riding Centre sits ten minutes south of the city in Lasswade and runs lessons across all four disciplines. Harelaw Equestrian Centre at Longniddry is the East Lothian option. For livery-led visitors who want serious facilities, The Scottish National Equestrian Centre at SRUC Oatridge in Broxburn is a BHS-approved national-level venue with cross-country, dressage and show jumping arenas.
The full Edinburgh directory and Lothians directory cover the rest.
Beach riding: Seacliff and the East Lothian coast
Seacliff Stables at North Berwick is one of the most photographed riding venues in Britain. The stables sit above a small private beach with Tantallon Castle ruins on the cliff to the west and Bass Rock (a gannet colony with an old prison fortress) sitting in the Firth of Forth to the north. The beach gallop along the wet sand at low tide is the shot you've seen on Instagram if you've ever browsed equestrian travel content.
ABRS approved, run from a working farm. Beach rides operate at low tide only, so booking is tide-dependent and worth planning around. Group beach hacks run around £75 to £95 for an hour. Suitable for confident riders only on the beach itself; nervous riders are accommodated on inland rides.
This is a 35-minute drive or train (to North Berwick station) from Edinburgh and is the single highest commercial-intent riding destination in Scotland for visiting tourists.
For Ayrshire-coast beach riding on the west, Turnberry Equestrian Centre sits next to the Trump Turnberry Hotel and runs beach rides on the Firth of Clyde with views across to Arran.
The Highlands and Cairngorms
The Highlands are where the Highland pony lives, native to Scotland and built for the terrain. Several centres run trekking on Highland ponies and crossbreeds, taking riders through deer-grazed estates, along lochs, and across heather moor.
Highlands Unbridled at Aboyne in Royal Deeside runs trekking and hacking through Cairngorms National Park. Royal Deeside is the area around Balmoral, the late Queen Elizabeth II's holiday residence, and the King's current Highland base. Tourist-friendly trekking with the genuine Cairngorms backdrop.
Carrbridge Carriage Driving at Dulnain Bridge in the Cairngorms is the option for non-riders who still want the horse experience. Traditional carriage rides through Highland countryside, accessible to all ages and mobility levels.
Wardhaugh Farm Riding Centre at Huntly and Strathorn Farm Stables at Inverurie are both BHS approved and serve the Aberdeenshire and Banff coast areas. Grange Riding Centre at Keith covers the Moray Speyside whisky country (Glenfiddich, Glenlivet) for visitors combining riding with distillery tours.
For Fife and the East Neuk, Kinshaldy Riding Stables at Leuchars runs beach riding on the Tentsmuir Forest coast.
The full Highlands and North East Scotland directory has more options.
The Borders: hunt country and Ian Stark's yard
The Scottish Borders is serious horse country. Hunt territory, common ridings (medieval festivals where towns ride their boundaries on horseback every summer), and home to one of British eventing's most famous yards.
Ian Stark Equestrian Centre at Selkirk is run by Ian Stark OBE, one of Britain's most decorated event riders (multiple Olympic and Badminton podiums). The centre offers cross-country schooling, eventing training, dressage, show jumping and hacking. This is the destination for serious riders and ambitious amateurs spending time in the Borders.
Kailzie Equestrian Centre at Peebles runs trekking through the Tweed Valley, accessible to beginners and intermediates. Barstobrick Riding Centre at Castle Douglas is a BHS-approved trekking centre in Dumfries and Galloway, in the south west.
The Borders' summer common ridings (Hawick, Selkirk, Lauder and others) are worth planning around if you want to see horsemanship as living tradition. Each town hosts its own week-long festival between June and August.
Glasgow and the west
Glasgow has more riding within an hour's drive than visitors expect. Kenmure Riding School and Milndavie Farm Riding Centre both serve the city for lessons. Killermont Polo Club runs the polo scene. For more interesting hacking, head to Ayrshire Equitation Centre at Ayr or Burnbank Equestrian Centre at Hamilton, both within an hour of the city.
The full Glasgow directory and Western & Southern Scotland directory have more options.
When to come
May to September is the riding peak. The Highland midges are at their worst in July and August (bring repellent). June and September give the best balance of weather and lower midge pressure. October produces the best photographic light, particularly across heather.
The common ridings calendar (Borders festivals) runs June through August. Royal Highland Show is in late June at Ingliston. The Edinburgh Festival in August doesn't directly overlap with riding but means accommodation gets expensive.
Winter riding is possible at most yards but cold and wet. The Highlands close some routes in deep snow.
Practical information
What it costs
- Edinburgh-area lesson: £35 to £55 group, £55 to £85 private
- Seacliff beach hack: £75 to £95
- Highland trekking (half-day): £80 to £120
- Cross-country schooling at Ian Stark: from around £45
- Carrbridge carriage ride: from around £40 per couple
What to wear
Long trousers (jeans, leggings, breeches), boots or trainers with a small heel, and serious layers. Even Highland summer weather changes hourly. A waterproof shell is non-negotiable. Helmets are provided. For Highland trekking, bring gloves regardless of season.
Booking
For Seacliff in summer, book 4 to 8 weeks ahead and check tide tables. For Edinburgh-area lessons, two weeks is usually fine. For Highland trekking in school holidays, book 6 weeks ahead. Ian Stark cross-country schooling needs proper notice for venue booking.
Combining with other Scottish travel
Riding pairs naturally with: distillery tours (Speyside whisky country, Glenlivet, Macallan), castle visits (Stirling, Edinburgh, Eilean Donan), the North Coast 500 driving route, and the Highland Games circuit (June to September). Less natural pairings: cycling-led tours (different schedules), and city-only Edinburgh weekends (the festival period).
Riding elsewhere in Britain
Visitors doing a longer UK riding trip often pair Scotland with one or two other regions. Three logical combinations:
- The Lake District is just over the border into England, 90 minutes south of Edinburgh. Similar northern landscape, fewer midges, and the option to ride heavy horses (Clydesdales, Shires) at Cumbrian Heavy Horses.
- The Cotswolds is 5 hours south for the contrast: pastoral English riding country, polo at Beaufort, country pubs, Princess Anne's neighbourhood. The opposite end of British riding aesthetic to the Highlands.
- Cornwall is the longest journey but the most distinctive beach riding in Britain: Perranporth, Crantock and the Atlantic coast.
Where to start
For a one-off ride from Edinburgh: book Tower Farm at Liberton.
For the iconic Scottish beach gallop: book Seacliff Stables at North Berwick (book early, check tides).
For Highland trekking: book Highlands Unbridled at Aboyne or Kinshaldy at Leuchars.
For serious cross-country and tuition: book Ian Stark Equestrian Centre in Selkirk.
For polo or carriage driving for non-riders: Killermont Polo Club (Glasgow) or Carrbridge Carriage Driving (Cairngorms).
If you run a Scottish riding venue and your stables aren't listed, claim or add your venue for free.