Family Holidays: Scotland family holidays and breaks
Take the Family holiday rating 
Why
Scotland used to be all about the scenery. Yes, it was awesome, world-beating and breathtaking, but if you weren’t interested in the great outdoors, there really wasn’t much to get excited about. These days, whether it’s dog-sledding in the Cairngorms, following castle ghost-trails in Aberdeenshire, climbing through a giant ear canal in a science centre in Dundee or having entrails slung at you at the Edinburgh Dungeons, there’s an incredible array of attractions for kids to get stuck into. There’s also history in spades, and genning up on what happened when and where really does enrich your visit.
The whole country, from the southern uplands to the remotest Highlands, has raised its tourism game hugely since those 1970s summer camping holidays when we parents were bitten senseless by midges. And it’s on your doorstep, which means there’s no need to set foot in a plane, with all the toe-curling moments that presents.
When
Weather WILL be your over-riding concern when you visit Scotland, but it should by no means deter you, even when it’s adverse – it all depends on what sort of a break you’re after. Spring is the classic time to see Scotland because it’s not too crowded, the weather is warming up and hotel prices haven’t reached their peak. It’s also a great time for anglers as the salmon are in abundance, making their journeys upstream.
In summer expect crowds, but there’s a reason for this – Scotland is at its most gorgeous in July, August and September, especially when the purple heather swathes the country in late August and early September. Prices are at their highest and the rainfall at its lowest, and the famous Edinburgh Festival (see below) kicks in as autumn approaches.
Autumn is great for a short cosy cottage break if you don’t mind some drizzle, and winter is the time to come if you are a keen snow sports enthusiast – Aviemore is superb at this time of year.
How
Flying is a quick option, especially if you live near one of the many main and regional airports that fly to Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Inverness. Check deals with Expedia. Alternatively, if driving up to Scotland then you will most likely be using the M6 for most of your journey, as it is motorway or motorway standard all the way from London to Edinburgh. Distances are, London to, Glasgow - 409 miles, to Edinburgh - 414 miles, to Aberdeen - 552 miles or London to Inverness - 557 miles. If you are going by train, try The Trainline and try booking really early to get a cheaper deal, or from Northern Ireland it's a short little, over an hour ferry ride across the Irish Sea.
Stay
Chilly B&Bs with even colder landladies and candlewick-bedspreaded hotels serving school-dinner-style meals have been replaced by an enormous choice of accommodation options, from caravan sites with Sky TV and on-site kids’ playrooms to five-star deluxe hotels complete with miniature dressing gowns, cookies and milk by the bed and toy-boxes on tap.
For Takethefamily’s report on Gleneagles, click here. For Crieff Hydro, click here.
For holiday parks in Scotland, see Haven or for a green hostel experience click here.
For accommodation in Edinburgh, click here.
Search for hotels in Scotland with partners Active Hotels, and Late Rooms.
Do
See the six cities, foremost amongst them Edinburgh. The Edinburgh Festival Fringe has loads of kids’ events, including theatre, storytelling and magic shows, plus hundreds of jugglers, stiltwalkers and buskers that we challenge your kids not to be intrigued by (and they’re free). The run-up to Christmas in the capital is fun too – the switching on of the lights is followed by a fantastic ice-show and fireworks display.
But it’s not just about the capital. Glasgow is renowned for its terrifically friendly attitude towards kids, and there’s more for them to do than you could possibly fit in one visit. Try the amazing Glasgow Science Centre on Clydeside; the miles-more-fun-than-it-sounds Transport Museum in Kelvin Hall; the mini-museum for kids in the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum; the fascinating Victorian Tenement House in Buccleuch Street; and the sweeping historical display that is the People’s Palace and Winter Gardens on Glasgow Green.
Aberdeen, with its stark granite face, yields up such wonders as the cool Satrosphere Science Centre and neighbouring Codonas amusement park. Dundee teaches biology in a uniquely kid-friendly way at Sensation. And Inverness provides a buzzing base from which to go Nessie hunting (there’s not much at the epicentre of monster mania, Drumnadrochit, except two rival Loch Ness Monster exhibitions).
Stirling has a castle and town-gaol experience that are fabulously child-orientated. Nearby, and less than an hour’s drive from Edinburgh and Glasgow, Blair Drummond Safari & Adventure Park is the place to take a boat-trip around an island of chimps, drive through a big-cat enclosure and get a bit closer to the friendlier inhabitants of the park, such as pot-bellied Vietnamese pigs, in the petting zoo.
As for the many beaches that Scotland has to offer, highlights include the white sandy beaches of Nairn in Invernesshire, with gorgeous views across the Moray Firth to the Black Isle – a wonderful local secret. On a sunny day (and yes, there are many), it’s bliss to chill out on its unspoilt and uncrowded central beach and let the kids splash in the superb outdoor pool while you relax with a drink and watch a game of village cricket on the green beside the old Victorian bandstand.
For children of an inquisitive nature, the rock-pools on the beaches at St Andrews provide endless afternoons of poking about. Film buffs might like to note that the sandy stretch next to the pools was where Chariots of Fire was filmed.
Immerse yourself in history with a stroll around Scone Palace just north of Perth in Perthshire. It’s got stacks of facts for grown-ups to wallow in (it was capital of the Pictish kingdom, centre of the Celtic church, the seat of parliaments, and the crowning place of kings), is ideal for buggy-pushers (it’s all on one floor), and has plenty of space in its grounds for kids to run about chasing the peacocks, as well as a great play-park, the great Murray Star Maze in which to lose the children, grazing Highland cattle, plus a smattering of rare breeds.
Get back to nature in Galloway Forest Park, Britain’s biggest forest park – for our feature on the forest, the nearby book-town of Wigtown and other Galloway attractions, click here.
Eat
Pleasingly, most good restaurants in Scotland still offer the likes of haggis, tatties and neeps, usually with a modern, very palatable twist. Restaurants around the country – historically rather unwelcoming to children, at least in the larger cities – now positively court your little darlings, with colouring pens and paper, balloons, kids’ menus and puzzlebooks proffered by engaging, switched-on staff who get the kids’ orders out double-quick so embarrassing ‘I’m Hungry’ tantrums are kept to a minimum. The only real exception is certain high-end Edinburgh eateries, which retain a slightly frosty reception to smaller children.
For Dea Birkett’s feature on eating out in Edinburgh, including cream teas at the Balmoral, click here.
Travel reading
by British Automobile Association
Buy from amazon.co.uk
25 itineraries; Well-thought-out tours take drivers to hip and historic Edinburgh, the birthplace of golf, the malt whisky distilleries of Speyside, Loch Ness, and elsewhere in the Highlands and Lowlands.