Craigmillar Castle
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Craigmillar Castle ticket options
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Standard entry
Explore the castle at a specific date and time, with options for family and carer tickets.
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Historic Scotland members get free, unlimited entry to all our sites
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Explorer Pass tickets
Explorer Pass holders can book their visit here
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Family tickets
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Young Scot Card holders
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Partner organisations
Members of our partner organisations receive free or discounted entry
Craigmillar Castle has many nooks and crannies to explore. Originally a simple tower house residence, the castle grew into a complex of structures and spaces as each owner improved its comfort and facilities.
Its gardens and parkland were also important. The present day Craigmillar Castle Park reminds us of the castle’s days as a rural retreat a short distance from Scotland’s capital.
The original tower house of the late 1300s is at the core. Craigmillar was among the first of this type of castle to be built in Scotland.
The tower house:
stands 17m tall to its battlements
has walls almost 3m thick
holds a maze of rooms, including a fine great hall on the first floor.
The courtyard wall, built in the 1400s, is well preserved, with gunholes shaped like inverted keyholes. A private family chapel and other secondary buildings lie inside the wall.
The west range was rebuilt after 1660 as a family residence for the Gilmour family.
Royal guest turned prisoner
Queen Mary’s Room, on the first floor of the tower house, is where Mary Queen of Scots is said to have slept in 1566. But it’s more likely that she had a multi-roomed apartment when she stayed at Craigmillar, probably in the east range.
Owner Sir Simon Preston was a loyal supporter of Mary, who had appointed him Provost of Edinburgh. Ironically, he would become her jailer for her first night as a prisoner after her capture in 1567. Mary was taken from his townhouse in the High Street to Lochleven Castle the next day.
Natural history
A number of fine ‘veteran’ trees stand in the grounds. One old sycamore to the south of the castle has grown around a drystone dyke.
Some of the plants growing by the castle were likely part of the original castle garden. These include Good-King-Henry – once widely eaten as a vegetable.
Statement of Significance
Read our Statement of Significance to learn more about what makes Craigmillar Castle so special.