Greyfriars Kirkyard tickets & tours | Price comparison

Greyfriars Kirkyard

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Greyfriars Kirkyard, often also called Greyfriars Cemetery, is one of the most atmospheric corners of Edinburgh Old Town: a burial ground dating to 1562 where weathered stones, Greyfriars Bobby, and the shadow of the National Covenant all meet just off Candlemaker Row.

Start with a guided history or ghost walk, because it turns scattered graves and legends into one vivid route and saves you time hunting for the key names on your own.
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Guided history and ghost walks

Best if you want Greyfriars Kirkyard explained properly, from the National Covenant and the Covenanters' Prison to Greyfriars Bobby, haunted lore, and the graves most visitors would otherwise miss.
Edinburgh: Greyfriars Kirkyard Tour
5.0(146)
 
getyourguide.com
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City of the Dead Haunted Graveyard Tour
4.7(229)
 
viator.com
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Edinburgh Underground Ghost Tour
4.4(56)
 
headout.com
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Private Greyfriars Kirkyard history tour
5.0(67)
 
viator.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Greyfriars Kirkyard

1
Choose daylight or dusk
If your priority is readable inscriptions and monument detail, go in daylight. If you want the haunted side of Greyfriars Kirkyard to land properly, choose a dusk or evening walk instead. Matching the light to your intent makes the stop feel sharper, not gimmicky.
2
Scout the gate first
Because the kirkyard is free to enter via Candlemaker Row, you can do a short daylight scout before paying for a tour. Spot the layout, glance at the Greyfriars Bobby statue just outside, then let the guide handle the denser history later. That way you do not spend the first part of the tour simply orienting yourself.
3
Respect the graveyard mood
This is still a burial ground, not a haunted-house set. Keep voices low, step carefully around older stones, and treat the Harry Potter name hunt as a side note rather than the whole point. The stop lands better when the place still feels reflective.
4
Wear shoes with grip
On wet Edinburgh days, grass edges, stone paths, and older steps can get slick fast. If you are heading in after rain or near dusk, wear shoes with grip and keep one hand free. That way you focus on the stories instead of the footing.
5
Pair one nearby stop
For a compact Old Town route, pair Greyfriars Kirkyard with just one nearby anchor: National Museums Scotland for museum depth, Mary King's Close for more dark-city storytelling, or Edinburgh Castle for the headline skyline stop. One add-on is usually enough here. So your Edinburgh day stays atmospheric instead of overpacked.
6
Allow 20 to 90 minutes
On your own, many visitors spend about 20 to 40 minutes in the kirkyard. Guided walks often stretch closer to 60 to 90 minutes, especially when they fold in wider Old Town history. Building that range into your plan keeps dinner, museum slots, or castle timing from slipping.

How to plan a Greyfriars Kirkyard stop in Edinburgh

This is one of the easiest atmospheric stops in Edinburgh Old Town, but it works best when you decide early whether the visit is about daylight history, ghost-tour mood, or a short free walk between bigger headline sights.

Choose history or haunted first

Best for first-time visitors who want substance: a daytime history walk. Best if your priority is mood: a dusk or evening ghost tour around Greyfriars Kirkyard and the surrounding Old Town. The mapped products here split along exactly that line, so make that decision first and the rest of the booking gets easier. Book now.

Use Greyfriars as an Old Town hinge

Because the kirkyard sits between Candlemaker Row, Chambers Street, and the climb toward the Royal Mile, it is easy to pair with National Museums Scotland, Mary King's Close, or Edinburgh Castle without adding transport. If you only have half a day, build the route around one of those and let Greyfriars Kirkyard be the atmospheric counterpoint. That keeps your Edinburgh day compact and walkable.

Scout the layout before your tour

Since access is free and the gate on Candlemaker Row stays open, many visitors do a short pre-tour loop in daylight. You can spot the Greyfriars Bobby statue outside, get your bearings inside the kirkyard, and save the denser storytelling for the guide. This avoids the classic first ten minutes of wandering with your phone held up like a compass.

Leave time for the names

Do not rush from the headline legend straight to the exit. After the big stories, give yourself a few spare minutes for the quieter corners, because names like Tom Riddell, weathered enclosures, and older wall monuments are exactly what make the stop linger in memory. This slower finish suits couples, solo travelers, and anyone chasing atmosphere over checklist speed.

History and legends of Greyfriars Kirkyard

The reason this place stays famous is not one single tale. It layers Reformation politics, prison history, civic burials, dog legend, and literary fandom inside one compact graveyard.

A burial ground from 1562

The kirkyard dates from 1562 and went on to become Edinburgh's principal cemetery, which is why the stones range from dense wall monuments to later free-standing enclosures around Greyfriars Kirk. You are not looking at one tidy memorial plan here, but at centuries of city memory layered inside a single enclosed site.

Why 1638 still matters here

On 26 February 1638, the National Covenant was signed at Greyfriars, tying the site to one of the defining disputes in Scottish religious and political history. That is why the place feels weightier than a photogenic graveyard alone: the kirkyard was part of national argument, not just private mourning.

The Covenanters and darker memory

After the defeat of the Covenanting Army in 1679, prisoners were confined in the eastern section later remembered as the Covenanters' Prison. Even if you do not believe a word of ghost lore, you can feel why guides keep returning to this corner. The history is harsh enough without any extra fog machine.

Bobby, Tom Riddell, and modern pilgrimage

The story of Greyfriars Bobby, who reportedly guarded John Gray's grave for 14 years, turned the kirkyard into one of Edinburgh's best-loved legends, and the bronze statue outside the gate followed in 1872. Add the grave of Tom Riddell and other surnames that fascinate Harry Potter fans, and you get a place where folklore, mourning, and pop culture all share the same map.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Greyfriars Kirkyard free to enter?

Yes. The kirkyard itself is free, and the current access wording allows entry 24 hours a day via the gate on Candlemaker Row. The paid products here are guided walks, not site-admission tickets.
Read more.

Do I need a guided tour, or can I visit on my own?

You can absolutely walk through on your own. A guide becomes worth it if you want the National Covenant, the Covenanters' Prison, Greyfriars Bobby, and the kirkyard's ghost lore tied into one clear story rather than a loose stroll.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for Greyfriars Kirkyard?

A practical range is 20 to 40 minutes on your own or 60 to 90 minutes with a guided walk. Add a little extra if you want to linger over inscriptions or combine the stop with the Greyfriars Bobby statue outside the gate.
Read more.

Is Greyfriars Kirkyard really linked to Harry Potter?

Yes, in a limited but very visible way. Visitors come for the grave of Tom Riddell and other surnames they connect with Harry Potter, and J.K. Rowling has described the Tom Riddell name as a subconscious inspiration. Treat it as a fun literary layer, not the main historical story of the site.
Read more.

Can I visit Greyfriars Kirkyard at night?

Yes, and that is one reason ghost walks work well here. If you want photographs, inscriptions, and monument detail, daylight is better; if atmosphere matters more, dusk or evening gives the stronger mood around Candlemaker Row and the upper enclosures.
Read more.

What should I pair nearby with Greyfriars Kirkyard?

For a practical Old Town cluster, pair it with National Museums Scotland, Mary King's Close, or Edinburgh Castle. One nearby anchor is usually enough, because Greyfriars Kirkyard works best as a concentrated atmospheric stop, not as a marathon checklist item.
Read more.

Is the kirkyard easy for limited-mobility visitors?

It is compact and open-air, but it is not polished museum terrain. Expect uneven historic surfaces, grass edges, and weathered stone rather than one perfectly smooth route, so daylight and slower pacing are the safer choice if balance or wheels are a concern.
Read more.

General information

address

Greyfriars Kirkyard
Greyfriars Place
Edinburgh EH1 2QQ
Scotland, United Kingdom

how to get there

The main pedestrian gate is on Candlemaker Row, just off George IV Bridge in Edinburgh Old Town.
Edinburgh Waverley is about 10 minutes on foot, and the Princes Street tram stop is roughly 12 minutes away via The Mound.
Driving is usually more hassle than it is worth here, so most visitors arrive on foot, by taxi, or as part of a wider Old Town walk.
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