
Edinburgh

Glasgow
United Kingdom · Multi-city itinerary
Scotland itinerary — February 2027
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
February 2027 is an off-season time for the Scotland trip (Edinburgh & Glasgow). Daytime highs sit around 8°C / 46°F across the route. Plan around 5–7 days for the full Edinburgh & Glasgow loop. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 5–7 days · 2 cities
Scotland's two great cities, under an hour apart by train: festival-and-castle Edinburgh and music-and-design Glasgow, the gateway to the Highlands and the western islands.
Edinburgh
Edinburgh in February
Temperature
46°F / 34°F
7.6°C / 1.1°C
Precipitation
10d
2.2in · 55mm
Daylight
9.3h
Sea
41.4°F
5.2°C
February stays wintry, good for Castle, National Museum, and pub routes between short clear spells.
February stays wintry, good for Castle, National Museum, and pub routes between short clear spells.
City overview
Edinburgh sits between Castle Rock, Arthur's Seat, and the Firth of Forth, with Old Town closes, New Town crescents, Leith waterfront, Stockbridge streets, Bruntsfield cafes, and Calton Hill viewpoints forming a compact but steep city. Its August festival season changes the city more completely than any single attraction.
Food & drink
Edinburgh food is Scottish staples with a strong pub map: haggis is minced offal, oats, and spice served with neeps and tatties, Cullen skink is smoked-haddock soup, and cranachan folds cream, oats, raspberries, honey, and whisky into dessert. Grassmarket pubs, Stockbridge Market, Leith's Shore restaurants, New Town whisky bars, and chip shops add Scotch pies, shortbread, drams, and fish suppers.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Arthur's Seat and Holyrood Park
- 2Calton Hill
- 3Royal Mile
- 4Princes Street Gardens and Scott Monument
- 5Edinburgh Castle
- 6Palace of Holyroodhouse
- 7National Museum of Scotland
- 8Royal Yacht Britannia
- 9Scottish National Gallery
- 10Camera Obscura and World of Illusions
1Arthur's Seat and Holyrood Park
4.8★ · 4,771outdoorThe extinct volcano rises 251m above the city, with paths from Holyrood, Duddingston, and the Salisbury Crags. Views reach the Castle, Firth of Forth, and Pentland Hills.
2Calton Hill
4.8★ · 6,446outdoorThe hill east of Princes Street has the National Monument, Nelson Monument, Dugald Stewart Monument, and one of the classic skyline views toward the Castle and Arthur's Seat. It is a short climb from Waterloo Place.
Wikipedia
3Royal Mile
4.7★ · 23,477outdoorThe Old Town spine runs from Edinburgh Castle to Holyrood Palace through Lawnmarket, High Street, Canongate, closes, churches, pubs, and souvenir shops. It is steep, crowded, and central to most first-time walks.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4Princes Street Gardens and Scott Monument
- 5Edinburgh Castle
- 6Palace of Holyroodhouse
- 7National Museum of Scotland
- 8Royal Yacht Britannia
- 9Scottish National Gallery
- 10Camera Obscura and World of Illusions
Neighborhoods
1
Old Town
Old Town is medieval and vertical, with the Royal Mile, Grassmarket, Greyfriars, Victoria Street, closes, pubs, ghost tours, and festival venues.
2New Town
New Town is Georgian and ordered, with Princes Street, George Street, Queen Street Gardens, galleries, shopping, and hotels.
3Leith
Leith is port-city and food-led, with the Shore, Royal Yacht Britannia, Water of Leith paths, seafood restaurants, pubs, and tram links.
4Stockbridge
Stockbridge is village-like, with Sunday market, Raeburn Place, Dean Village access, Water of Leith walks, and independent shops.
5Bruntsfield and Morningside
Bruntsfield and Morningside are local and cafe-heavy, with Meadows access, cinemas, bakeries, bookstores, and tenement streets.
6Southside and Marchmont
Southside and Marchmont are student-and-festival districts, with University of Edinburgh buildings, the Meadows, theatres, pubs, and August venues.
Getting around
Lothian Buses, Edinburgh Trams, airport tram service, and contactless day caps cover most visitor moves. Walk the Old Town-New Town core, use trams for airport-Leith links, and expect steep climbs between Waverley, the Royal Mile, and the Castle.
Glasgow
Glasgow in February
Temperature
46°F / 34°F
7.6°C / 1.2°C
Precipitation
15d
4.9in · 125mm
Daylight
9.3h
February remains wet, with museums and West End cafes safer than exposed Loch Lomond plans.
February remains wet, with museums and West End cafes safer than exposed Loch Lomond plans.
City overview
Glasgow sits on the River Clyde, with Merchant City, the West End, Finnieston, Southside, East End, and city-center grid showing a former shipbuilding and industrial city turned museum, music, food, and architecture base. Charles Rennie Mackintosh, sandstone tenements, Victorian civic buildings, and live music give the city its strongest traveler identity.
Food & drink
Glasgow food mixes Scottish comfort with South Asian cooking: fish suppers mean battered haddock or cod with chips, square sausage rolls show up at breakfast counters, pakora and curry are part of the city's late-night and family-restaurant rhythm, and tablet is a crumbly sugar-and-condensed-milk sweet. Finnieston, Merchant City, the Barras, Byres Road, and Pollokshaws Road are better routes than a single market hall.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum
- 2The Burrell Collection
- 3Riverside Museum and Tall Ship
- 4Mackintosh House and Hunterian Museum
- 5People's Palace and Glasgow Green
- 6Glasgow Cathedral and Necropolis
- 7Glasgow Botanic Gardens
- 8George Square and City Chambers
1Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum
4.7★ · 24,682indoorOpen dailyThe red-sandstone museum opened in 1901 in Kelvingrove Park and displays Scottish art, European paintings, natural history, armor, design, and Salvador Dali's Christ of Saint John of the Cross. It is near Kelvinhall subway.
Wikipedia
2The Burrell Collection
4.7★ · 2,914indoorOpen dailyThe collection reopened in Pollok Country Park after a major renovation and holds medieval art, tapestries, Chinese ceramics, stained glass, sculpture, and paintings collected by Sir William Burrell. It pairs with Pollok House and park walks.
Wikipedia
3Riverside Museum and Tall Ship
4.6★ · 1,872indoorOpen dailyZaha Hadid designed the transport museum, which opened on the Clyde in 2011 with trams, locomotives, cars, bicycles, subway cars, and street reconstructions. The Tall Ship Glenlee is moored outside.
Show 5 more sights
- 4Mackintosh House and Hunterian Museum
- 5People's Palace and Glasgow Green
- 6Glasgow Cathedral and Necropolis
- 7Glasgow Botanic Gardens
- 8George Square and City Chambers
Neighborhoods
1Merchant City
Merchant City is polished and central, with restaurants, bars, galleries, City Halls, Trongate, and easy walks to George Square.
2West End and Hillhead
The West End is leafy and student-heavy, with Byres Road, Ashton Lane, University of Glasgow, Kelvingrove, Botanic Gardens, and subway access.
3Finnieston
Finnieston is food-and-nightlife focused, with Argyle Street restaurants, bars, the SEC, OVO Hydro, and routes toward the Clyde.
4Southside and Pollokshields
The Southside has Queens Park, Pollok Country Park, Tramway, cafes, tenements, and access to the Burrell Collection.
5East End and Dennistoun
The East End mixes Glasgow Cathedral, Necropolis, Barras Market, breweries, Celtic Park, and Dennistoun cafes.
6City Centre and Sauchiehall Street
The city center grid has Buchanan Street shopping, Sauchiehall Street nightlife, theatres, stations, murals, and Victorian facades.
Getting around
SPT Subway circles the center and West End, while ScotRail, buses, and contactless payments cover wider trips. Use the subway for West End-Finnieston-center loops, trains for Pollokshaws/Balloch/Stirling, and walking for Merchant City to George Square.
Best time to do the Scotland trip
In February, the Scotland trip runs daytime highs near 8°C / 46°F, with nights down to about 1°C / 34°F at the coolest stop. It is one of the wetter months, with up to 15 rainy days at the wettest stop. Weighed across both stops, February is an off-season time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Edinburgh & Glasgow are July, August and June, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. February 2027 is off-peak to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact February dates — across every city on the Scotland trip.
Plan this Scotland tripCommon questions about the Scotland trip
- When is the best time to do the Scotland trip?
- The most comfortable months across Edinburgh, Glasgow are July, August and June, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at each stop. February is an off-season time — see the per-stop weather below for the exact picture in February 2027.
- How many days do you need for the Scotland trip?
- A comfortable Scotland trip runs about 5–7 days, allowing roughly Edinburgh 3, Glasgow 2 nights plus travel between stops. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Scotland trip?
- The classic order is Edinburgh & Glasgow. Each city below has its own February weather, events and top-sights list.
- Will the sights be open during my February Scotland trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday, and they differ from city to city on a multi-stop trip. Paste your Scotland list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Edinburgh, Glasgow against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.