The Cairngorms is the biggest national park in the UK — nearly 4,500 square kilometres of high plateau, ancient pinewood and glacier-carved glen, sitting in the eastern Highlands between Aviemore and Braemar. Five of Britain's six highest mountains rise here, and the ground between them is the closest thing the country has to the Arctic: a bare, sub-alpine tableland that holds snow into summer and grows weather of its own.
This is high, serious country, but it's also more reachable than its reputation suggests. Aviemore sits right on the railway line and the A9, and from there you're an hour's walk from old Caledonian forest and half a day from the summit plateau. Routes run from gentle loch-side wild camps in Rothiemurchus to the full crossing of the Lairig Ghru, the great pass that splits the massif in two.
It's the wildlife that stays with people. The Cairngorms holds Britain's only free-ranging reindeer herd, along with ptarmigan that turn white in winter, capercaillie in the pines, and golden eagles overhead. Come in summer for long light and warm camps; come in winter and it's a different mountain entirely — which is exactly why our winter skills days run here.
Booking through GBAC puts you with a qualified local Mountain Leader who knows this ground in every season — where to camp, when to turn back, and how to read a plateau in cloud. Small groups, kit available to hire at checkout, and no fantasy version of what the Cairngorms is. Just the real thing, done properly.
Aviemore is the main hub and it's easy to reach: direct trains from Edinburgh, Glasgow and Inverness, and it sits just off the A9. Most of our trips meet in or near Aviemore; you'll get exact meeting points and times once you book.
Depends on the trip. Our family and beginner wild camps assume no experience at all — just a willingness to walk and camp. The winter skills days and longer expeditions ask for a bit of hill fitness and comfort on rough ground. Each trip page spells out who it's for.
For the beginner camps, if you can manage a few hours of walking on uneven paths with a pack, you'll be fine. Winter days and plateau routes are more demanding. If you're unsure where you sit, get in touch and we'll talk it through honestly before you book.
Group safety kit is provided by your guide. Personal kit like tents, sleeping bags and pads can be added as hire during checkout if booking an overnight or wild camping adventure, so you don't need to own a full setup to come. Winter trips have specific kit, listed on the trip page.
Late spring to early autumn (May–September) is the sweet spot for wild camping: longer days, firmer ground, warmer nights. Winter (roughly December–March) is for the skills days, and only with the right kit and guiding. Each season here is genuinely different.
Changeable, and often colder than the glen below suggests. The plateau makes its own weather and can be in full winter conditions while Aviemore is mild. That's not a warning to put you off — it's why you go with a guide who watches the forecast and plans around it.
Yes. Scotland's access laws allow responsible wild camping across most of the park, following leave-no-trace principles. On our trips your guide handles where and how, so you camp legally and lightly, in the right spots, without disturbing the ground or the wildlife.
The Cairngorms in winter is real mountaineering terrain — avalanche-prone slopes, navigation in white-out, and short daylight. Our winter skills days teach crampon and ice-axe use, avalanche awareness and cold-weather movement, so you build the judgement to be out there safely, not just the kit.
Often, yes — though nothing's guaranteed in wild country. Reindeer, red squirrel, ptarmigan and mountain hare are all regulars, and the pinewoods hold rarer species like capercaillie and crested tit. Your guide will know where to look and how to watch without disturbing anything.
Parts of the plateau are a long way from a road, which is part of the appeal. Your guide carries safety and communication kit, holds current first-aid qualifications, and plans routes with escape options. You're going into wild country — but not on your own, and not without a plan.
There's a reason the Cairngorms pulls people back. It's the scale of the place — the sense, standing on the plateau with the wind pushing at you, that you've stepped out of ordinary Britain and into somewhere older and harder. Few places this wild are this easy to reach, and fewer still reward a first visit as generously.
For a first taste, the beginner and family wild camps are hard to beat: a night under canvas in the pinewoods or by a hill loch, with everything you need carried and cooked, and a guide to show you how it's done. It's the gentlest possible way into a serious landscape, and it tends to be the trip people talk about for years.
Come back with a little experience and the park opens up — the long crossings, the high camps, the winter days when the whole massif turns white and the skills you've learned suddenly matter. This is ground you can grow into, spending a lifetime and still finding new corries and unclimbed lines.
Whatever you come for, you'll leave with the same thing: cold air, big country, and the particular quiet that settles once the last light goes off the plateau. Browse the trips below, find the one that fits where you are right now, and come and see the Cairngorms properly.