The Castle RollsA survey of every visitable castle in the United Kingdom
4.6 / 5 · 94 reviews FREE ENTRY

Noltland Castle

Orkney Islands, Scotland


Noltland Castle
Noltland Castle, further view Noltland Castle, further view

Key facts

Operator
Historic Environment Scotland
Condition
Ruin
Access
Free, open access

Pinpoint

Orkney KW17 2DW

Telephone 01856 872044

Possible Opening hours

Opening times change. Always check the official website before you travel.

Monday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Tuesday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Wednesday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Thursday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Friday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Saturday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM
Sunday8:00 AM – 8:00 PM

A ruin on Westray, left unfinished and, according to visitors, commissioned by a figure with a genuinely dark reputation. Its most distinctive feature is 71 gun holes built into the walls, an unusually heavy defensive design for a Scottish tower house. It's unsupervised and free, with barely any on-site information, so reviewers suggest reading up before you go.

Worth the trip

The 71 gun holes - an extraordinary concentration of defensive firepower for a single tower house, and the detail that sets Noltland apart from every other Orkney ruin.

Before you go

It's unsupervised with almost no on-site information, so look up the building's history before visiting; reviewers also warn it feels bigger and more maze-like inside than it looks from outside, so mind your step on the old stone stairs.

WHAT VISITORS SAY · 4.6 / 5 across 94 Google reviews

Visitors consistently find Noltland Castle atmospheric and worth the stop when on Westray, with several drawn to its unusual, unfinished history and the unsavoury reputation of the laird who commissioned it. Reviews are split on the level of on-site information - some found the information boards helpful, while one felt there was barely any interpretation and noted the site is unsupervised, so a guided tour (available locally) is recommended by one reviewer for getting more out of the visit. It's free to enter, with a free car park nearby.

On Westray; free, famed for 71 gun holes

“Very impressive. You can clamber right to the top. Its not supervised and barely any info but its a very atmospheric place.”— wendy pearn, visitor review

Further reading

The Castles of Scotland cover book
The Castles of Scotland

Martin Coventry

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Castles of Britain and Ireland cover book
Castles of Britain and Ireland

Plantagenet Somerset Fry

Find it on Amazon