Quick Facts: Port of Leith / Port of Rosyth | Scotland, United Kingdom | Ocean Terminal (Leith) or Rosyth Cruise Terminal | Dockside (no tender) | Leith to Edinburgh city centre ~3 miles; Rosyth to Edinburgh ~14 miles | UTC+0 (GMT) / UTC+1 BST (late MarchβOctober)
Edinburgh is one of the great cruise destinations in Northern Europe, and ships call here more often than most cruisers realise β docking either at Ocean Terminal in Leith or, for larger vessels, at Rosyth across the Firth of Forth near Queensferry. The single most important planning tip: if you’re docked at Rosyth, build in extra transfer time β the city is farther than it looks on a map.
—
Port & Terminal Information
Leith β Ocean Terminal: Ships dock at the Port of Leith, directly adjacent to Ocean Terminal shopping centre, which serves as the de facto passenger hub. Check your Google Maps location here. Facilities include ATMs (inside Ocean Terminal), free Wi-Fi throughout the mall, a tourist information point, cafΓ©s, and left-luggage lockers. The Royal Yacht Britannia is literally docked alongside β you can see it from your gangway.
Rosyth Cruise Terminal: A purpose-built terminal near Dunfermline, approximately 14 miles northwest of Edinburgh across the Forth Road Bridge. Facilities are more basic β shuttle buses are typically laid on to Queensferry or Edinburgh, but confirm with your ship before arrival. The Queensferry area is actually a destination in itself (more on that below).
Both ports are dockside β no tender anxiety here.
—
Getting to the City

- On Foot (Leith only): The Shore district of Leith β lined with excellent restaurants and bars β is a 5β10 minute walk from Ocean Terminal. Edinburgh city centre is a 45β60 minute walk along Leith Walk; pleasant, but a long haul if you’re short on time.
- Bus (Leith): Lothian Buses route 22 runs directly from Ocean Terminal to Princes Street in about 25β30 minutes. Fare is Β£2.00 (contactless card accepted). Buses run every 10β12 minutes. No app needed β just tap your card.
- Bus (Rosyth): Local X55 or shuttle services connect Rosyth to Edinburgh Waverley; journey time approximately 45β55 minutes. Confirm current services with the terminal on arrival.
- Taxi: From Leith to Edinburgh Old Town, expect Β£10β14. From Rosyth to Edinburgh, budget Β£30β40. Use official black cabs or pre-booked firms like City Cabs Edinburgh β avoid unlicensed drivers outside the terminal.
- Hop-On Hop-Off: City Sightseeing Edinburgh operates open-top buses from Waverley Bridge. Tickets are approximately Β£17 adults, Β£9 children. The bus does not stop at Ocean Terminal itself, so take the Lothian Bus into town first.
- Rental Car: Practical only if you’re heading to Glencoe, St Andrews, or Stirling β not needed for Edinburgh alone. Hertz and Europcar have city-centre desks.
- Ship Shore Excursion: Worth it specifically for Rosyth passengers who want a guaranteed return transfer, or for whisky distillery visits where driving is off the table. Independent options are significantly cheaper for Leith passengers.
—
Top Things to Do in Leith-Edinburgh, Newhaven-Rosyth-Queensferry, Scotland
Edinburgh and its surroundings pack an extraordinary amount into a single shore day β the challenge is choosing. Here are 13 highlights, from the iconic to the quietly brilliant.
Must-See
1. Edinburgh Castle (Β£21.50 adults, Β£13 children) β The volcanic-rock fortress dominating the Old Town skyline houses the Scottish Crown Jewels and the Stone of Destiny. Book timed entry in advance to skip queues. Find a guided castle and Old Town tour on Viator π Book: Private Edinburgh City Half-Day Tour. Allow 2β2.5 hours.
2. The Royal Mile (free to walk) β The ancient spine connecting the Castle to Holyrood Palace, lined with closes (alleyways), whisky shops, tartan merchants, and street musicians. It’s touristy but genuinely magnificent. Walk it top to bottom in 30 minutes or spend 2 hours exploring. Find walking tours on GetYourGuide.
3. Palace of Holyroodhouse (Β£19.50 adults) β The official Scottish residence of the King, with Mary Queen of Scots’ actual chambers and a dramatic ruined abbey. Far less crowded than the Castle, equally atmospheric. Allow 1.5 hours.
4. Royal Yacht Britannia (Β£19.50 adults, Β£11.50 children) β Berthed at Ocean Terminal, this is one of the world’s great ship visits β five decks of royal history, from the Queen’s bedroom to the engine room. It’s steps from your gangway; there’s almost no excuse to miss it. Book tickets in advance. Allow 2 hours.
5. Scottish Whisky Tasting (varies, ~Β£30β80 per person) β Whether at a dedicated tasting room on the Royal Mile or a full private distillery day trip, Scotch whisky is the defining local experience. A private whisky day trip via Viator makes the logistics effortless. π Book: The Big Whisky Tasting Tour – Private Whisky Day Trip Allow a half-day for a proper tour.
Beaches & Nature
6. Arthur’s Seat (free) β An ancient volcano rising 251m above Edinburgh, accessible from Holyrood Park with a 45β60 minute hike. The 360Β° views over the city and Firth of Forth are extraordinary. Go early before the midday crowds. Allow 2β3 hours round trip.
7. Cramond Beach & Island (free) β A quietly beautiful tidal causeway leads to Cramond Island at low tide, about 5 miles west of Leith. The village of Cramond itself has a Roman fort ruin and a good pub. Check tide times before walking the causeway. Allow 2 hours.
Day Trips
8. Stirling Castle & Braveheart Country (~Β£16.50 castle entry) β Stirling Castle, the Wallace Monument, and the battlefield of Bannockburn form a powerful day trip 35 miles from Edinburgh. A Warriors & Wilderness day trip on Viator combines them beautifully. π Book: Warriors & Wilderness: Braveheart & Stirlingshire Day Trip Allow a full day.
9. Queensferry & the Forth Bridges (free to view) β If you’re docked at Rosyth, this is practically on your doorstep. The three Forth bridges β Victorian railway, 1960s road, and modern Queensferry Crossing β viewed together from South Queensferry are a genuine engineering spectacle. The village has good waterfront pubs. Allow 1.5β2 hours.
Family Picks
10. Dynamic Earth (Β£17.95 adults, Β£11.95 children) β An interactive journey through Earth’s 4.5-billion-year history, from the Big Bang to climate change. Dramatic, immersive, and genuinely engaging for kids 6+. Located at the foot of the Royal Mile next to Holyrood. Allow 2 hours.
11. Camera Obscura (Β£19.95 adults, Β£14.95 children) β Five floors of optical illusions, hands-on exhibits, and a 160-year-old camera obscura projecting live Edinburgh street scenes onto a viewing table. At the top of the Royal Mile; queue-buster with pre-booking. Allow 1.5 hours.
Off the Beaten Track
12. The Shore, Leith (free to explore) β Edinburgh’s coolest neighbourhood is walking distance from your ship. The Shore β Leith’s old harbour street β has indie restaurants, a Michelin-starred bistro (The Kitchin), craft beer bars, and zero tourist tat. Walk here before your bus into town.
13. Greyfriars Kirkyard (free) β This 17th-century cemetery in the Old Town is the resting place of Greyfriars Bobby and ground zero for Edinburgh’s ghost tour industry. Hauntingly beautiful, genuinely historic, and always uncrowded before 10am. Allow 30β45 minutes.
—
What to Eat & Drink

Scotland’s food scene has been transformed in the last 20 years, and Leith is at the heart of it β this is where Scottish produce meets serious cooking, not where you buy shortbread tins. The Scots are passionate about seafood, beef, game, and β increasingly β natural wine and craft whisky.
- Cullen Skink β Smoked haddock chowder; Scotland’s greatest soup. Find it at almost any traditional pub. Β£6β9 a bowl.
- Haggis, Neeps & Tatties β The national dish of offal, turnip and mashed potato. Try it at The Witchery by the Castle or any honest pub. Β£12β18.
- Scottish Breakfast β Square sausage (Lorne sausage), tattie scone, black pudding, eggs. A proper one will power you through a full day ashore. Β£8β12 at a cafΓ©.
- Oysters at The Shore β Fresh Loch Fyne or Loch Ryan oysters at a Leith waterfront bar. Outrageously good. Β£12β18 for half a dozen.
ποΈ Things to Book in Advance
These highly-rated experiences fill up fast β book before you arrive to avoid missing out.
This page contains affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
π Getting to Leith-Edinburgh, Newhaven-Rosyth-Queensferry, Scotland
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

Leave a Reply