Campsites in Isle of Jura

Weather-beaten Jura beckons adventurous campers, mixing mountainous moorland with silent coast.

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Happy farmer sitting in a truck in a grassy field
Happy farmer sitting in a truck in a grassy field

Campsites in Isle of Jura guide

Where to go

Craighouse & Around

Jura’s ‘capital’ is the thriving, teensy village of Craighouse at the southern end of the eastern shoreline. Most island facilities are here: a campsite, hotel, post office, bistro, summertime ferry link to the mainland at Tayvallich—and distillery! The Jura Forest, containing a conical trio of summits known as the Paps of Jura, lies northwest and is accessible from a few miles away. The Jura Hotel’s campsite sits on level grass by the shore as the island’s only organised camping. 

Jura Forest

Not a forest but a swathe of blanket bog and summits constituting some of the Inner Hebrides’ most rugged land, the Jura Forest hosts the Paps of Jura, the island’s three biggest peaks. Drawing hill walkers from afar, the forest is best accessed from where the A846 road crosses the Corran River north of Craighouse. Camping is wild—very wild—so consider pitching in Craighouse and exploring from there.

Northern Jura

It can feel very far on the narrow, slow-going but intensely beautiful roads from Craighouse north to Lealt—but in reality, it is under 20 miles away. Once you are here, there is little but a track continuing to George Orwell’s one-time retreat at Barnhill, and thereafter paths to view the Gulf of Corrywreckan’s swirling waters, the Maclean’s Skull Cave, and the solitary bothy at Glengarrisdale. Wild campers will find several pitching spots along these lonely but lovely shores.

Eastern Islay

Jura’s main link to the outside world is via the Isle of Islay. From Feolin Ferry at the island’s west end, ferries serve Islay’s Port Askaig, with connections to the Scottish mainland. And it’s worth discovering Islay’s wild east coast from here. From Ballygrant, 3.5 miles southwest of Port Askaig, a path leads to the shore at An Cladach bothy, a good wild camping spot, and on along the seldom-trodden seaboard. There are endless good views across to Jura en route.