Hadrian’s Wall Path

πŸ“Œ

πŸ“

🌐

Northern

Distance

135

km

Elev. Gain

1,600

m

Duration

7

days

Grade

T1

Route

Point-to-Point

⚑ Quick Facts
πŸ“
135 km
Distance
πŸ“…
7 days
Duration
⛰️
345 m
Peak Height
πŸ“Ά
T1
Grade
🧭
Point-to-Point
Route Type
↗️
1,600 m
Elev. Gain
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🟒 Trail Status
Status Open
Hemisphere Northern
Timezone Europe/London
πŸ—‚οΈ Logistics
Dogs Yes
Transport Easy
Parking Yes
Wild Camping No

πŸ“Š Technical Details

Distance: 135 km
Route Type: Point-to-Point
Grade: T1
Grade note:

Considered the easiest National Trail in England. The central section (Chollerford to Birdoswald) involves repeated short, steep climbs and descents on the Whin Sill crags β€” this is the only physically demanding section. Both ends are essentially flat. No technical terrain, no scrambling. Well-maintained paths throughout.

Navigation: Easy
Navigation note:

National Trail with acorn waymarks throughout. Easy to follow. The urban sections through Newcastle at the start require some attention but are well-signed. The central section is straightforward. Basic guidebook or National Trails app recommended.

Suck Factor: Too easy
Suck Factor note:

Variable underfoot β€” the urban eastern section involves some pavement and tarmac through Newcastle and suburbs. The central crag section is on grassy paths and rough moorland. The western section along the Solway Firth is flat but can be waterlogged and involves some road walking. Mud is common throughout after rain.

Direction: WEBO
Total Ascent: 1,600 m
Max Elevation: 345 m
Highest Point: Winshield Crags
Lowest Point: Wallsend / Bowness-on-Solway (sea level)
Start Trailhead: Segedunum Roman Fort, Wallsend
End Trailhead: Bowness-on-Solway

πŸ“… Best Season

J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Peak
Shoulder
Off
Note:

Best May–October. The AD122 bus only runs Good Friday to early October, so spring–autumn is strongly preferred. The central Northumberland section is exposed and can be wet and windy year-round β€” Northumberland has some of the highest rainfall in England. The Solway Firth section at the end can flood at very high tides (check tide times for sections between Dykesfield and Drumburgh). Winter walking is possible but bleak.

πŸ’­ Logistics & Budget

Ease of Access1/5
πŸŽ’ Dirtbag
€30
per day
🎿 Flashpacker
€140
per day
Budget note:

Budgets in euros at approx 1.15 GBP/EUR. Northumberland and Cumbria are notably cheaper than the Cotswolds or southern England. Dirtbag assumes campsites (~Β£12–16/night) and supermarket food. Average assumes B&Bs (~Β£50–65pp) with pub dinners. Flashpacker assumes comfortable guesthouses and restaurant meals at the Wall’s heritage hotels. Good value by National Trail standards.

Wild Camping No
Dog Friendly Yes
Dogs note Dogs welcome throughout. Route passes through many farmland sections β€” leads required near livestock, which is frequent. Several fort museums and visitor centres have dog policies; most allow dogs in the grounds but not buildings. The AD122 bus accepts dogs.
Baggage Transfer Yes
Permit Required No
Permit note

No permit required. National Trail and UNESCO World Heritage Site. A Hadrian’s Wall Path passport (available at the start) can be stamped at forts and museums along the route β€” a popular memento.

Transport Access Easy
Trailhead Parking Yes
Transport & parking note

Wallsend: easily reached by Tyne and Wear Metro from Newcastle city centre and Newcastle Airport (Wallsend Metro station). Newcastle has direct rail links from London King’s Cross (~3hrs). Bowness-on-Solway: local bus to Carlisle, then train. Carlisle has direct rail links to London Euston (~3.5hrs) and Glasgow (~1.5hrs). The AD122 bus (named after the year the Wall was built) runs the central section seasonally and is invaluable for section walkers.

Accommodation
Campsites Guesthouses Hostels Hotels
Accommodation

Good accommodation coverage throughout, though sparser than southern National Trails. B&Bs, small hotels, and pubs with rooms in most villages along the route. The central section (Once Brewed, Haltwhistle, Gilsland) is well-served for walkers. The AD122 bus service runs the length of the central section from Good Friday to early October, making it easy to reach accommodation slightly off-route. Book ahead in summer. Wild camping is not permitted β€” the path crosses private land and farmland throughout.

🎢 Vibe

Remoteness: Rural
Popularity: Steady
Social Scene: Friendly
Local Interaction: Welcoming
Tourist Overrun: Low (a few day hikers)
Plushness: Rustic (huts/hostels, hot showers)
Trash Level: Pristine
Avg Local Income: €30,000.00
Cannabis: Illegal
Alcohol: Accepted
Note:

Hadrian’s Wall Path is a history walk as much as a nature walk β€” the entire route is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and every day brings you past the physical remains of Rome’s northernmost frontier. The central section on the Whin Sill crags is genuinely dramatic, with the Wall running along the edge of a dolerite escarpment with sweeping views north into Northumberland National Park. Housesteads Roman Fort and Vindolanda are world-class archaeological sites worth spending extra time at. The western half is quieter and less dramatic but offers a pleasing transition through Cumbrian farmland to the flat marshes of the Solway. A trail that rewards anyone with even a passing interest in history, and packs more educational punch per kilometre than almost any other walk in Britain.

πŸ›Ÿ Safety & Inclusion

Safety Score4.1/5
Terrorism Risk Low
Political Risk Negligible
Solo Female Safety Optimal
LGBTQ+ Friendliness Celebrated
Racism Risk Rare
Muslim Friendliness Supportive
Jewish Friendliness Fully integrated
Phone Signal Occasional
Charging Interval Daily
Safety note

Low-risk trail overall. The central crag section is exposed in bad weather with some modest drops at the cliff edges β€” normal care applies. The Solway Firth final section can be affected by flooding at very high tides; check tide forecasts before the final day. Note: the famous Sycamore Gap tree was illegally felled in September 2023 β€” the gap remains but the tree is gone.