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Anstruther Voyage Tips and guide

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Anstruther is a fishing village on the East Neuk - the peninsula - of Fife on the east coast of Scotland. With a population of 4000 in 2022, it's the largest of a series of villages along the coast: east through Crail to the tip of Fife, and west through Pittenweem and St Monans to Earlsferry, all covered on this page. Further west the coast becomes industrial and is described as part of Leven, while the area to the north is described as part of St Andrews.

Understand

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Dreel Burn at Anstruther

Anstruther is first documented in 1225, when already its fishing was important enough to be the basis of a feud with the monks of Dryburgh Abbey. The Pope himself had to intervene, possibly the first involvement of a pontiff in a fish fight since the miracle of the loaves and the fishes. "Struther" comes from Gaelic sruthair, a stream, referring to the Dreel Burn which divided the community into Anstruther Easter (the larger) and Anstruther Wester. These grew together in modern times, but after 1936 the shoals of herring disappeared from traditional fishing grounds. Anstruther never had the industry of the more westerly villages near the coalfield, and was too far from the cities to become a commuter town, so its picturesque centre was never re-developed on a large scale. For most of a century it's been an attractive resort with small-scale fishing and leisure boating.

Get in

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Map
Anstruther and East Neuk

By road from Edinburgh city or airport follow M90 onto A92 then A915; at Upper Largo branch onto A917. By bicycle cross the Forth on the old road bridge then follow the coast road through Kirkcaldy.

Stagecoach Bus X61 runs hourly from Edinburgh via Halbeath and Kirkcaldy to Leven. There you change to Bus 95, while X61 heads inland to St Andrews.

From Edinburgh airport take the direct bus to Halbeath and change.

Leven is the nearest railway station, with trains twice an hour from Edinburgh via Kirkcaldy. From Dundee and Aberdeen change at Kirkcaldy.

Bus 95 hugs the coast hourly from Leven through Elie, St Monans, Pittenweem, Anstruther, Crail, Kingbarns and St Andrews.

Get around

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Anstruther can easily be explored on foot, and the bus gets you along the coast. You need wheels to explore inland.

The local taxi firm is H&S (+44 1333 311111).

See

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Scottish Fisheries Museum
  • 56.2219-2.696961 Scottish Fisheries Museum, St Ayles Cres, Harbourhead, Anstruther KY10 3AB, +44 1333 310628. M-Sa 10AM-4:30PM, Su 11AM-4:30PM. Museum tracing fishing back to the days of sail, with displays of engines, fishing gear and fishermen's houses. The museum has 18 boats. Adult £11, conc or child £8.80. Scottish Fisheries Museum on Wikipedia Scottish Fisheries Museum (Q7437730) on Wikidata
  • Anstruther Harbour by the museum was built between 1866 and 1880. The 9-m concrete Chalmers Lighthouse is simply a harbour light. It's named for Thomas Chalmers (1780 – 1847), a founder of the Free Church of Scotland, who was born nearby.
  • 56.2257-2.68312 Cellardyke was a separate fishing village with its own harbour. It merged into Anstruther when both grew during the 19th century heyday of herring fishing. The community suffered several grievous losses of boats but it was a storm of 1898 that wrecked their harbour. The remaining Cellardyke boats relocated to the new Anstruther harbour. Herring vanished from local waters in 1936 and traditional livelihoods ended.
  • 56.2139-2.727533 Pittenweem is the next village west, two miles along the coast, and of all the East Neuk villages this retains the most active fishing fleet. An Augustinian Priory once stood here, with an outpost on the Isle of May. Its 15th-century gatehouse and "Great House" have been preserved in what is now the Church of Scotland. There was also a hermit's cave associated with the 7th-century St Fillan. This was used for unsavoury purposes into the 18th century then forgotten until 1900 when a horse ploughing the priory garden had the earth open beneath its hooves. The cave has been restored as a chapel and is entered from Cove Wynd, the alley between church and harbour. The key is held at Cocoa Tree Cafe on High St next to the church.
  • 56.236944-2.7761114 Kellie Castle, Pittenweem KY10 2RE (off B9171), +44 1333 720271. Mar-Oct daily 10AM-5PM, Nov Dec Sa Su 10AM-4PM. Sturdy 14th-century towerhouse, extended and prettified from the 15th. The interior and gardens were done over in Arts & Crafts style in the 19th century, and in 1970 it passed to the National Trust for Scotland. An exhibition in the stables block depicts Hew Lorimer, the sculptor and bygone owner. Adult £14, conc £11, child £8, NTS / NT free. Kellie Castle on Wikipedia Kellie Castle (Q4185834) on Wikidata
  • 56.206-2.7675 St Monans is a fishing village named for St Monan, supposedly killed in a Viking raid. East side is a late 18th-century windmill, which once powered the salt-panning industry; you can't go inside. The church by the water's edge at the west end of the village is from 1369.
  • 56.201-2.7786 Newark Castle is a dilapidated 15th-century turret, you just come for the coast walk and the view. It's no relation to the one in Newark-on-Trent where King Charles I surrendered, though one owner General Leslie did serve with the Royalists. The Edwardian shipping tycoon Sir William Burrell considered restoring the castle, blanched at the cost, and instead founded the Burrell Art Collection in Glasgow.
Lady Janet's Tower
  • Ardross Castle half a mile west of Newark Castle is of similar age but even scrappier, as its masonry was plundered for building, and what's left is the rubble that no-one wanted.
  • Lady Janet's Tower on the headland east of Elie is a Folly, a picturesque look-out tower and bathing hut of 1770. It's said that Lady Janet Anstruther would have a bell rung to warn off townsfolk before she went skinny-dipping, but that was just wishful thinking by locals with tinnitus.
  • 56.19-2.8237 Elie and Earlsferry were combined in 1930. It was a medieval crossing point of the Forth, for instance by pilgrims to St Andrews, and in legend one earl that took the ferry was Macduff fleeing Macbeth. It remained a crossing point until a storm trashed the harbour in 1766. There's an attractive High Street, a church of 1639 with an octagonal tower, and a small lighthouse. Elie House, built 1697, is now private apartments.
  • West of Elie the coast is not unpleasant, but the view is of industrial towns further up the Forth. See Leven for Lundin Links and Largo.
  • 56.243-2.6488 Caiplie Caves are in a sandstone bluff two miles east of Anstruther. They were religious sites in Pictish and early Christian times and have ancient carvings. They suffer from vandalism and strewn trash.
  • 56.261-2.6269 Crail is the most easterly of the villages, picturesque and with a parish church from the 12th century. The dovecot is the only remnant of the Franciscan Friary, and the royal castle is long gone.
  • 56.279-2.58610 Fife Ness the tip of the East Neuk is a bit disappointing, as it's dotted with modern buildings.
Ops room in the Bunker
  • 56.2706-2.698411 Scotland's Secret Bunker, Troywood KY16 8QH (On B940), +44 1333 310301. Feb-Oct daily 10AM-5PM. Hidden within a farmhouse is the entrance to a labyrinth, a blast-proof underground complex where government would re-locate if nuclear attack was likely, and carry on governing (governing what?) in the aftermath. It was built in 1954 and stood ready until 1993. Adult £19, conc £18, child £14. OSM directions
  • 56.3-2.6612 Kingbarns: see St Andrews for this and other points along the northeast coast of the Neuk. There's golf and a distillery. It's surprising that medieval kings trusted this exposed shore to ship their grain: you can even surf here.
  • 56.1858-2.554913 Isle of May lies five miles off the Fife coast out in the Firth of Forth. Its ruined priory was abandoned in 1318. The lighthouse is a Gothic affair of 1816 by Stevenson. The nearby Low Light was added to create a pair to assist navigation but is no longer lit, and is used as a bird observatory. This is the main reason to visit, as the island is a National Nature Reserve owned by Scottish National Heritage. Seals can be seen all year round, whales can be spotted in late July and August. April-July there are thousands of puffins. Anstruther is the usual departure point for boat trips, see below; they sometimes also sail from North Berwick.

Do

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Isle of May
  • Anstruther Golf Course, Shore Rd, Anstruther KY10 3DZ, +44 1333 310956. Founded in 1890, it's a 9-hole course on sandy soil.
  • Crail Golfing Society is at Fife Ness. The old course laid out by Tom Morris is the Balcomie, and the Craighead is the modern championship course.
  • Golf House Club is in Elie, visitor round £100.
  • Charleton Golf Club is 4 miles north of Elie, within the grounds of plush Charleton House, a private dwelling.
  • 56.1887-2.85811 Elie Chainwalk. A series of chains anchored into the rock face that you cling onto while scrambling along the coast. Some physical ability and strength required. Pay attention to the tides to avoid getting trapped. OSM directions
  • Boat trips sail most days Apr-Sep, weather and tides permitting. It takes about an hour to sail to the Isle of May, and the landing trips give you 2-3 hours on the island, so those take 5 hours in all. The non-landing trips just circle beneath the cliffs, among sea birds and seals, so they have you back ashore within 3 hours.
    • Anstruther Pleasure Cruises (+44 7957 585200) sail in "May Princess" from Anstruther middle pier. The boat takes 100 passengers and has a small snack bar and toilets. Online booking preferred (in mid-summer they often book out) but you can also buy or book at their kiosk on the pier.
    • Isle of May Boat Trips (+44 7429 454055) sail from the middle pier in Ribs, which are fast but wet and bouncy and only take 12.
  • Crail Raceway is a hot-rod and go-kart racetrack along the lane east of Crail towards Fife Ness.
  • East Neuk Festival is classical music, with events in Anstruther and other villages. The next is 1-5 July 2026.
  • Largo Arts Week is next held in that village 18-26 July 2026.
  • Pittenweem Arts Festival is next held 1-8 Aug 2026.

Buy

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Lookout tower on Crail Castle
  • Co-op Food is northwest edge of Anstruther on St Andrews Road, open daily 7AM-10PM.
  • The Pop In is an antiques and art shop at 1 Backgate, Pittenweem KY10 2LG, open daily 11AM-4PM.
  • Bowhouse Market is off A917 west side of St Monans, on the second full weekend of each month 11AM-4PM.
  • ENOS (East Neuk Open Studios) is a promotional event for local artists, you can visit the individual studios or their collected work at the Bowhouse near St Monans. The main event is the last two weekends in June, with a further show first weekend in Nov.

Eat

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  • Anstruther Fish Bar, 42 Shore St, Anstruther KY10 3AQ (by Fisheries Museum), +44 1333 310518, . Daily 11:30AM-9PM. Takeaway and sit-in restaurant. Wide selection of fish served in batter with chips, and the usual alternatives like sausage or haggis.
  • The Cellar, 24 East Green, Anstruther KY10 3AA, +44 1333 503110. Th 5-8PM, F-Su noon-3PM, 5-10PM. Acclaimed restaurant, especially for its seafood.
  • Eastern Touch is an Indian restaurant at 35 Cunzie St, open Tu-Th 5-9PM, F Sa 4-10PM, Su 4-9PM.
  • Haven Bar and Restaurant, 1 Shore Street, Cellardyke KY10 3BD, +44 1333 310574. Tu-F 3-11PM, Sa 11:30AM-1AM, Su 12:30-11PM. Good seafood selection.
  • Larachmhor Tavern (Chip Ahoy), 6 Mid Shore, Pittenweem KY10 2NJ, +44 1333 311888. Daily 11AM-10PM. Good seafood, dog-friendly pub.
  • The Dory, 15 East Shore, Pittenweem KY10 2NH, +44 1333 311222. W-Su noon-11PM. Seafood bistro by Pittenweem harbour.
  • 56.2085-2.83191 Kinneuchar Inn, 9 Main St, Kilconquhar KY9 1LF, +44 1333 340377. W Th 6-11PM, F Sa noon-11PM, Su noon-9PM. This village pub serves great meals and also has rooms. OSM directions
  • The Shoregate is a pleasant pub-restaurant with rooms in Crail. It's open M Tu 3-10PM, W-Su noon-11PM.
  • The Shoregate, 67 High St, Crail KY10 3RA, +44 1333 451815. M Tu 3-10PM, W-Su noon-11PM. Outstanding restaurant with rooms.
  • Peat Inn in Cupar (Fife) gets exceptional reviews, see St Andrews#Sleep.

Drink

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Pittenweem Harbour
  • Anstruther has the most choice, with Dreel Tavern, Morrison's, Masonic Arms, Ship Tavern, Coastal Inn and The Haven (above).
  • Aeble is a bottle shop specialising in cider at 17 Rodger St Anstruther, open Th-Su.
  • Pittenweem has Larachmhor Tavern (above) and West End Bar.
  • Elie has Ship Inn (below) and Station Buffet Bar, where no train will ever interrupt your sup.
  • Crail and St Monans are too small for free-standing pubs.

Sleep

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Anstruther

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  • 56.2298-2.68241 Silverdyke Caravan Park, Windmill Rd, Cellardyke KY10 3FN, +44 1333 313098. Caravan and motorhome site open Mar-Oct with 31 touring pitches, but no tents. The static caravans here are individually-owned weekend retreats. Pitch £37 per night. OSM directions
  • 56.223-2.70292 The Bank, 23 High Street KY10 3DQ, +44 1333 310189. Cozy hotel with bar and restaurant. B&B double £160. OSM directions
  • Murray Library Hostel, 7 Shore St KY10 3EA. Clean friendly hostel by the shore.
  • The Waterfront, 18 Shore St KY10 3EA, +44 1333 312200. Pleasant place with sea views.
  • 56.2186-2.71173 The Spindrift, Pittenweem Rd KY10 3DT, +44 1333 310573. Welcoming Victorian guesthouse west edge of Anstruther. B&B double £130. OSM directions

Further east

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Elie Chain Walk

Further west

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  • The White House is a B&B at 11 South Loan, Pittenweem.
  • Albert Cottage is a B&B at 15 Viewforth Place, Pittenweem.
  • 56.1883-2.81614 The Ship Inn, The Toft, Elie KY9 1DT, +44 1333 330246. Charming pub with rooms, views and good dining. B&B double £300. OSM directions
  • 56.1941-2.8625 Elie Holiday Park, Shell Bay, Elie KY9 1HB, +44 1333 330283. Relaxing coastal park open Mar-Oct. Tent £33, tourer £40. OSM directions

Connect

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As of April 2026, Anstruther and the East Neuk villages have 4G from O2, Three and Vodafone, and 5G from EE.

Internet can be accessed at St Monans Library (Council-run), W Sa 10AM-noon, Th 2-6PM, and Pittenweem Community Library (volunteer-run), M W 2-5PM, F Sa 10AM-1PM.

Go next

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  • North to St Andrews, the home of Golf, with a cathedral and university.
  • Further north across the Tay bridge is rejuvenated Dundee.
  • The coast west from Kirkcaldy is industrial and worth missing, so head inland to Falkland Palace, the Lomond Hills and Lochleven Castle.



This city travel guide to Anstruther is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.


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