Walks you can reach from Edale by train
MapA day hike is just a simple train journey away — plan your next day of green.
Alternatively, view walks directly from Edale.

Hope Circular via Hope Cross (Derbyshire)
5 minutes direct from Edale.
The most magnificent views of the Hope Valley, the Edale Valley and even into the Derwent Valley. Hill trails over moorland and an old Roman road. Detailed route map, photographs and route preview video available.
Time: 3h–6h
Walk details: Let's Go Peak District (tips, photos, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Hathersage Circular via Stanage Edge (Derbyshire)
15 minutes direct from Edale.
Green valley, gritstone escarpment edge, open moorland plateaus, ancient hill fort, narrow wooded gorge with tumbling waterfalls and quiet river pastures.
Time: 5h30
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Grindleford Circular via Surprise View (Derbyshire)
15 minutes direct from Edale.
Quite possibly the best views in the whole of the Hope Valley. Ancient mixed woodland with rocky brook and footbridges, open moorland and gritstone edge. Detailed route map, photographs and route preview video available.
Hilly: a quarter on high ground, rising above the surrounding land.
Woodland: a third under tree cover.
Time: 2h–4h
Walk details: Let's Go Peak District (tips, photos, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Hope to Hathersage (Derbyshire)
5 minutes direct from Edale.
Limestone and gritstone uplands, pastures with panoramic views, landslip area, dry limestone gorge, collapsed cave dale, upland moor and scenic river descent.
Time: 7h
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Bamford to Grindleford (Derbyshire)
9 minutes direct from Edale.
Spectacular gritstone Stanage Edge. Gritstone edges including Stanage Edge and Burbage Edge, moorland, woodland and riverside paths. Gritstone edges carved by ice age glaciers; historically used for millstone quarrying. Pride and Prejudice film location.
Hilly: three fifths on high ground, rising above the surrounding land.
Time: 5h–9h30
Warnings: Hard terrain; rocky gritstone boulders to traverse.
Walk details: Walk Midlands (tips, photos and local insights).

Hathersage to Bamford (Derbyshire)
15 minutes direct from Edale.
Gritstone edges, open moorland, pastures with views, ancient oak woods, plantation woods, reservoir shore and Hope Valley.
Time: 6h30
Warnings: Steep descents.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Sheffield to Meadowhall Interchange (Yorkshire)
30 minutes direct from Edale.
Flat urban canal towpaths and riverside paths along the Sheffield & Tinsley Canal and Five Weirs Walk, past Victoria Quays and the Tinsley locks. An easy waterside start to the trail.
Victoria Quays: A large canal basin in Sheffield constructed 1816-1819 as the terminus of the Sheffield Canal.
The Sheffield & Tinsley Canal: A canal opened in 1819 to link the city with the navigable River Don, famous for featuring in the opening scenes of the film The Full Monty.
Walk details: Penistone Line Trail / Penistone Line Partnership (PDF).

Sheffield to Bamford (Yorkshire)
30 minutes direct from Edale.
Urban streets, landscaped Victorian cemetery, municipal parkland, narrow wooded valley, open moorland, rugged gritstone edges and a scenic descent into lush valley.
Time: 6h30
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

New Mills Central to Marple (Derbyshire)
15 minutes direct from Edale.
Spectacular. Canal towpath with residential roads and riverside paths. Scenic canal walk through Peak District foothills along the Peak Forest Canal.
Waterway: almost all along the Peak Forest Canal.
Time: 2h30–4h30
Warnings: Muddy sections on towpath.
Walk details: Walk Midlands (tips, photos and local insights).

Chinley to Hope (Derbyshire)
7 minutes direct from Edale.

Hathersage to Dronfield (Derbyshire)
15 minutes direct from Edale.
The climbs are rewarded with superb views. A Peak District gritstone walk with three climbs and a huge variety of path surfaces, from enclosed footpaths through housing estates to open moorland bridleway across Totley Moor. Some stiles, deep puddles after heavy rain and mostly good underfoot with some mud. The climbs are rewarded with superb views. Uses the Sheffield Country Way across Totley Moor. Buses to Sheffield. Good views of Sheffield from Totley Moor.
Time: 5h–9h30
Lunch: Refreshment stops along the way.
Warnings: The A6187 is a busy, fast road to cross; do so where there is a grass verge. Parts could be very challenging in poor visibility. Some stiles and potential cattle. The confusing path up to Mother Cap among many paths needs care.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Hathersage to Sheffield (Derbyshire)
15 minutes direct from Edale.
An otherwise glorious walk. A glorious Peak-to-city route: a steep climb out of Hathersage onto open moorland with criss-crossing, sometimes unclear tracks (map and GPS essential), passing between Iron Age forts, then a contrasting descent through green fields and woods down the Limb Valley and along the Sheaf Valley into Sheffield. Steps, stiles and gates; broken road and dirt and very stony ground; can be boggy and very windy on the tops. Crosses Burbage Moor between the Iron Age forts of Carl Wark and Higger Tor; follows the Sheaf Walk (signed to Granville Square) into the city. Hathersage church has the grave of Little John. No refreshments until Millhouses Park; a Tesco and Sainsbury's with cafes lie near the route.
Woodland: a fifth under tree cover.
Time: 2h30–5h
Lunch: No refreshments until Millhouses Park (a summer kiosk), then a Tesco and Sainsbury's with cafes near the route.
Warnings: The moorland tracks above Hathersage criss-cross and can be hard to find in poor visibility, requiring map and compass; the tops can be very windy and boggy. A new development blocks a short section of the Sheaf path (divert ~100m along the main road); avoid a closed footbridge on Broadfield Road. Can be muddy.
Walk details: Slow Ways.