Walks you can reach from Dunfermline Queen Margaret by train
Fife · Scotland
MapA day hike is just a simple train journey away — plan your next day of green.

North Queensferry to Burntisland (Fife)
15 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.
Scenic coastal walk on the Fife Coastal Path beneath the iconic Forth Bridge, through charming towns including Aberdour with its harbour and sandy beach, on to Burntisland.
Warnings: Exposed to coastal weather; pack layers and waterproofs.
Walk details: ScotRail (tips).

Dalmeny to Edinburgh Waverley (West Lothian)
15 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.

Edinburgh Waverley to Brunstane (Midlothian)
30 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.

Leven to Kirkcaldy (Fife)
45 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.

Aberdour to Inverkeithing (Fife)
15 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.

Curriehill to Edinburgh Waverley (Midlothian)
30 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.
Recommended: A very green, quiet and largely traffic-free route, gently downhill towards Edinburgh for most of the way, with a good surface throughout. It follows the Water of Leith Walkway and then the Union Canal towpath and ending through the city's parks and streets. A few steepish slopes but no stairs; the river path can be muddy in places. Follows National Cycle Route 75 for most of its length and is part of the John Muir Way; the Colinton Tunnel is a highlight. Princes Street Gardens open at 7am and close at dusk.
Lunch: Cafes near the route at Juniper Green, though most open around 10am.
Warnings: The Slateford Aqueduct has only a narrow, cobbled towpath with a drop, so take care and be patient when passing others.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Cowdenbeath to Kinghorn (Fife)
6 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.
Roughly half on road (mostly quieter roads) and half off-road on Fife's core paths and including a large field with no path to follow south of Auchtertool. There are kissing gates and possibly stiles and muddy tracks. Almost all on Fife's core paths. No places to buy food mid-route.
Lunch: Nowhere to eat en route — pack lunch!
End-of-walk reward: There is a café at the Ecology Centre on Kinghorn Loch, about a mile outside Kinghorn.
Warnings: Take particular care on the road heading north from Auchtertool, which has narrow verges and tight bends, and at the B9157 crossing at Kilrie.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Cowdenbeath to Kirkcaldy (Fife)
6 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.
About three-quarters off-road on core paths, with grazing land, kissing gates, self-closing gates, slopes of about 10% and possibly stiles and muddy tracks. There are pavemented in-town road sections at each end. Goes along the banks of Camilla Loch and through Beveridge Park, part of a historic designed landscape. There may be grazing water buffalo. Bring food and drink as there is nowhere to stop and eat. An alternative route avoids the unwelcoming Raith Estate.
Lunch: Nowhere to eat en route — pack lunch!
Warnings: One road section just north of Auchtertool has tight bends and needs extra caution.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Cowdenbeath to Burntisland (Fife)
6 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.
About half on road, half off-road, with gorse, grazing animals, kissing gates, stiles and small lochs. Most road sections are small and quiet or in-town with good pavements and though there is a 2 km stretch along the A909. Includes the Old North Road local heritage trail and a footpath along the banks of Stenhouse Reservoir, with likely views to the Firth of Forth. Optional side trips up Dunearn Hill (an ancient hill-fort) or Burntisland Binn. Bring food and drink as there is nowhere to stop and eat; bus routes on the B925 and B9157.
Lunch: Nowhere to eat en route — pack lunch!
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Inverkeithing to Cowdenbeath (Fife)
15 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.

Lochgelly to Kirkcaldy (Fife)
15 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.
A varied rural walk on tracks and paths through fields and woodland, including a picturesque wooded glen and burn and with short pavement sections beside busier roads at each end. Over 90% off-road. Rough and occasionally steep paths. Mostly uses Fife's core paths. Highlights include the late-18th-century designed landscape of Raith Park and the wooded ravines of the Den Burn. No places to eat or buy food between Lochgelly and Kirkcaldy. A bus service runs between the two towns. Extensive woodland.
Lunch: Nowhere to eat en route — pack lunch!
Warnings: One short core-path section involves climbing a very rickety gate wrapped in barbed wire through undergrowth; it can be avoided via a couple of quiet roads.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Dalgety Bay to Cowdenbeath (Fife)
6 minutes direct from Dunfermline Queen Margaret.