GO BEYOND THE CASTLE AND FIND THE EDINBURGH’S SECRET PASSAGES You have been to Edinburgh. You walked the Royal Mile, you looked up at the castle, you followed the crowds from one landmark to the next, and somewhere in the back of your mind a quiet but persistent feeling settled in. The feeling that the city was holding something back. That the real Edinburgh, the one that does not appear on the tourist maps or the open-top bus routes, was just around a corner you never quite turned. You were right. And you are not alone. Most visitors to Edinburgh leave having seen only its public face. They miss the narrow stone passages that disappear between buildings and open into courtyards of unexpected calm. They walk past the unmarked archways that lead to spaces where the sounds of the city vanish within seconds. They never descend the steep, centuries-worn staircases that connect the Royal Mile to the streets far below, never find the hidden garden tucked behind an unassuming opening in the Canongate, never stand in the buried lanes beneath the Old Town where the city's layered past is present and immediate in a way that nothing at street level can replicate. They leave satisfied, but not fully. And that feeling of something missed never entirely goes away. This guide was written to fix that. It is a complete, practical, and deeply informed walking companion to Edinburgh's secret closes, hidden alleys, forgotten corners, and buried streets, covering over sixty specific named locations across the full breadth of the city, from the Royal Mile and the castle rock to the Canongate, the Grassmarket, the New Town's forgotten service lanes, and the atmospheric waterfront passages of Leith. Here is a glimpse of what is waiting inside: Seven secret closes running off the Royal Mile that most visitors walk past every single day without noticing. - The steep staircase passages clinging to the flanks of the castle rock with extraordinary views at every turn. - The buried plague closes beneath the Old Town that survived centuries sealed under the city above. - The hidden garden tucked behind an unassuming Canongate entrance that stops every visitor who finds it. - The forgotten service lanes running behind the New Town's elegant Georgian terraces. - The waterfront passages of Leith carrying the honest, undecorated character of a working port district. - The underground vaults, atmospheric kirkyards, and after-dark spaces that reveal Edinburgh at its most compelling. Every location comes with clear directions, practical visiting guidance, accessibility information, photography tips, and honest advice on the best time to visit. This is not a book about Edinburgh's famous sights. It is a book about everything else. If you have ever felt that a city was keeping its finest secrets for the people who looked hardest, Edinburgh absolutely is. And this guide knows exactly where they are hidden. Pick up your copy, lace up your walking shoes, and go and find the Edinburgh that most visitors never see.