MY ITINERARY
Ready to get started? LET'S GO!
Dales Way Map and Trail Guide for Walkers

Dales Way

This much-loved long-distance path runs right across the Yorkshire Dales National Park, walking north from Ilkley to Bowness and Windermere.

Season: 1 April - 20 October 2024
Starting point: Ilkley
Finishing point: Bowness & Windermere
Recommended for extra nights: Bowness & Windermere
Distance: 80 miles / 128km

Dales Way Price Guide

Luggage Transfers
  • £15.50 per bag per move
  • Minimum £29 per booking
  • Minimum 1 bag for whole walk, max 18 kg per bag
  • Luggage transfers paid at checkout
  • 1 - 2 moves only, contact the office for pricing
Accommodation Booking
  • 1-7 nights £50.00 per person
  • 8-14 nights £100.00 per person
  • 15+ nights £150.00 per person
  • Accommodation fee & bag transfers paid at checkout
  • You pay the hotels directly as you follow the trail

Book your full Dales Way package now
If you have any queries, please email info@sherpavan.com.

Gradients and terrain on the Dales Way are relatively easy, but the going may be muddy underfoot in wet weather. There are also a large number of stiles and ‘kissing gates’ to negotiate. The itinerary follows Wharfedale (where there is time to admire the ruins of Bolton Abbey) and then Langstrothdale, gradually gaining height upstream to reach the Pennine watershed at Cam Fell (1,700 feet). The way then runs down Dentdale to the market town of Sedbergh and across sheep pastures to Bowness on Windermere.

Click the blue 'BOOK MY LUGGAGE' button above to organise baggage transfer services.

Walkers are required to bring their own face mask and hand gel.

Dales Way Route Map


Typical Itinerary

Stage 1: Ilkley to Burnsall (13 miles / 21km)

This is an entirely valley walk, following the River Wharfe upstream from the lowland scenery of Lower Wharfedale to the hillier surroundings of the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Those who prefer a slightly shorter day can opt to stop at Appletreewick (12 miles from Ilkley), while the really fit and ambitious might consider continuing to Grassington or Linton. In any case the main highlight of the day for most walkers is the ruined Augustinian priory at Bolton Abbey, in a fine setting close to the River Wharfe. It can be crowded at summer weekends, but still, near the half-way point of the stage, makes a pleasant spot for a picnic lunch. There is also a café serving lunches a mile earlier at Bolton Bridge. Appletreewick (a short walk off the Dales Way itself) and Burnsall are both characteristically pretty stone-built Dales villages, with pubs where you can obtain evening meals.

Stage 2: Burnsall to Hubberholme (15 miles / 24km) 

If you start in Appletreewick or Burnsall you could aim to reach Buckden (milepost 27), Hubberholme (milepost 28) or Yockenthwaite (milepost 30) today. If you start in Grassington and are a moderate or strong walker you could continue beyond Yockenthwaite to Deepdale (milepost 31), Beckermonds (milepost 32.5) or Oughtershaw (milepost 33.5). The first and last sections of this stage again keep close to the valley bottom, but the middle section of 5 miles or so between Grassington and Kettlewell take you onto the high ground on the east side of the Dale, where you cross some good examples of the famous 'limestone pavements' (areas of bare rock with grooves or 'grykes' eroded by solution to a depth of up to a metre or more). The upstanding ridges between the grykes are called 'clints'. The views across the Dale take in the great rock mass of Kilnsey Crag, popular with rock gymnasts. The villages of Grassington and Kettlewell provide all the facilities that you could wish for en route, including shops, pubs and cafés, as does Buckden, which is closer to the end of the stage.

Stage 3: Hubberholme to Dent Head (Cowgill) (18 miles / 29km)

This stage includes the highest and wildest ground of the trip, the area of bleak open moorland reaching 430m/1,410 feet, which you cross between the long ascent of Wharfedale and Langstrothdale, and the shorter, steeper descent into Dentdale. If you are not confident of your fitness or navigational ability you should consider breaking the stage into two and stopping for the night at either Cam Houses (milepost 36.6) or Gearstones (milepost 40). There is no shop en route between Buckden (milepost 27) and Dent village (milepost 50) so make sure you have all you need before embarking on this stage.

Stage 4: Dent Head (Cowgill) to Sedbergh (10 miles / 16km)

After a couple of fairly demanding stages most walkers welcome the opportunity of an easier day in the peace and solitude of the secretive valley of Dentdale. Especially attractive are the whitewashed cottages and cobbled streets of the pretty village of Dent (milepost 56), where you can relax and enjoy a pub lunch. Sedbergh makes a very good overnight stop and has pubs which provide evening meals, as well as a variety of accommodation. Sedbergh is 0.5 miles from the nearest point on the Dales Way at Millthrop. 

Stage 5: Sedbergh to Burneside (15 miles / 24km)

It is no longer truly 'Dales' landscape, but this transitional zone of small hills (many of them 'drumlins' of glacial origin) and sheep farms between the Yorkshire Dales and Lake District National Parks has its own charms, only briefly interrupted by crossing the M6 motorway and the London to Glasgow railway. This part of the Dales Way has few settlements or accommodation opportunities, and so most Dales Way walkers will have spent a night in Sedbergh. You should obtain lunch (picnic materials from shops in the town or a packed lunch from your accommodation) before leaving Sedbergh as there is little or no opportunity for buying refreshment en route. The day's walk will inevitably bring you close to Burneside (3 syllables, with the first 'e' pronounced as if it were 'ey'). There are various accommodation opportunities both shortly before and shortly after Burneside itself - wherever you stay we advise making arrangements to include the evening meal at your accommodation tonight. 

Stage 6: Burneside to Bowness-on-Windermere (9 miles / 14.5km)

This is no more than a half-day walk, but the probability is that you, like most Dales Way walkers, will find plenty to occupy yourselves for the remainder of the day in Bowness and its environs. After a possibly late lunch (no need to carry a picnic), you can take to the water and go for a cruise on lake Windermere, or visit the Beatrix Potter Centre in the town. For the evening there is an abundance of restaurants where you can celebrate your completion of the Dales Way walk.


Click the blue 'BOOK MY LUGGAGE' button above to organise baggage transfer services.

Getting to the area

Rail

Catch the train to Ilkley from most major cities with a change in Leeds. At the end of the walk, you will be able to catch a from Windermere station (1.5 miles from Bowness) to Oxenholme, from where there are connecting trains to London, Manchester, Glasgow, Edinburgh and elsewhere. Refer to www.nationalrail.co.uk