Features Munros Community Reviews Blog Coming Spring 2026
0 Every Munro. One app. Coming soon.

Track your
Munros.

All 282 Munros in one app. Detailed routes, real summit weather, GPS maps, and a community that keeps you climbing.

Munros app showing summit tracking, progress and recent activity
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Join the waitlist — launching Spring 2026

Features

Everything you need to
bag them all

Built by hillwalkers, for hillwalkers. Every feature designed to make your next summit safer and more rewarding.

Summit Tracking

Log every peak with dates, photos, and notes. Watch your progress grow towards 282.

Step-by-Step Routes

Difficulty ratings, bog levels, scramble grades, parking, and time estimates.

Summit Weather

Real forecasts for the mountaintop, not the car park. Wind, visibility, and cloud-free %.

GPS Maps & GPX

Interactive maps with route overlays, elevation profiles, and full offline support.

Climb With Friends

Leaderboards, achievement cards, and an activity feed of friends' summits.

Dog-Friendly Tags

Every route flagged for four-legged companions. Stile alerts and terrain notes included.

Explore

282 mountains.
One incredible journey.

From Ben Nevis to the remote peaks of Knoydart. Every Munro with routes, conditions, and everything you need to summit safely.

Ready to start your journey?

We're building the ultimate Munro bagging app. Routes, summit weather, GPS maps, and tracking — all free. Launching Spring 2026.

Coming Spring 2026App Store Coming Spring 2026Google Play
Buachaille Etive Mor, Glen Coe, Scotland
282

Munros to bag

🏔️ 1,345m

Highest summit

Community

You don't have to
climb alone

Join a growing community sharing journeys, tips, and summit selfies. Motivation comes from seeing others out there too.

Achievement Cards

Beautiful shareable cards for every summit — Instagram-ready.

Friend Leaderboards

See who's bagging the most and get inspired to keep going.

Activity Feed

Friends' climbs, photos, and milestones in real time.

The hills are calling

Scotland's 282 Munros span some of the most dramatic landscapes in Europe. Here's what's waiting for you.

Reviews

Loved by hillwalkers

Early feedback from beta testers on the hill.

★★★★★
"Finally an app that treats Munro-bagging with the respect it deserves. The summit weather alone has saved me from several miserable days out. Beautiful design, works perfectly offline. This is what Walkhighlands should have been."
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Craig M.
Beta tester · Highlands
★★★★★
"The bog level ratings are genius. My boots have never been drier. Well, relatively — it's still Scotland."
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Sarah K.
Beta tester · Cairngorms
★★★★★
"Switched from a spreadsheet. The progress tracking is addictive and routes are spot-on. Dog-friendly tags = lifesaver."
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Duncan R.
Beta tester · Glen Coe
★★★★☆
"Lovely app. The achievement cards look amazing shared on Instagram. Would love to see Corbetts added!"
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Fiona L.
Beta tester · Torridon
From the blog

Guides for every
hillwalker

Tips, routes, and stories from the Scottish hills — whether you're planning your first Munro or chasing your last.

All posts
Heritage

135 years of
Munro bagging

What started as a Victorian list in a mountaineering journal became Scotland's greatest outdoor obsession.

In 1891, Sir Hugh Munro published his tables listing every Scottish peak above 3,000 feet. He was a founding member of the Scottish Mountaineering Club and spent decades surveying the Highlands, often in conditions modern walkers would consider reckless. His original list counted 283 summits. The number has shifted with resurveys — it currently stands at 282.

Ironically, Sir Hugh never completed his own list. He died in 1919 with three peaks unclimbed, including the Inaccessible Pinnacle on Skye — a genuine rock climb that still blocks many aspiring completionists today.

For decades, completing all Munros was a rare feat. Fewer than 50 people had done it by 1970. Then came better roads, guidebooks, the internet, and lightweight gear. The 1,000th completer was recorded in 2010. Today, over 7,500 people have stood on every summit — and the community grows every year.

1891

The Original Tables

Sir Hugh Munro publishes his list of 283 Scottish peaks over 3,000ft in the SMC Journal.

1901

First Completion

Rev. A.E. Robertson claims all Munros — the first person to attempt the full round.

1984

First Winter Round

Martin Moran completes all Munros in a single winter, finishing in 83 days.

2003

Right to Roam

Scotland's Land Reform Act enshrines the right of responsible access to all open land.

2010

1,000th Completer

The milestone demonstrates Munro bagging's shift from elite pursuit to popular pastime.

Now

7,500+ Completers

And counting. The community has never been bigger — or more welcoming to beginners.

What Are Munros?

Munros are Scottish mountains over 3,000 feet (914.4 metres) in height. They are named after Sir Hugh Munro, who published the first list of qualifying peaks in 1891 as part of the Scottish Mountaineering Club's tables. There are currently 282 Munros, spread across the Scottish Highlands and Islands from Loch Lomond in the south to Sutherland in the far north.

Munro bagging — the pursuit of climbing every Munro — has become one of Scotland's most popular outdoor activities. Over 7,500 people have now completed all 282, though for most baggers the journey takes years or even decades. The mountains range from straightforward hillwalks like Ben Chonzie in Perthshire to serious mountaineering challenges like the Cuillin Ridge on Skye, where rock climbing skills are essential.

Scotland's Munros are divided across 21 regions, each with its own character. The Cairngorms offer vast arctic plateaux with Britain's second-highest peak, Ben Macdui. Torridon has ancient sandstone mountains with dramatic ridges. Glen Coe is famous for volcanic peaks and the exposed Aonach Eagach scramble. Knoydart provides genuine wilderness accessible only by boat or on foot.

Whether you are planning your first Munro or your 282nd, every peak has detailed routes, maps, and climbing guides on this site. Browse by region, search by name, or explore our blog guides for seasonal advice, equipment lists, and route recommendations.

The Cuillin Hills from Elgol, Isle of Skye, Scotland
About

Built in Scotland,
for Scotland

Munros was born from a love of the Scottish Highlands and a frustration with tracking summits on spreadsheets. We're a small team of hillwalkers who believe bagging Munros should be as beautiful on your phone as it is on the hill. Every feature is designed with one goal: getting you to the top, safely and often.

Start your journey

Ready to bag
them all?

All 282 Munros with routes, weather, and GPS maps — built by hillwalkers, for hillwalkers. Coming Spring 2026.