14 days in Fife Itinerary

Created using Klarna Trips Fife trip planner
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Make it your trip
Drive
1
Inverkeithing
— 4 nights
Drive
2
St. Andrews
— 9 nights
Fly

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Inverkeithing — 4 nights

Inverkeithing is known for fun & games, sightseeing, and shopping. Your trip includes some of its best attractions: take in the views from Forth Bridge, relax and rejuvenate at Silver Sands Spa, steep yourself in history at Mercat Cross, and get up close and personal with brilliant marine life at Deep Sea World.

For reviews, where to stay, more things to do, and more tourist information, read our Inverkeithing trip app.

Manchester to Inverkeithing is an approximately 5-hour car ride. You can also drive. Expect a daytime high around 7°C in January, and nighttime lows around 1°C. Wrap up your sightseeing on the 6th (Fri) to allow time to drive to St. Andrews.
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Parks · Historic Sites · Outdoors · Beaches
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Find places to stay Jan 2 — 6:

St. Andrews — 9 nights

Venture out of the city with trips to Falkland (Bruce Fountain, Falkland Palace & Garden, &more), Dunfermline (Dunfermline Public Park, Spas, &more) and Lindores Abbey Ruins (in Newburgh).

To see traveler tips, photos, reviews, and other tourist information, read our St. Andrews route planner.

Use the Route module to find suitable travel options from Inverkeithing to St. Andrews. In January in St. Andrews, expect temperatures between 7°C during the day and 1°C at night. Finish your sightseeing early on the 15th (Sun) to allow enough time to fly back home.
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Parks · Historic Sites · Outdoors · Wildlife
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Find places to stay Jan 6 — 15:

Fife travel guide

4.2
Golf Courses · Castles · Aquariums
Fife boasts one of the best public transportation systems in the country, so getting in and around the region is quick and easy. Most visitors to the so-called Kingdom of Fife find themselves inescapably drawn to St Andrews, home to a world-famous golf course and Scotland’s oldest university, established in 1410. Despite the county’s reputation for being little more than the southern commuter belt to Edinburgh and the town of St Andrews, its people are very proud of their colorful past. As the birthplace of Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, the area has a history steeped in economic achievement. An atmosphere of distinctness from the rest of Scotland gives this area an old-world charm, enforced by the multitude of quaint fishing villages dotting the countryside.
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