Kilnsey
village

Discover Kilnsey

Kilnsey is a village located in North Yorkshire, governed by the North Yorkshire Council (formerly Craven). Known for its dramatic limestone kilnsey crag, the village is a highlight for visitors to the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Kilnsey hosts the annual Kilnsey Show, showcasing agricultural traditions and local crafts.

Explore the map below to discover accommodation, attractions, restaurants, and live events across Kilnsey. Scroll down to browse featured listings and plan your perfect visit.

Stay in Kilnsey

Accommodation at The Tennants Arms Hotel in kilnsey
Bed & Breakfast

The Tennants Arms Hotel

Mastiles Lane, Kilnsey, Skipton, North Yorkshire, BD23 5PS
📍0.1m from the centre of Kilnsey

Accommodation at Moorhouse Cottage in pateley bridge
Bed & Breakfast

Moorhouse Cottage

Moorhouses Cottage, Bewerley, Harrogate HG3 5JF, UK
📍10.6m from the centre of Kilnsey

Discover Moorhouse Cottage, a stunning and idyllic country hideaway in Bewerley offering first-rate facilities and delightful animal encounters.

Elegant yellow stone hotel surrounded by lush greenery, with classical architecture and a serene landscape in Yorkshire.
Event Venue

Broughton Sanctuary

Broughton Hall Estate, Broughton Hall, Skipton BD23 3AE, UK
📍10.8m from the centre of Kilnsey

Broughton Sanctuary provides comfortable accommodation in broughton-craven.

Accommodation at Roundhill Estate in greenhow hill
Hotel

Roundhill Estate

Waterford Road, Bewerley, Greenhow Hill, HG3 5BN, United Kingdom
📍9.8m from the centre of Kilnsey

Charming hotel with stone buildings, green lawn, and a hillside bathed in warm sunset light in West Burton, Yorkshire.
Pub

The Fox & Hounds

Back Nook, West Burton, Leyburn DL8 4JY, UK
📍12m from the centre of Kilnsey

The Fox & Hounds provides comfortable accommodation in west-burton.

Accommodation at Warren House in grassington
Hotel

Warren House

Arncliffe Road, Grassington, BD23 5PU, United Kingdom
📍3m from the centre of Kilnsey

Things to Do in Kilnsey

A man crouches by a pond, fishing, with lush greenery and limestone hills in the background.
Attraction

Kilnsey Park

Kilnsey Park, Kilnsey, Skipton BD23 5PS, UK
📍0.1m from the centre of Kilnsey

Kilnsey Park offers a delightful day out in the heart of Yorkshire, set beneath the stunning Kilnsey Crag. Visitors can enjoy fishing, nature trails, and a cosy cafe, making it a perfect spot for families and nature enthusiasts. Convenient pay-and-display parking ensures easy access to all the attractions.

Tranquil lake reflecting lush trees and a hillside, with stone cottages nestled in the landscape under a blue sky.
Park

Kilnsey Park

Kilnsey Park, Kilnsey, Skipton, North Yorkshire, BD23 5PS
📍0.1m from the centre of Kilnsey

Rushing river water flows over rocks, surrounded by lush green trees in a serene natural setting.
Park

Giggleswick Memorial Bridge

Kings Mill Ln, Settle BD24, UK
📍10.2m from the centre of Kilnsey

Discover the tranquil Giggleswick Memorial Bridge, offering scenic river views amidst beautiful Settle.

A man crouches by a pond, fishing, with lush greenery and limestone hills in the background.
Attraction

Kilnsey Park

Kilnsey Park, Kilnsey, Skipton BD23 5PS, UK
📍0.1m from the centre of Kilnsey

Kilnsey Park offers a delightful day out in the heart of Yorkshire, set beneath the stunning Kilnsey Crag. Visitors can enjoy fishing, nature trails, and a cosy cafe, making it a perfect spot for families and nature enthusiasts. Convenient pay-and-display parking ensures easy access to all the attractions.

Stone building with "Thwaite Arms" sign, flower pots, and a blackboard menu, set in a rural Yorkshire landscape.
Pub

Thwaite Arms

Horsehouse, Leyburn DL8 4TS, UK
📍9.5m from the centre of Kilnsey

Located in the picturesque and remote area of the Yorkshire Dales, Thwaite Arms offers a charming traditional pub experience. While primarily a destination for enjoying local ales and hearty meals, visitors should be prepared for standard pay-and-display parking arrangements typical of rural establishments. Enjoy the stunning surroundings and the warm hospitality of this unique pub.

The Old Bakehouse Ltd - Bakers in pateley bridge
Bakers

The Old Bakehouse Ltd

8 High St, Pateley Bridge, Harrogate HG3 5AW, UK
📍11.5m from the centre of Kilnsey

Discover The Old Bakehouse, a highly-rated Pateley Bridge gem serving delicious freshly baked goods, tiffins, and sandwiches.

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Geographic Facts

This village is geographically within the following regions:

Administrative area
Conistone with Kilnsey

Data sourced from Wikidata and verified public records

Upcoming Events in Kilnsey

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Latest news from Kilnsey

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Smiling woman in an apron holds rapeseed oil bottles in a bright food hall, surrounded by colorful product displays.

From Local Farm to National Shelves: How a North Yorkshire Rapeseed Oil Business Wins Listing with Garden Centre Chain

A North Yorkshire farm business, Charlie & Ivy's, has landed a major nationwide listing! Find their award-winning rapeseed oil bread dippers in Dobbies now.

Yorkshire TeamApr 2, 2026
0

Walkshire in Kilnsey

More Walks in Kilnsey
Walk: Limestone Walking in Wharfedale
7mi
Moderate

Walk: Limestone Walking in Wharfedale

⏱️2h 50m📍Conistone

The limestone scenery in Upper Wharfedale is beautiful. The walking is straightforward and on this walk there are many of the best features including pavements and the famous Conistone Pie. The Route what3words for start point: ///galloping.swept.songbook Start / Finish Point: Conistone, Skipton, BD23 5HS Distance: 7 Miles GPX Route Map limestonewalkaboveconistoneDownload Walk Description Start the walk from the small village of Conistone and climb through the dry valley of the Conistone Dib. There is a splendid limestone pavement above the Dib. Continue uphill through some limestone scars and past an example of an old lime kiln where the limestone was crushed. The views across Wharfedale and in to Littondale are lovely. Drop back down to towards the valley and join the Dales Way. Follow this south past the Conistone Pie before returning to Conistone.

Walk: Grassington, Grass Wood, Conistone Dib and Lea Green
8.5mi
Moderate

Walk: Grassington, Grass Wood, Conistone Dib and Lea Green

⏱️3h 38m📍Grassington

A walk around Grassington, Ghastrill’s Strid, Grass Wood, Conistone Dib and Lea Green in the Yorkshire Dales. The Route Start Point: Grassington, Wharfedale Finish Point: Grassington, Wharfedale Distance: 8.5 Miles GPX Route Map grassington-conistone-and-lea-greenDownload Walk Description Grassington is an attractive small town set amongst the rolling hills of Upper Wharfedale, a popular tourist destination due to its picturesque cobbled square, stone cottages and winding alleyways. From Grassington, our route follows the River Wharfe to the impressive limestone rapids of Ghastrill’s Strid (admire from a safe distance), before reaching Grass Wood. This ancient swathe of woodland once formed part of the much larger forest of Wharfedale and has many indigenous tree species and almost 400 species of flowers and plants, thus meriting Nature Reserve status. It is a truly magical place to explore in spring. Beyond Grass Wood our path traverses the dry limestone gorge of The Dib, a glacial meltwater channel, before reaching Conistone, an attractive Craven village that boasts many fine old farmhouses, a large maypole and the oldest church in the southern Dales that dates back to pre-Conquest times. St Mary's Church still has some pre-Norman arches as well as wealth of other interesting features including a poor box. In the graveyard is a sad memorial to a group of young men who were killed in a tragic pot-holing accident at Mossdale Cavern in 1967. From Conistone, a footpath leads up through the spectacular dry limestone valley of Conistone Dib, one of the ‘natural wonders’ of the Yorkshire Dales. This deep steep-sided gorge was scoured out by glacial meltwaters towards the end of the last Ice Age when the permafrost prevented the water from seeping down through the limestone bed-rock. In places, Conistone Dib closes in to little more than a narrow passage beneath towering limestone crags. This whole area boasts some wonderful limestone scenery with pavements, dry valleys, crags and outcrops all around. From Conistone Dib, the return leg of this walk crosses Lea Green and the remains of one of the largest Iron Age settlements in England. This was occupied from 200BC until 400AD, surviving throughout the Roman occupation because of its secluded situation high on the hills. Rectangular fields, hut circles and traces of roads can be clearly seen, although to the untrained eye it appears to be a very rough scattering of fields covered with lots of grassy bumps! As with many other archaeological sites, the true picture only really comes to life when viewed from the air. 

Walk: Wharfedale and Littondale
8.45mi
Moderate

Walk: Wharfedale and Littondale

⏱️4h 5m📍Kettlewell

This is a delightful exposed and dramatic walk with stunning views into Wharfedale and Littondale both at the beginning and end of the day. The Route what3words for start point: ///premises.spaceship.bins Start Point: Arncliffe Finish Point: Kettlewell Distance: 8.45 Miles GPX Route Map wharfedalelittondale2Download Walk Description Starbotton has been a village since the Iron Age times and still has only 75 residents! The village is criss crossed with a web of ancient routes from the times of the great monasteries of Fountains Abbey, Jervaulx and Rievaulx. The River Wharfe means ‘winding river’ and flows from Beckermonds into the Humber Estuary. As a result Wharfedale is a beautiful valley with steep hills rising on both sides making it one of the most stunning Dales in Yorkshire. The path ascending from Starbotton is an old packhorse track and drovers’ lane with crumbling walls on each side and trees lining the way – it is atmospheric and historic. It climbs steeply to the top of the moor used for grouse shooting in season. Arncliffe, now a conservation area, was used for filming Emmerdale. The fictional village of Beckindale was Arncliffe and The Falcon Inn, the Woolpack. The pub has no pumps for its beer but pours pints straight from the barrel into pot jugs and to the glass! From behind the pub, Malham Tarn can be reached just 4 miles away on the Monks Road. The scars above the village were once home to eagles hence the Old English name Earn meaning Eagle has evolved into Arn Cliffe. Hawkswick is a tiny hamlet with 70 residents. It was named after the first settlement, Hauk’s Dairy. The hamlet later had a Ballroom which still exists but is now a house. The climb over Hawkswick Moor passes Knipe Wood above Knipe Scar and is popular with ornithologists as there are peregrine falcons, redshanks and curlews here as well as dippers, oystercatchers and wagtails.

Walk: Grassington
1mi
Moderate

Walk: Grassington

⏱️0h 23m📍Grassington

This easy walk takes you around the quaint village of Grassington and along the River Wharfe. The Route what3words for start point: ///elections.slyly.cricket Start / Finish Point: Grassington National Park Centre, Hebden Rd, Grassington, Skipton BD23 5LB Distance: 1 Miles GPX Route Map drawaroute-6Download Walk Description An easy access walk by the River Wharfe close to the lovely village of Grassington. A gate at the lower end of the car park gives access to a walled lane. The route here is well-surfaced with some gradients reaching a 1:7. Follow the river to the right along an unsurfaced route. From here, turn right onto the main road into Grassington where the first 50m are a 1:6 gradient. Take a moment to look at Linton Falls.

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