BMC Huts

Book a mountain hut around Britain. As a BMC member you get exclusive access to our three huts: Glen Brittle Memorial Hut on the Isle of Skye, the Don Whillans Memorial Hut at the Roaches and the Alex MacIntyre Memorial Hut in the Scottish Highlands. If you’re a member of a mountaineering club you may also have access to even more huts around the country.

Your Basecamp For Adventure

If you’re ready to head to the mountains, but you’re not sure the idea of staying in a ‘hut’ sounds very inviting, think again. Imagine a place that’s close to the best hills and crags in the area. A place to get clean and warm after a long day outdoors. To cook, sleep, and chat about the events of the day with people who are into the same adventures as you. Sounds pretty good, right?

What’s It Like To Stay In A Club Hut?

Mountaineering ‘huts’ aren’t really huts at all, they’re usually converted farmhouses or cottages that club members use as a base for long weekends in the mountains. They each have  unique characters, like an old miner’s cottage in the Llanberis Pass, Wales, or the Don Whillans hut built into a buttress at the Roaches in the Peak District. Climbing and mountaineering clubs have huts in locations across the UK including the Lake District, Yorkshire, the Peak District, North and Mid Wales and the South West of England. If your club owns a hut, lucky you! It’s likely that many weekend meets will be based there, plus a range of trips elsewhere.

Huts aren’t just a place to stay, they’re a place to socialise. They are communal places, with beds or bunks in dorm type rooms, so you’ll need to bring a sleeping bag or blanket, and possibly a pillow. You can expect to find separate men’s and women’s bathrooms. Depending on the size of the place there might be several rooms to sleep in, and depending on the mix of people attending, rooms might be allocated for men, women, couples, families and/or visitors. Often it’s just down to individuals to grab their preferred space on arrival - this is usually down to the meet organiser to coordinate, so just ask if you’d like to know more.

Huts have a shared living area with a kitchen, a fireplace or heaters, and a sitting and dining area so that club members can cook together and socialise at the end of each day. You’ll need to bear in mind there might not be a shop nearby, and bring your own food and drinks. If cooking is your thing, you might like to get involved in making a meal for the group, or organising a BBQ. This is a big part of keeping costs so low – it’s often as cheap as camping (but less impacted by the weather). Since huts are shared, everyone is responsible for keeping the place clean and tidy, so pitch in with things like tidying and washing up to keep it as you’d like to find it.

If you can’t get enough of being outside, you might prefer to camp or stay in your van at the hut while taking advantage of the facilities indoors. That’s usually possible, but do check.

Huts are quirky, unique, and excellent value (usually between £5-£15 per night). Some are very modern and full of all the latest gadgets, others are pretty basic. They are all warm and cosy, and offer cheap but quality accommodation so you can have an amazing weekend away without breaking the bank. They also tend to contain information like maps and guidebooks that you can borrow while you’re there to make the most of your visit to the area. Many clubs have their own huts, and BMC affiliated clubs are able to hire out huts from each other, allowing its members to explore more of the UK. So while you’re there you can expect to meet people from your own club, or others.

  • Alex MacIntyre Memorial Hut

    The Alex MacIntyre Hut sits between Glen Coe and Fort William. This National Hut is held in trust jointly by the BMC and Mountaineering Scotland, and is run by a management committee of volunteers which reports to Trustees from both organisations. The hut can accommodate sixteen people in five different bedrooms. Facilities include a well-equipped kitchen, drying room and car park. The hut is open to Club and Individual members of the BMC and Mountaineering Scotland.

  • Don Whillans Memorial Hut

    Located at the Roaches in Staffordshire, the Don Whillans Hut is a unique building, superbly located amongst the buttresses and boulders of this historic climbing area - you can almost belay from the hut! It can accommodate up to 12 people, mixed, in two rooms. There are full cooking and dining facilities, a drying room and showers. Parking in lay-by approximately 400 yards away.

  • Glen Brittle Memorial Hut

    The Glen Brittle Memorial Hut is superbly located on the edge of the Cuillin on the Isle of Skye. This makes it a great location for those wishing to walk or climb in this inspiring mountain playground. Jointly owned by the BMC and Mountaineering Scotland, the hut is open all year round and is wardened from April - October, and can be booked by Individual and Club members of the BMC and Mountaineering Scotland. The hut has spaces for 18 persons, and includes a kitchen, showers and drying room.

  • Club Huts

    As well as the BMC owned huts, there are also many huts around Britain that can be used if you are a member of a mountaineering or climbing club,

    We have a full list of huts with details of those maintained by mountaineering and climbing clubs who are members of the BMC/Mountaineering Scotland. Some of these Clubs are willing, if there is room, to make their huts available to other BMC members.