
This page answers the question people search for most: "best time of year to climb schiehallion". It covers the specific kit, timing, and weather thresholds for Schiehallion at 1083m, not generic mountain advice.
For live conditions right now — summit wind, rain, cloudbase, freezing level — go to the main Schiehallion weather page. It updates every hour from a 7-model weather ensemble.
For a 900m+ mountain like Schiehallion, May and June are the pick. Snow has usually cleared from the highest corries, days are long (16+ hours of daylight at midsummer), midges haven't yet reached peak, and settled high-pressure windows are more frequent than in autumn. If you can only go once, late May is the sweet spot.
Schiehallion in winter (November-March) is a serious undertaking requiring ice axe, crampons, winter navigation and mountain judgement. Done well, a clear winter day on Schiehallion is among the best outings in British hillwalking. Done badly, it can be lethal. Build up winter skills on easier hills first and check the SAIS avalanche forecast.
Mid-June to mid-September, with peak misery in July and August on calm, humid days below 400m. Once you're on the ridge with the wind in your face, midges disappear. Scottish and Irish hills are the worst affected; Welsh hills are middling; the Lake District and Pennines barely notice them.
Weekdays in January and February, or any early-morning start on a Saturday. Midsummer weekends and school holidays bring the busiest paths; for solitude on Schiehallion, either avoid those or start before 08:00.
Schiehallion at 1083m carries significant snow cover from November to April in most years, with permanent patches in sheltered corries often lasting into June. Plan full winter kit for any ascent between October and May inclusive.
Planning Schiehallion? Get the hourly summit forecast, 14-day outlook and wind chill — all at the 1083m summit, not the valley.
Schiehallion Weather → All Condition Guides