Three Peaks Challenge (Yorkshire)
Walk

Three Peaks Challenge (Yorkshire)

North Yorkshire

Dog Friendly Rating: 4/10 An epic 24 mile circuit taking in Pen-y-ghent, Whernside and Ingleborough, only suitable for very fit dogs prepared for long moorland miles on lead.

The Yorkshire Three Peaks Challenge is the benchmark long-distance day walk of the Dales, and while it is technically a dog friendly route it is strictly for very fit, experienced hill dogs. Starting traditionally from Horton-in-Ribblesdale, the circuit climbs Pen-y-ghent first, then heads north across open moor and farmland to Whernside, and finally swings south-west over Ingleborough before descending back to the village.

This is 38.6 kilometres and around 1600 metres of ascent, typically taking ten to twelve hours, and it crosses continuous sheep-grazed open access land so leads are required throughout. Water is scarce on the ridges, navigation in cloud is serious, and the stone-flagged paths are unforgiving on paws over this distance, so most dogs should sit this one out or be walked in sections. Horton has a large pay and display car park, the famous Pen-y-ghent Café for breakfast and clocking in and out, pubs, toilets and a train station.

At a Glance

Distance 38.6 km (24.0 miles)
Difficulty Challenging
Duration 11 hr
Walk Type Peak, Moorland
Route Type Circular
Off Lead Potential None
Livestock Risk High
Facilities Horton-in-Ribblesdale has the Pen-y-ghent Café, two pubs, public toilets, a shop and a mainline train station; no facilities on the hills between.
Parking Large pay and display car park in Horton-in-Ribblesdale village centre, plus limited roadside spaces; arrive before 7am on challenge-weather weekends.

Frequently Asked Questions

Technically yes, but with serious caveats — the Yorkshire Three Peaks earns a 4 out of 10 on our dog-friendly rating. At 38.6 kilometres with 1,600 metres of ascent and typically ten to twelve hours on the hill, this is strictly a route for very fit, experienced dogs. Most dogs are better off sitting this one out, or tackling individual peaks as separate, shorter days.

No — the entire circuit crosses continuous sheep-grazed open access land, so dogs must be kept on lead throughout. There are no sections where this changes, so be prepared for a full day of lead walking across open moorland, farmland and rocky ridgelines.

Water is scarce on the ridges, so carry plenty for both of you, and bear in mind that the stone-flagged paths are tough on paws over this kind of distance. Navigation in cloud can be serious, so this isn't a route to attempt without experience and proper kit. Horton-in-Ribblesdale has good facilities including the Pen-y-ghent Café, two pubs, toilets and a train station, but once you leave the village there's nothing until you return — plan accordingly. Parking is available in the pay and display car park in the village centre, though on busy weekends it's worth arriving before 7am to secure a space.

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Location

Horton-in-Ribblesdale pay and display car park

54.1489, -2.297

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