Plan a 7-day Yorkshire Dales road trip from Harrogate through Wharfedale, Wensleydale and Swaledale. Covers Grassington, Hawes, Aysgarth Falls and Richmond with practical stops and local tips.
The Yorkshire Dales reward drivers with exactly what the name promises: a sequence of broad green valleys, each with its own character, its own pubs and its own version of silence. This 7-day Yorkshire Dales road trip itinerary loops from the spa town of Harrogate through Wharfedale, Wensleydale and Swaledale before swinging back south.
Distances are modest. The pleasure here is in driving slowly through landscapes that shift every few miles as limestone pavement gives way to heather moor, then drops again to a valley threaded with wildflowers. Pack walking boots and a waterproof. You will use both.
Harrogate is an unhurried place to begin. The Regency-era town made its name as a spa resort, and the faint air of indulgence still shows in the well-kept gardens, the hotel facades along The Stray and the perpetual queue outside Bettys Café on Parliament Street. Spend the first evening wandering the Valley Gardens or nursing a pint in one of the Victorian pubs before the Dales begin in earnest tomorrow.
Skipton is 14 miles west and earns its title as gateway to the Dales with a medieval castle that has not had its roof removed in over four centuries. The high street drops to a broad marketplace where a market operates three times a week. The Leeds-Liverpool Canal runs through town, and a morning walk along the towpath before you drive north is a good way to settle into the pace of things.
Grassington sits in upper Wharfedale and rewards two nights. The cobbled central square is flanked by 18th-century limestone cottages, and riverside footpaths lead in both directions from the village. Save the second day for Malham, 20 minutes south-west on narrow lanes: Malham Cove is a 260-foot curved limestone cliff that looks from below like a natural theatre, and the limestone pavement on top is worth the climb. Gordale Scar, a kilometre from the cove, adds a limestone gorge with a scrambleable waterfall.

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The road from Grassington climbs into Wensleydale through some of the finest driving in England. Hawes is England's highest market town at 850 feet, and it wears its identity clearly. The Wensleydale Creamery runs twice-daily tours of the cheese-making floors, and the Dales Countryside Museum beside the old station building is one of the region's genuinely absorbing local collections. In the afternoon, follow the path from the Green Dragon Inn to Hardraw Force, the highest unbroken waterfall in England at 100 feet.
Aysgarth is where the River Ure takes a long staircase over limestone, splitting into upper, middle and lower falls over a mile-long stretch. The circular walk from the National Park Visitor Centre links all three and takes about 45 minutes at a comfortable pace. Five minutes by car brings you to Bolton Castle, a 14th-century fortress with falconry displays, archery and a walled kitchen garden. Stay the night at one of the valley's small hotels or B&Bs.
Richmond ends the Dales section with a flourish. The Norman castle keep rises above a broad market square that has changed little since the Georgian era, and the view from the top across the River Swale justifies the £8 entry fee on its own. The Georgian Theatre Royal, one of England's oldest surviving theatres still in regular use, runs tours most weekdays. From Richmond, the return to Harrogate via the A1 takes just over an hour.
When to go: April to October brings the best driving conditions and wildflower meadows at their peak in June and July. Avoid the August bank holiday weekend if clear roads through Wharfedale matter.
Getting around: A car is essential. Lanes between valleys are often single-track with passing places. Top up fuel in Skipton and again in Leyburn, as stations are sparse north of Hawes.
Where to stay: Grassington has several good B&Bs and the Old Inn serves reliable pub food. In Hawes, Simonstone Hall is a comfortable country house hotel a mile from town. Richmond has B&Bs directly on the market square.
Driving tip: The Buttertubs Pass between Hawes and Richmond is a narrow B-road named for the natural limestone potholes at the roadside. It is passable in a standard car but take it at walking pace on the narrowest sections.
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The full route — stops, maps, and driving times — is on Routebook by Kington.
A 7-day loop from Harrogate through the three great Yorkshire Dales: Wharfedale, Wensleydale and Swaledale. Takes in Skipton's medieval castle, the cheese heartland of Hawes, Aysgarth's triple falls, and Richmond's commanding Norman keep.