Climb the highest hills on the Isle of Man in the northern Irish Sea. Includes all hills at least 300 m high with at least 30 m prominence lying on the 572 sq km Isle of Man. A hiking/hill-running challenge not involving mountains in permanent snow. Created and maintained by peakery member Mark Trengove.
Highest peak
Snaefell
2,037 ft / 620 m
Most prominent peak
Snaefell
2,037 ft / 620 m prom
Most summited peak
Snaefell
11 summits
Most difficult peak
no info yet
Difficulty breakdown
no info yet
Highlights
- Climb the highest hills on the Isle of Man.
- Enjoy the views of sea, sky, Ireland, Scotland, England and Wales from its highest summits.
- All hills easily accessible from Douglas, the island’s capital.
Latest summits
"This may be my only ever summit where i started at the top and then walked down and back up again, and back down again. Over on the island for the TT races and got the Mountain Railway to the top in the morning. Surprisingly hardly anyone here! Then walked down the eastern face to The Verandah to watch the TT racing. Then walked back up the same face to the summit once again for refreshments followed by a further descent down the southern face to The Bungalow! Two summits maybe?? Trig point, views of Ireland, Scotland & England seen but Wales was elusive due to mist. 4km. Hot and sunny. With brother. " — MuchMoorWalking • Jun 4, 2022
"Parked at the Green Way at the foot of South Barrule. A misty day on a hill I have walked many times, unfortunately not much of a view today. A steady climb to the summit, which has a stone circle and trig point. The entire top is circled by the remains of an Iron Age Hill fort!" — dreeder75 • Sep 1, 2020
"Parked at the top the Mill Road then followed the roadway up through the middle of Eairy Beg plantation. The actual summit, which is quite obvious is on the opposite side of the path from the Peakery icon. Noticeable stone cairn!" — dreeder75 • Aug 30, 2020
"Sunny morning walk from the parking area at The Black Hut on the Mountain Road! The Summit isn’t visible from this side, it is the summit of Clagh Ouyr Beg (Little Dun Stone). Clagh Ouyr meaning Dun Stone. A soggy walk at the start then a slightly steep climb to the first summit then a short walk along the ridge to the actual summit!" — dreeder75 • Aug 29, 2020
"Parked on the Greenway at the foot of the hill. A very misty morning with a bit of drizzle thrown in for good measure. An easy walk even for my old dogs! No views today! Translates as The Hill of the Day Watch" — dreeder75 • Aug 27, 2020