Loch Ness House is a comfortable and welcoming family run hotel offering Highland Hospitality at its best, backed unobtrusively by the skills of professional hoteliers with many years experience and a keen awareness of the requirements of today's visitor to the Highlands.
After a day's hard sight seeing, why not relax in the lounge with a cup of coffee or a good highland malt.
Or perhaps you would prefer to join the locals in the Copper Kettle Bar - our pub - where you can have a wee dram beside the fire and plan tommorrow's Highland adventure.
Chris and Gail take a keen personal interest in the menu content, ensuring the use of traditional, modern and international recipes using the best of local produce where ever possible.
The Stag and Haggis restaurant specialises in fresh fish, Scottish and international cuisine. Our extensive menu features the like of salmon, mussels, prawns, pickled herring, smoked salmon, haddock etc, on the seafood side, venison, pheasant, haggis, angus beef, lamb, steaks and chicken on the Scottishside plus stir fries and pasta on the International and Vegetarian Selection.
Our restaurant is popular with visitors and regulars alike, offering excellent food and wine at reasonable prices.
We also provide a selection of quality bar meals in the Copper Kettle both at lunchtime and in the evenings.
The hotel is centrally heated throughout with individual control in each of the 22 bedrooms. All rooms have private facilities with wc, bath and shower (except room 1 which has shower only).
All rooms are tastefully furnished and fully equipped with tea/coffee making facilities, colour television with satellite and terrestrial channels, hair dryer, ironing board, direct dial telephones.
We also have two rooms overlooking the front of the hotel onto the Torvean Golf Course which are beautifully furnished with four poster beds offering the romance of ages past.
Around and About the Highland Capital
Loch Ness House Hotel lies on the western outskirts of Inverness just five minues by car from the town centre.
We have golf on our doorstep and Loch Ness cruises to Urquhart Castle depart from the canal dock, just over the road. Further afield to the west lie the Western Highlands with jagged mountain tops and jewelled lochs stretching to the coast and the Isle of Skye. To the east lies flatter countryside with beaches and fishing ports. The road north leads across the Moray Firth with its Dolphin population then over the Black Isle to Sutherland and Caithness in the far north.
Directions - approaching Inverness from the north or south on the A9 turn off at the Kessock roundabout and follow the dual carriageway straight through three roundabouts then turn second "left" at the fourth on the Kenneth Street. At the traffic lights turn right and follow Glenruquhart Road past the Council Offices for about a mile on the A82 signposted Fort William. Cross the Caledonian Canal Bridge