Seafood
Scotland catches the best. Then exports it.
We help you buy back into it. Species guides, supplier reviews, a live seasonality calendar, and a market finder — all in plain English.
Species guides
Browse all species →crustacean
Langoustine
Scotland’s most valuable seafood export — and, bafflingly, a product most Scots have never eaten. Also called Dublin Bay prawns, Norway lobster, or scampi in its cheapest incarnation. Fresh, whole langoustines landed on the west coast are one of the great seafood experiences in the world.
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Cod (North Sea)
The backbone of Scottish fish and chips. North Sea cod has been through stock collapse and recovery cycles; look for MSC-certified Icelandic or Barents Sea if you’re unsure about provenance.
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Scottish Salmon
Scotland’s most exported food product by value. Virtually all salmon you buy is farmed — wild Atlantic salmon is critically endangered and mostly reserved for catch-and-release sport fishing. Look for RSPCA Assured or organic labels for higher welfare.
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Native Oyster
The traditional British native oyster is in season when there’s an ‘R’ in the month. Loch Ryan is the last commercially active native oyster bed in Scotland. Meatier, more metallic, and more characterful than the common Pacific rock oyster.
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Mackerel
Cheap, sustainable when line-caught, and a brilliant introduction to oily fish cookery. Scottish line-caught mackerel in late summer is one of the best value food items in the country.
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King Scallop
Hand-dived scallops from the west coast are one of Scotland’s premier luxuries. Much better than dredged, with zero seabed damage and notably plumper meat. Pay the extra.
crustacean
Brown Crab
Scotland's most important crab species and the meaty workhorse of British shellfish cookery. UK-creel-caught brown crab has one of the best sustainability profiles of any commercial seafood — low-impact pot fishing, healthy stocks. White claw meat is sweet and firm; brown body meat is rich and intense.
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Scottish Lobster
The European lobster is Scotland's most expensive wild-caught seafood and, when creel-caught responsibly, one of the most sustainable premium shellfish in the world. Distinctive dark blue in life — red only after cooking. Most Scottish lobster is exported live to Spain and France; buying locally is genuinely harder than it should be.
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Razor Clams
Scotland's most underrated shellfish — sweet, firm, and cheap relative to scallops, but almost impossible to find in supermarkets. Most hand-harvested razor clams are exported to Spain, where they're a restaurant staple. Look for hand-dived or diver-caught for the best product and best sustainability credentials.
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Scottish Mussels
Rope-grown Scottish mussels — especially Shetland — are one of the most sustainable proteins on the planet. Zero feed, zero antibiotics, positive impact on water quality. Plump, sweet, and dramatically better than anything imported from the Netherlands. Peak quality during the 'R' months (September to April).
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Haddock
The Scottish fish and chip shop default (never, ever cod in the east of Scotland), and the base of proper Arbroath Smokies and Cullen Skink. North Sea haddock stocks are now MSC-certified sustainable, making it one of the smarter white fish choices.
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Herring
The fish that built the Scottish east coast — Wick, Buckie, Peterhead, Eyemouth were all herring towns in the 19th century. Still fantastic value, still underused, and the base for proper Scottish kippers. Line-caught North Sea herring is a strong sustainability pick.
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Monkfish
One of the ugliest and most expensive fish in UK waters. The tail meat is firm, meaty and almost scallop-like — the only white fish that can genuinely hold its own against robust flavours like chorizo, curry spices or smoked bacon. Mostly landed in Peterhead for export to France and Spain.
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Sea Trout
Scotland's answer to wild salmon now that Atlantic salmon is effectively off-limits. Sea trout is brown trout that has migrated to sea, returning to spawn, and its flesh is pinker and more delicate than its freshwater cousin. Short summer season, mostly from rod-caught sport fisheries.
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Halibut
The largest flatfish in UK waters and one of the most expensive. Wild Atlantic halibut is critically endangered and should be avoided — look instead for Gigha Halibut, a Scottish farmed operation on the Isle of Gigha using sustainable land-based recirculating tanks. Meaty, firm, almost steak-like flesh.
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Lemon Sole
Confusingly, not a sole at all — lemon sole is actually a dab, and has no connection to true Dover sole. That said, it's an excellent, delicate flatfish at a fraction of Dover sole prices, landed in decent volumes at Peterhead and Fraserburgh.
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Dover Sole
The real thing — the classic Dover sole of fine dining. Rarely landed in large volumes on the Scottish east coast but sold widely through Peterhead and Fraserburgh markets. Firm, buttery flesh that holds up to high-heat cooking; best eaten whole on the bone.
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Scottish Squid
Scottish veined squid is mostly caught as a summer bycatch by west coast and Moray Firth boats. Sweet, firm, and miles better than most imported calamari from Southeast Asia. Most is exported to Spain and Italy where squid is understood better than it is in the UK.
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Whelks
One of Scotland's most exported shellfish — almost the entire whelk catch goes to South Korea, where they're prized. Rarely seen on UK menus and almost never in supermarkets, which is a shame: properly cooked, they're firm, salty, and excellent value. Pot-caught, year-round, and low-impact.
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Cockles
Small, hand-gathered bivalves that are genuinely cheap and genuinely delicious — hot-smoked, pickled, or fresh from the boil with vinegar. Scotland's cockle beds are smaller than the famous Welsh ones but produce equally good shellfish, mostly from Solway Firth.
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Pollock
The honest, cheap substitute for cod — and often the more sustainable choice. Scottish line-caught pollock is one of the MCS's top recommendations. Milder than cod, holds together better than haddock, and costs half as much. Chefs love it; the public hasn't quite caught up yet.
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Hake
A chef's favourite white fish that's only recently come back into fashion after MSC certification of North Sea and west coast stocks. Firm, flaky, pearly flesh with a slightly sweeter flavour than cod or haddock. The Spanish, inevitably, buy most of what Scotland lands.
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Megrim Sole
One of Scotland's most underappreciated catches. Megrims are landed in huge quantities by the Scottish fleet but almost entirely exported to Spain, where they're called 'gallo' and served in every coastal restaurant. In Scotland, fishmongers sell them for a fraction of what Dover sole costs. The flesh is delicate, sweet, and takes butter beautifully. Pan-fry whole for 3-4 minutes per side — the bones lift out cleanly. An excellent introduction to flatfish for home cooks who've never cooked anything beyond salmon fillets.
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King Scallop (Dredged)
The same species as hand-dived scallops (west-coast-scallops), but harvested by dredging rather than diving. Dredged scallops are significantly cheaper (£10-18/kg vs £20-35/kg for hand-dived) and more widely available — most supermarket scallops are dredged. The quality is lower: dredging damages some shells and picks up grit, and the environmental impact on the seabed is greater. However, for dishes where scallops are cooked in a sauce (risotto, pasta, pie), dredged scallops are perfectly adequate and much better value than hand-dived.
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Sprat
Scotland's most overlooked small fish. Sprats are tiny, silvery, oily fish closely related to herring — caught in huge quantities from the Moray Firth and the North Sea but rarely sold to consumers. Most are processed into fishmeal or smoked into 'brisling' (the Scandinavian name). Fresh sprats are one of the cheapest fish available from a fishmonger (£3-6/kg) and one of the most nutritious — rich in omega-3, protein, and calcium (you eat the bones). Deep-fry whole in seasoned flour for 2-3 minutes, or grill with lemon and chilli. A sustainable, delicious fish that Scotland catches by the thousand-tonne and barely eats.
Editorial
Wild Salmon vs Farmed: The Honest Buyer's Guide
Wild and farmed salmon are different fish in almost every meaningful way — price, taste, sustainability, even species. The honest comparison.
Langoustines vs Lobster: Which Is Worth the Money?
Langoustines cost about half as much as lobster but yield less meat. Here's which one is genuinely worth ordering, with Scottish prices, yields and recipes.
Langoustines vs Prawns: What's the Difference and Which Should You Buy?
Langoustines and prawns look similar but are different animals with different flavours, prices, and best uses. The honest comparison shoppers need.
Why Scottish Salmon Divides Opinion
Farmed salmon is Scotland's biggest food export and most controversial product. Environmentalists hate it, chefs love it. What's actually going on.
The Scottish Seafood Export Paradox
Scotland exports 80% of its seafood — langoustines to Spain, salmon to France, scallops to China. Meanwhile, Scots eat frozen fish fingers. Here's why, and how to buy back in.
Scottish Oysters: A Beginner's Guide to Buying and Eating Them
Scotland produces some of the finest native and rock oysters in Europe. If you've never eaten one raw, here's everything you need to know — where to buy, how to open, and what they actually taste like.
How to Cook Langoustines at Home
Scotland catches most of the UK's langoustines — then exports 80% to Europe. Here's how to buy them locally, what to pay, and four simple ways to cook them at home.
How to Buy Fish from a Fishmonger: A Beginner's Guide
A no-judgement guide to walking into a fishmonger for the first time. What to ask, what to look for, how much to buy, and how not to get ripped off.
Best Fish and Chips in Scotland: An Honest Guide
Scotland does fish and chips differently — haddock not cod, salt and sauce in Edinburgh, and chippers that have been frying since your gran was young. Here's where to eat, what to order, and what to avoid.
10 Scottish Fish You Should Be Eating (But Probably Aren't)
Beyond salmon and haddock, Scotland's waters produce extraordinary fish that most Scots have never cooked. Here are 10 underrated species, where to buy them, and what to do with them.
The Best Scottish Seafood Delivery Services: An Honest Review
Scotland exports most of its best seafood. Here's how to get langoustines, scallops, and fresh fish delivered to your door — from the people who actually catch them.
Frequently asked questions
+What is the best Scottish seafood to buy right now?
It depends on the month. Langoustines are at their best from late autumn through spring. Native oysters run September to April. Mackerel peaks in summer. Scallops are good most of the year but best from autumn through winter. Our live seasonality calendar shows you exactly what is in season this week.
+Where can I buy fresh Scottish seafood online?
Several boats and fishmongers ship next-day across the UK — Welch Fishmongers, The Fish Society, and Loch Fyne Oysters are the most established. Our seafood delivery review covers what each one does well, what they get wrong, and where the markup sits.
+What is the difference between langoustines and prawns?
Langoustines (also called Norway lobsters, scampi, or Dublin Bay prawns) are a small clawed crustacean from cold North Atlantic waters — closer to a small lobster than to a prawn. Prawns are a different family entirely, generally warmer-water, without large claws, and with softer flesh. Langoustines cost roughly 3–5× as much for good reason. See our dedicated langoustines vs prawns guide.
+Is Scottish salmon farmed or wild?
Almost all salmon sold under the 'Scottish salmon' label is farmed in sea pens off the west coast and northern Highlands. Wild Atlantic salmon from Scottish rivers exists but is rare, expensive, and tightly regulated. The honest answer is that most 'Scottish salmon' on supermarket shelves is farmed — the quality varies enormously by producer.
+Why does so little of Scotland’s seafood stay in Scotland?
Scotland catches world-class shellfish — langoustines, scallops, crabs, oysters — but exports around 80% of it, predominantly to France and Spain where chefs and consumers pay more. The good news is that small fishmongers and quayside markets in Scottish coastal towns increasingly stock the same species you would find on a Paris restaurant menu, often at lower prices.
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