A 16-page PDF guide to finding gold in Britain — top 10 locations with GPS, equipment checklist, UK legal guide, and app tutorial. No cost, no catch.
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The Beginner's Pack is written for people who have never panned for gold before and want to start properly — with the right locations, legal knowledge, and equipment from day one.
Hand-picked from 211 BGS-sourced sites. Each entry includes GPS coordinates, a description, access notes, difficulty rating, and best panning method.
Prioritised shopping list split into Essential, Recommended, and Optional. Includes price estimates and product links for each item.
Quick-reference guides for Scotland, England & Wales, and Northern Ireland. What you can do, what you cannot, permit contacts, and the key legislation — in plain English.
The most common errors that cost beginners time and finds — from picking random rivers to buying the wrong gear first. Read this before your first outing.
How to get the most from the UK Gold Prospector map — browsing locations, reading geological data, submitting field reports, and planning trips effectively.
As a subscriber you'll receive location spotlights, seasonal guides, legal updates, and equipment reviews — starting straight away.
Beginner-friendly sites across Scotland, Wales, England, and Northern Ireland — all with confirmed gold finds, GPS coordinates, and clear access details in the full PDF.
Site of the 1869 gold rush. Flakes and nuggets from terrace gravels.
BeginnerPermit ~£15/dayGod's Treasure-House. Five productive burns, free open moorland access.
BeginnerFree AccessDownstream of Scotland's only gold mine. Consistently alluvial gold.
BeginnerFree AccessBGS-confirmed trace gold. Ideal for developing technique.
BeginnerFree AccessDrains entire Dolgellau Gold Belt. Trail access the full length.
BeginnerFree AccessBritain's Roman gold mine. Guided NT panning available seasonally.
BeginnerNational TrustConfirmed flakes up to 5mm. National Park footpath access throughout.
BeginnerFree AccessBest Midlands/North panning site. Consistent gold confirmed by analysis.
BeginnerFree AccessCornwall's most productive alluvial site — 59g nugget found here.
IntermediateFree AccessSperrin Mountains — drains the largest undeveloped gold resource in Britain.
BeginnerFree AccessFull GPS coordinates, access notes, permit info and best method in the free PDF. Get it here →
Every location in this guide comes from the UK Gold Prospector map — built on British Geological Survey data that professional exploration geologists use.
Every confirmed and prospective gold site — alluvial rivers, historic mines, active workings, and BGS prospective zones — plotted across the UK.
Toggle on the bedrock geology layer to see exactly why gold concentrates where it does — the same data BGS uses for mineral prospectivity analysis.
The Beginner's Pack gives you everything you need before your first outing. 16 pages, completely free, delivered to your inbox.
Yes — recreational gold panning is tolerated throughout the UK. In Scotland, the Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003 gives you a statutory right of access to most land and waterways for recreational purposes. In England and Wales there's no equivalent right to roam beside rivers, so you need the landowner's permission to access private riverbanks — but in practice many farmers and estate owners say yes if you ask politely and explain what you're doing.
All UK gold is technically Crown property under the Royal Mines Act 1693, but the Crown Estate has historically tolerated casual recreational panning for personal use. Our Beginner's Pack includes a full legal cheat sheet covering Scotland, England & Wales, and Northern Ireland.
The best beginner sites are those with confirmed alluvial gold, good public access, and straightforward ground conditions. Our top picks include: Kildonan & Suisgill Burns in Sutherland (site of the 1869 gold rush, permits ~£15/day); Leadhills & Wanlockhead in South Lanarkshire (free, five productive burns); Cononish Burn near Tyndrum (free, downstream of Scotland's only gold mine); the Mawddach Estuary in Wales (free, full trail access); Dolaucothi in Carmarthenshire (National Trust, guided panning available); and the River Dart on Dartmoor (free National Park access).
All 10 locations in the pack come with GPS coordinates, difficulty ratings, access notes, and permit information.
You can start for under £50 with three core items: a 10–12 inch dark plastic gold pan with riffles (£12–£18) — dark colours make fine gold much easier to spot; a classifier sieve (£8–£15) to remove large rocks before panning; and a snuffer bottle (£4–£8) to recover fine gold from your pan without losing it.
Add some small glass vials for storage and a stainless steel trowel and you're ready. Don't buy a metal detector or sluice box first — those tools only become useful once you understand how to read a river and identify productive ground. The Beginner's Pack has a full prioritised checklist with product links for each item.
The UK Gold Prospector app (ukgoldprospector.co.uk) maps 211 confirmed gold locations sourced from the British Geological Survey. It includes location type filters, BGS geology overlays, GPS coordinates, access notes, community field reports, and offline use via PWA.
Free users can browse a preview of 10 locations — enough to try the app and explore the interface before committing. The full 211-location database, geology overlays, community reports, and offline GPS tools require a subscription at £14.99/month or £99.99/year. The Beginner's Pack tutorial covers how to use both the free preview and the full subscription features effectively.
Most Scottish rivers and burns are free to access under the Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003. However, Kildonan and Suisgill Burns in Sutherland require a paid permit (around £15/day from Suisgill Lodge) because of how mineral rights there are structured — the access right exists, but the mineral right to take gold is separately licensed.
A small number of Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) and National Nature Reserves have additional restrictions that apply on top of general access rights. The Beginner's Pack covers Scotland's rules in full, with permit contact details for the main regulated sites.
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16 pages of practical guidance — top 10 locations, equipment checklist, UK legal guide, app tutorial. Delivered straight to your inbox.