
Primark: Six floors of fashion and value in Edinburgh.
Primark in Edinburgh's city center at 91-93 Princes St offers six floors of clothing and home goods focused on value. Shoppers praise a wide, affordable range—from trendy pieces to cozy basics and seasonal gems—plus winter wear. The top-floor cafe is noted for a Stranger Things collaboration, while some reviews mention cafe quality and concerns about paper bags.
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Offers a wide range of trendy and basic apparel for men, women, and children at affordable prices.
Provides budget-friendly home decor, kitchenware, and seasonal items for everyday living.
Features Edinburgh and Scotland-themed merchandise, including shirts and mugs, at lower prices than souvenir shops.
Serves coffee, snacks, and themed collaborations on the top floor for a quick break while shopping.
Introduces high-quality winter wear and other seasonal fashion items to keep up with trends.
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Overall rating
AJay Sadh
Stepping into Primark in Edinburgh is like entering a style bazaar where your wallet breathes easy and your closet gets a wink. Right in the heart of the city — a stone’s throw from historic streets and castle views — this Primark hums with lively energy, bags brimming, racks stacked like spirited poetry. The range? Trendy pieces, cozy basics, and seasonal gems sit side by side, each priced so gently you almost forget you’re shopping. .
Emily Sullivan
We stumbled upon Primark and it turned out to be a very pleasant surprise. The store is huge, with an impressive selection of clothing and home goods. Prices are incredibly affordable, especially compared to many other shops in the area. We picked up gloves along with Edinburgh and Scotland themed shirts and mugs for a fraction of what souvenir shops were charging. If you are looking for budget friendly shopping or last minute gifts without overpaying, this is a great stop.
Scott Chegg
Primark’s paper shopping bags are a perfect metaphor for the brand itself: cheap, flimsy, and designed to fail. They tear under minimal weight and collapse into pulp at the first hint of rain, often before you’ve even left the shopping centre. Calling this an “eco friendly” initiative is laughable. A bag that disintegrates on the walk to the car isn’t saving the planet, it’s forcing customers to double bag, make repeat purchases, or throw the wreckage straight in the bin. This isn’t sustainability; it’s penny-pinching dressed up as virtue.
M4l2K T4N
6 floors of good value retail therapy. Hugh quality winter wear now on offer. Their top floor cafe has a stranger things collab on too.
James Carson
DONT use the cafe! Coffee is undrinkable the cookie tasted so synthetic I might as well have eaten the plastic covering it as well. Tables just left with rubbish!