Home Glasgow Areas Merchant City Glasgow: Rent, Restaurants, Transport and What It’s Actually Like
Glasgow Areas

Merchant City Glasgow: Rent, Restaurants, Transport and What It’s Actually Like

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georgesquare

Merchant City: Glasgow’s Fanciest Postcode

Merchant City is what happens when you take a bunch of 18th-century tobacco lord warehouses and fill them with cocktail bars and Italian restaurants. It’s Glasgow’s answer to a European quarter, all cobbled lanes and converted buildings, and it knows exactly how expensive it is.

If you want city centre living without the grime of Sauchiehall Street on a Saturday night, this is where you end up. It’s polished, it’s pricey, and it’s got more restaurants per square metre than anywhere else in Glasgow.

What’s It Like?

Merchant City covers a tight grid of streets between George Square and the Trongate. Ingram Street is the main spine. The Italian Centre sits at the heart of it, a courtyard development full of designer shops and places to eat. You’ll see folk having espresso at pavement tables like they think they’re in Milan.

The buildings are gorgeous. Properly gorgeous. Victorian and Georgian architecture that’s been cleaned up and converted into flats, restaurants, and galleries. It’s one of the best-looking parts of Glasgow and it photographs well. The council knows it too, which is why they host the Merchant City Festival here every summer.

The crowd is mostly young professionals, couples without kids, and a fair few students from Strathclyde Uni which is right next door. During the day it’s calm. At night and weekends it picks up, especially around the Merchant Square area where the bars are. It can get noisy on a Friday and Saturday, but that’s city centre living for you.

Rent and Property

This is not a cheap area. You’re paying a premium for the address and the converted warehouse flat with the exposed brickwork.

A 1-bed flat in Merchant City will cost you around £950 to £1,200 a month. A 2-bed runs to £1,200 to £1,500. That’s well above Glasgow’s average of around £925 for a one-bed. You’re paying for the location, the building quality, and the fact you can walk to work in five minutes.

If you’re buying, expect to pay £180,000 to £280,000 for a 2-bed flat depending on the building and condition. The converted warehouses with high ceilings and original features command the highest prices. New-build apartments on the edges of the area are slightly cheaper but lack the character.

Compared to the West End or Finnieston, Merchant City is about the same price. The difference is you get proper city centre access and a different style of flat. Less sandstone tenement, more warehouse conversion.

Best Places to Eat and Drink

Merchant City is packed with places to eat. The quality is high and so are the prices.

  • Dishoom (Nelson Mandela Place) opened in the old Glasgow Stock Exchange building in August 2025 and it’s been rammed ever since. Bombay comfort food done brilliantly. The bacon naan roll at breakfast is worth the queue alone. Their Glasgow-exclusive Haggis Pau is a clever touch.
  • Mharsanta (Candleriggs) won Best City Centre Restaurant 2025. Scottish cooking with local produce. Haggis, scallops, the works. It’s the kind of place you take your parents when they visit. Mains from around £16-24.
  • Paesano (Miller Street) does the best pizza in Glasgow. Neapolitan style, simple toppings, no messing about. They don’t take bookings so get there early or expect to wait. Pizzas from about £8-12. Brilliant value for this area.
  • Swadish is refined Indian cooking from Ajay Kumar, a Great British Menu finalist. Two AA Rosettes. Not your average curry house. Tasting menus and seasonal Scottish ingredients with Indian techniques.
  • Santa Lucia (Ingram Street) has been serving Italian food in Merchant City for years. Reliable, not trying to reinvent the wheel. Good pasta, decent wine list.
  • Babbity Bowster is a proper traditional pub on Blackfriars Street. Live folk music, real ales, and none of the cocktail bar nonsense. It’s one of the oldest pubs in the area and still one of the best for a pint.
  • Bar 91 on Candleriggs is a local favourite. Relaxed, unpretentious, and cheap by Merchant City standards. Good for a pint after work without spending fifteen quid on a craft cocktail.

If you’re only going to one place, make it Paesano. Best pizza in Glasgow at a price that doesn’t make your eyes water.

George Square in Glasgow city centre, next to Merchant City
George Square, right on the edge of Merchant City. You can see it from your window if you’re lucky.

Transport Links

You’re in the city centre, so transport is as good as it gets in Glasgow.

Glasgow Queen Street station is a two-minute walk from most of Merchant City. That gives you trains to Edinburgh (50 minutes), Stirling, Dundee, Aberdeen, and the Highlands. Glasgow Central is about a five-minute walk south, which covers everything heading south and west.

Buchanan Bus Station is right there too, at the top of Buchanan Street. Citylink coaches, Megabus, and local services all run from there.

The subway is accessible from Buchanan Street station, a short walk away. That connects you to the West End, Southside, and back around in a loop.

Plenty of buses run through the area on High Street, George Street, and Argyle Street. You genuinely don’t need a car living here. Most folk who live in Merchant City don’t have one.

Things to Do

The Gallery of Modern Art (GoMA) on Royal Exchange Square is free and worth a visit. It’s Glasgow’s most visited museum and the building itself, a former mansion, is stunning. The cone on the Duke of Wellington statue outside is a Glasgow institution at this point.

The Merchant City Festival runs every summer. Street performances, food stalls, live music, and the streets get closed to traffic. It’s one of the best free events in Glasgow.

The Trongate at the south end of Merchant City has some good independent galleries and studios. Trongate 103 houses several art organisations under one roof. The Sharmanka Kinetic Theatre there does mechanical puppet shows that are genuinely unlike anything else in Scotland.

Glasgow Cathedral and the Necropolis are a 10-minute walk east. The cathedral is medieval, free to visit, and the Necropolis on the hill behind it has some of the best views over the city.

For shopping, Buchanan Street and the Style Mile are right there. Ingram Street has the designer end of things. You won’t struggle to find something to spend money on.

Schools and Families

Merchant City is not really a family area. The flats are mostly one and two beds, the pubs outnumber the playgrounds, and it’s geared towards folk without kids.

If you do have children, St Mungo’s Primary and Townhead Primary are the nearest options. They’re Glasgow City Council schools and both are a short walk away. For Catholic primary schooling, St James’ Primary is nearby.

Secondary-age kids would likely attend one of the city centre catchment schools. Check with Glasgow City Council for your specific address, as catchment areas can be tight in the centre.

Honestly, if you’ve got a family, you’d be better looking at Dennistoun or the Southside where you’ll get more space for less money. Merchant City is for folk who want restaurants on their doorstep, not soft play centres.

Safety

Merchant City is one of the safest parts of Glasgow. It’s well-lit, there’s always folk about, and the restaurant and bar trade keeps the streets busy into the evening.

The main issues are the usual city centre stuff. The odd bit of antisocial behaviour on weekend nights, especially around the Trongate end. Bike theft happens, so lock yours properly. Don’t leave anything visible in your car if you park on the street.

It’s not the kind of area where you feel worried walking home. The foot traffic from restaurants and bars means there are always people around. Compared to most of Glasgow’s city centre, it’s one of the more comfortable places to be at night.

Glasgow Cathedral, a short walk from Merchant City
Glasgow Cathedral, just a 10-minute walk east of Merchant City. Free entry and genuinely impressive.

Parking

Terrible. Just terrible.

Merchant City is within Glasgow’s controlled parking zone. Street parking is metered during the day and restricted in the evenings near the bars. A resident parking permit is essential if you own a car, and even then, you’re not guaranteed a space near your flat.

There are multi-storey car parks nearby, including the ones at Duke Street, High Street, and the Concert Hall. These charge around £8-15 a day, which adds up fast if you’re using them regularly.

The honest advice? Don’t bring a car. The whole point of living in Merchant City is that everything is walkable. If you need a car for work, look at whether your building has allocated parking before you sign the lease.

The Verdict

Merchant City is Glasgow’s most polished city centre area. The buildings are beautiful, the food scene is excellent, and you’re within walking distance of everything that matters. It’s expensive by Glasgow standards, but you get a lot for it. Great transport, good bars, and a flat in a converted warehouse that’ll impress anyone who visits.

The downsides are real though. It’s noisy on weekends, parking is a nightmare, and it’s not built for families. You’re paying city centre prices for city centre living, and that means compromising on space and quiet. If that trade-off works for you, Merchant City is hard to beat.

Written by Lewis McGuire. Last updated March 2026.

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