Pupils at an Inverness school are preparing for an expedition to Tanzania where they will help to build homes alongside members of a community.
Bars and restaurants in Inverness are getting ready to shake it up for the city’s first ever Cocktail Week.
Child poverty rates in the Highlands remain unacceptably high, says an MSP as a children’s charity prepares to open a new building in the region.
Police inquiries are continuing today into a late-night stabbing in an Inverness street in which a man was seriously injured.
A fortnight of foodie delights will be served up across Inverness and Loch Ness during the Food and Drink Festival 2025 starting later this month.
The Highland’s biggest free book festival is set to return to Inverness this October under the theme of nature.
Campaigners keen to a acquire a historic Inverness building for the community have been buoyed by a show of support at a public meeting.
Further tests are being carried out after heightened levels of a cancer-causing gas were discovered in Inverness Justice Centre.
A lack of affordable housing in the Highlands is fuelling the social care staffing crisis, care homes across the region are warning.
Diners at an Inverness restaurant had a surprise visitor among their midst.
A non-stop four-hour performance by choral singers in front of shoppers in Inverness city centre raised more than £5200.
Proposals by President Donald Trump for the US to take over Gaza and relocate its people are ‘morally incomprehensible’, says an Inverness doctor.
A Highland teenager has set himself the challenge of running a distance of more than two marathons to benefit younger pupils at his school.
The high level of support provided to breastfeeding mothers in the Highlands has been recognised with a gold award.
Traditional lion dances and business blessings will take place in Inverness city centre tomorrow to celebrate the Chinese New Year.
Anglers are preparing to gather in Inverness with a sense of renewed optimism as they mark the start of the salmon fishing season on the River Ness.
Contentious plans to change a former Inverness care home into a children’s nursery have been given the go-ahead.
The potential future of the Old High Church in Inverness will be discussed at a public meeting next month.
An Inverness care home which was at risk of having its registration withdrawn has made the improvements demanded by Scotland’s care watchdog.
The chance to own Inverness’s oldest building is once again a possibility as the Old High Church is once again back on the market.