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2023–24 Highland Football League
| Season |
|---|
| 29 July 2023 – 27 April 2024 |
| Buckie Thistle |
| 306 |
| 1,124 (3.67 per match) |
| Fraserburgh 11–0 Strathspey Thistle(20 April 2024) |
| Strathspey Thistle 1–10 Brora Rangers(6 March 2024) |
| .mw-parser-output .plainlist ol,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul{line-height:inherit;list-style:none;margin:0;padding:0}.mw-parser-output .plainlist ol li,.mw-parser-output .plainlist ul li{margin-bottom:0}Strathspey Thistle 1–10 Brora Rangers(6 March 2024)Fraserburgh 11–0 Strathspey Thistle(20 April 2024) |
| 10 matches:Brechin City & Fraserburgh |
| 19 matches:Banks o' Dee |
| 16 matches:Clachnacuddin & Strathspey Thistle |
| 14 matches:Strathspey Thistle |
| ← 2022–23 2024–25 → |
| All statistics correct as of 27 April 2024. |
The 2023–24 Highland Football League (known as the Breedon Highland League for sponsorship reasons) was the 121st season of the Highland Football League, and the 10th season as part of the fifth tier of the Scottish football pyramid system. Brechin City were the reigning champions, and were one of three teams that could have won the title in the final round of games, along with Buckie Thistle and Fraserburgh.
Buckie Thistle's 1–0 win – a sixth consecutive win to finish the season – over Keith gave them their 12th Highland League title on goal difference from Brechin City, with Fraserburgh three points behind in third, having won their last ten games.
However, Buckie Thistle were not eligible for the pyramid play-off (they would have played the winners of the 2023–24 Lowland Football League (East Kilbride)) as they did not hold a bronze-level club licence.
All grounds are equipped with floodlights as required by league regulations.
| Team | Location | Stadium | Capacity | Seats |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Banks o' Dee | Aberdeen | Spain Park | 876 | 122 |
| Brechin City | Brechin | Glebe Park | 4,083 | 1,519 |
| Brora Rangers | Brora | Dudgeon Park | 2,000 | 250 |
| Buckie Thistle | Buckie | Victoria Park | 3,000 | 400 |
| Clachnacuddin | Inverness | Grant Street Park | 2,074 | 154 |
| Deveronvale | Banff | Princess Royal Park | 2,651 | 360 |
| Formartine United | Pitmedden | North Lodge Park | 1,800 | 300 |
| Forres Mechanics | Forres | Mosset Park | 2,700 | 502 |
| Fraserburgh | Fraserburgh | Bellslea Park | 1,865 | 480 |
| Huntly | Huntly | Christie Park | 2,200 | 270 |
| Inverurie Loco Works | Inverurie | Harlaw Park | 2,500 | 250 |
| Keith | Keith | Kynoch Park | 2,362 | 370 |
| Lossiemouth | Lossiemouth | Grant Park | 2,050 | 250 |
| Nairn County | Nairn | Station Park | 2,250 | 250 |
| Rothes | Rothes | Mackessack Park | 1,731 | 167 |
| Strathspey Thistle | Grantown-on-Spey | Seafield Park | 1,600 | 150 |
| Turriff United | Turriff | The Haughs | 2,135 | 135 |
| Wick Academy | Wick | Harmsworth Park | 2,412 | 300 |
Subject to the tier 6 champion clubs meeting the required licensing criteria for promotion, a play-off was scheduled to take place between the winners of the 2023–24 Midlands Football League (Dundee North End), 2023–24 North Caledonian Football League (Invergordon) and the 2023–24 North Region Junior Football League (Culter), with the winners then playing Strathspey Thistle, who finished bottom of the Highland League. However, none of the tier 6 champions had the required SFA licence and as such there was no promotion to, or relegation from, the Highland League.
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