London
United Kingdom · Best time to visit: May-Sep.
Choose your pace
Thames Skyline — Every Postcard in One Walk
Buckingham Palace
LandmarkArrive at 9am when the forecourt is nearly empty — golden morning light hits the Portland stone facade and the Victoria Memorial gleams white against a blue sky. Walk the full length of the gilded fence for the classic shot, then climb the steps of the Victoria Memorial for an elevated angle with the entire palace stretched behind you. Watch the Queen's Guard in their bearskin hats standing motionless at the sentry boxes — close enough to see the buttons on their tunics.
Tip: Skip the front gate crowd — climb to the top tier of the Victoria Memorial for the only elevated angle of the full palace facade. Before 10am you'll have this vantage point almost to yourself. The Changing of the Guard is at 11:00 but takes 45 minutes and the view is blocked by thousands of heads — not worth waiting for on a one-day trip.
Open in Google Maps →Palace of Westminster & Big Ben
LandmarkFrom Buckingham Palace, cut through St James's Park — the tree-lined path along the lake takes 12 minutes, and you'll pass the resident pelicans that have lived here since 1664. Emerging at the park's east end, the Houses of Parliament and Elizabeth Tower appear framed by ancient plane trees. Walk onto Westminster Bridge for the definitive Big Ben shot: stand at the bridge's midpoint looking northwest — the clock tower rises above the Thames with red double-decker buses crossing behind you, the most London photograph that exists.
Tip: Westminster Abbey's Gothic west facade is 2 minutes across the road — grab a quick photo but don't queue to enter (90-minute wait typical, and today is exteriors only). For Big Ben, the midpoint of Westminster Bridge gives the cleanest composition; on calm mornings you'll catch the clock tower's reflection in the Thames.
Open in Google Maps →St Paul's Cathedral
LandmarkFrom Westminster, walk east along Victoria Embankment for 25 minutes — the Thames glitters on your right, and across the water you'll spot the London Eye, the Southbank Centre, and the OXO Tower sliding past in sequence. This riverside promenade, lined with cast-iron dolphin lampposts, is one of London's finest walks that most tourists miss entirely. St Paul's west facade catches the late-morning sun full-on. Christopher Wren's dome — the second largest cathedral dome in the world after St Peter's — is best photographed from the south churchyard where no modern buildings intrude on the skyline.
Tip: For a free aerial view of the dome, walk 1 minute southeast to One New Change shopping centre and take the lift to the rooftop terrace — it's free, open to the public, and gives you an eye-level shot of St Paul's dome that 95% of tourists never find. The interior costs £23 and needs 2 hours — skip it today.
Open in Google Maps →Borough Market
FoodFrom St Paul's south steps, walk onto the Millennium Bridge — this 4-minute crossing is a photo op itself: look back for the cathedral dome filling the sky, look ahead for Tate Modern's industrial chimney. At the south bank, turn left past Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, and Borough Market's Victorian iron arches appear in 8 minutes. Head straight for Kappacasein for their legendary raclette grilled cheese toastie (£8) — rivers of molten Swiss cheese over sourdough bread, grilled until blistered. Still hungry? Grab a crispy pork belly bao from Bao Borough (£6). Finish with a salted caramel doughnut from Bread Ahead (£4.50) — the queue moves fast and it's worth every second.
Tip: Borough Market is closed on Sundays — plan accordingly. Kappacasein's queue looks intimidating but moves in 10 minutes. Skip Padella (the famous pasta stall) unless you enjoy a 40-minute wait for a £9 plate. The market is quieter on Monday–Wednesday but some stalls are closed; Thursday–Saturday is the full experience.
Open in Google Maps →Tower Bridge
LandmarkFrom Borough Market, walk east along Tooley Street for 12 minutes — Tower Bridge's Victorian Gothic towers reveal themselves gradually between buildings, growing taller with every block. Cross the bridge on the east pavement for wide-open river views in both directions. On the north bank, descend to the Thames Path and walk west 5 minutes to the Tower of London — skip the entrance (you'd need 3 hours), but the 950-year-old fortress walls and the White Tower are magnificent from the riverside. Cross back south over the bridge, then duck into Potters Fields Park on the southeast side for the ultimate photo: both towers, the full suspension span, and their reflection in the Thames. Afternoon light from the south illuminates the bridge's white-and-blue paintwork perfectly.
Tip: Potters Fields Park (south bank, southeast of the bridge) is THE photo spot — come back here at sunset if your schedule allows, Tower Bridge lit golden is transcendent. After photos, walk 3 minutes into Shad Thames for London's most photogenic alley: overhead iron walkways connecting Victorian warehouses. Avoid every restaurant on the north bank near the Tower of London gift shop — they're tourist traps charging double for microwave food. St Katharine Docks (5 minutes north of the bridge) is a peaceful hidden marina with honest pubs, perfect for resting your legs before dinner.
Open in Google Maps →Butlers Wharf Chop House
FoodFrom Tower Bridge south side, turn into Shad Thames — the atmospheric converted-warehouse alley with overhead iron walkways — and Butlers Wharf Chop House is 2 minutes down on your left, right on the river. This is where Londoners book for birthdays and proposals, not a tourist restaurant. Order the beer-battered fish and chips (£19.50 — flaky Atlantic cod, hand-cut chips, and proper mushy peas, the definitive version) or the 28-day dry-aged beef burger (£18.50). Start with the potted Dorset crab if you're hungry (£14). A glass of English sparkling wine (£12) pairs perfectly with the river breeze. Budget £35–45 per person.
Tip: Book a terrace table at least 2 days ahead via their website — you'll eat with Tower Bridge glowing blue and white directly in front of you after dark. Request the table at the west end of the terrace for the most centered bridge view. They won't hold your table past the booking time, so arrive 10 minutes early. This is the single best dinner view in London and the perfect final image of your one-day trip.
Open in Google Maps →A Thousand Years Along the Thames
Big Ben & Houses of Parliament
LandmarkExit Westminster station and Big Ben rises directly in front of you. Walk onto Westminster Bridge for the classic shot: Big Ben on your left, the London Eye across the river on your right. Morning light from the southeast perfectly illuminates the Victorian Gothic clock face.
Tip: Stand at the south bank end of Westminster Bridge for the best angle — Big Ben framed with the bridge's green railings. The 7-meter clock face photographs beautifully even on overcast London days.
Open in Google Maps →Westminster Abbey
ReligiousCross back over the bridge and walk 3 minutes south to the Abbey's north entrance. Every British monarch since 1066 has been crowned here; Queen Elizabeth II's funeral was held here in 2022. Morning light through the rose window is breathtaking — don't miss Poets' Corner and the hidden Cloisters garden.
Tip: Buy tickets online in advance — saves £5 and skips the queue. Closed to tourists on Sundays (services only). The Cloisters garden is a hidden medieval courtyard that most tourists completely miss.
Open in Google Maps →Borough Market
FoodCross Westminster Bridge to the south bank and turn left along the Thames Path — this 30-minute riverside walk passes the London Eye, Tate Modern, and Shakespeare's Globe. Borough Market has fed London for a thousand years. Don't sit down — graze standing up like a local.
Tip: Get the raclette cheese melt at Kappacasein (£9.50, back corner of the market) and a flat white from Monmouth Coffee (£3.50). Skip the overpriced paella stands near the entrance — tourist trap.
Open in Google Maps →Tower of London
LandmarkWalk east from Borough Market, cross at London Bridge and continue along the north bank for 15 minutes. This 950-year-old fortress has served as royal palace, prison, and execution ground. Go straight to the Crown Jewels first — afternoon queues are shorter — then join a free Yeoman Warder tour for stories no guidebook has.
Tip: Book online (saves £5+). Yeoman Warder tours leave every 30 minutes — last one around 14:30, so join immediately upon entry. Find the ravens near the White Tower: legend says if they leave, the kingdom falls.
Open in Google Maps →Tower Bridge
LandmarkExit the Tower of London from the riverside gate — Tower Bridge is 3 minutes straight ahead. Afternoon western sun lights up the blue-and-white Victorian Gothic towers. Walk the glass-floored Exhibition walkway 42 meters above the Thames, then cross to the south bank for the iconic full-bridge photo.
Tip: The glass walkway is worth it. Best full-bridge photo: Potters Fields Park on the south bank, 2 minutes past the bridge. Avoid the fish & chips shops on Tooley Street — tourist traps with microwaved food.
Open in Google Maps →Butlers Wharf Chop House
FoodFrom Tower Bridge's south end, turn left into Shad Thames — a cobblestone lane between converted Victorian spice warehouses with iron bridges overhead. Three minutes along, Butlers Wharf Chop House sits on the riverfront with a terrace facing Tower Bridge. A proper British grill that City bankers frequent for long Friday lunches.
Tip: Book a terrace table online — Tower Bridge lit up at dusk is the best dinner view in London. Order the Steak & Ale Pie (£19.50) or Grilled Rib-Eye (£36); the Sticky Toffee Pudding (£9.50) is legendary. Budget £35-50/person.
Open in Google Maps →From the Queen's Doorstep to the Edge of the World
Buckingham Palace
LandmarkTake the Tube to Green Park, walk south through the tree-lined avenue — The Mall opens up and Buckingham Palace appears in full. At 09:00 the forecourt is nearly empty. The Queen's Guard in bearskin hats and red tunics stand frozen at the gates; the silence of early morning makes it cinematic.
Tip: Skip the Changing of the Guard (11:00) — massive crowds, terrible sightlines. At 09:00 you get close-up guard photos through the railings with no one in the way. Stand at the Queen Victoria Memorial for the best symmetrical palace shot.
Open in Google Maps →National Gallery
MuseumWalk through St James's Park along the lake, duck under Admiralty Arch onto Trafalgar Square — 15 minutes of London's most regal scenery. Nelson's Column dominates the square; the bronze lions are a classic photo spot. The National Gallery crowns the north side — enter via the Sainsbury Wing on the left for a shorter queue.
Tip: Pick 5 paintings max: Van Gogh's Sunflowers (Room 43), Monet's Water-Lilies (Room 41), Turner's Fighting Temeraire (Room 34). Download the free gallery app for audio commentary. Admission is completely free.
Open in Google Maps →Dishoom Covent Garden
FoodExit from the east portico, walk 8 minutes up St Martin's Lane past the West End theatre marquees. Dishoom occupies a basement space on Upper St Martin's Lane — step inside a 1960s Bombay café with ceiling fans, vintage Bollywood posters, and the scent of 24-hour black daal. The restaurant Londoners queue an hour for.
Tip: The House Black Daal (£8.50, 24-hour slow-cooked) is mandatory. Add a Bacon Naan Roll (£12.90) and Mango Lassi (£5.50). Arrive at 11:45 to beat the rush or use the Dishoom app to join the waitlist remotely. Budget £15-25/person.
Open in Google Maps →Covent Garden
NeighborhoodStep out of Dishoom and turn right — Covent Garden's piazza is 3 minutes away. World-class street performers play the lower courtyard under a 19th-century iron-and-glass roof. Then find Neal's Yard through the narrow alley on Shorts Gardens — a hidden courtyard painted in every color, one of London's best-kept Instagram secrets.
Tip: Neal's Yard: look for the narrow alley entrance on Shorts Gardens, easy to miss. Penhaligon's on Wellington Street (perfumer since 1870) makes the most quintessentially British souvenir. Street performers are free; tip £2-5.
Open in Google Maps →British Museum
MuseumWalk north through Bloomsbury's Georgian squares for 15 minutes. The British Museum holds 8 million objects from every civilization on earth. Two-hour plan: Rosetta Stone (Room 4), Parthenon Marbles (Room 18), Egyptian mummies (Rooms 62-63), Lewis Chessmen (Room 40). The Great Court's glass ceiling glows in afternoon light.
Tip: Use the rear entrance on Montague Street — almost no queue vs. 20+ minutes at the main entrance. The Lewis Chessmen (Room 40) inspired the wizard chess in Harry Potter. Free admission; download the official audio guide app beforehand.
Open in Google Maps →Noble Rot
FoodExit the south gate, walk 5 minutes via Museum Street to Lamb's Conduit Street — one of Bloomsbury's prettiest streets lined with independent bookshops. Noble Rot is a wine bar and restaurant that London's food critics quietly call one of the city's best tables. Short, daily-changing menu with seasonal ingredients, perfectly executed.
Tip: Book online — only 40 seats, popular with the local literary crowd. Start with charcuterie to share (£16), then trust whatever the daily main is. Ask the sommelier for a glass (from £7) — the wine list is extraordinary. Budget £35-50/person.
Open in Google Maps →Imperial Gold — The Coronation Mile from Abbey to Palace
Westminster Abbey
ReligiousThe abbey opens at 9:30 — arrive right at opening when morning light pours through the medieval stained glass and the nave is nearly empty. Every English monarch since 1066 has been crowned here; Newton, Darwin, and Dickens rest beneath these stones. Start at the nave, then find Poets' Corner in the south transept.
Tip: Buy tickets online to skip the queue. Start counterclockwise from the nave — most tour groups begin at Poets' Corner, so you'll have the Coronation Chair nearly to yourself.
Open in Google Maps →St James's Park & Buckingham Palace
ParkFrom the abbey's north door, Big Ben is right there — snap a photo, then stroll 15 minutes west through St James's Park along the lake to Buckingham Palace. The view from the Blue Bridge over the lake is the postcard angle most tourists miss. Morning light is soft and the park is quieter than it will be by noon.
Tip: The best photo of Buckingham Palace: stand on the Blue Bridge at the center of the lake, not at the gates. If it's a guard-change day (Mon/Wed/Fri/Sun in summer), watch from the Victoria Memorial steps for the best angle and elevation.
Open in Google Maps →The Wolseley
FoodWalk north through Green Park for 10 minutes — the tree-lined path opens onto Piccadilly. This 1926 grand motoring showroom is now London's most glamorous café, where Art Deco arches frame a buzzing room of power lunches and tourist pilgrimages alike. Order the Wiener Schnitzel (£29.75), their most famous dish, or the eggs Benedict (£16.50) — arrive by 12:00 to beat the rush. Budget £30-40 per person.
Tip: Book online or arrive at 12:00 sharp — by 12:30 every table is taken. Ask for a banquette seat along the wall for the best people-watching. Skip the à la carte desserts; the Kaiserschmarrn shredded pancake (£14.75) is the secret menu winner.
Open in Google Maps →Churchill War Rooms
MuseumWalk south from Piccadilly through St James's Park for 12 minutes, past Horse Guards Parade, down the Clive Steps beside the Treasury. This underground bunker is exactly as it was when the lights were turned off on VJ Day 1945: the Map Room, Churchill's bedroom, the transatlantic telephone room. An ideal afternoon activity — no weather dependency, no stairs, and fascinating enough to forget your tired feet.
Tip: Download the free IWM Stories app before arriving — it replaces the audio guide and is better. The Map Room is the emotional climax: every pin, every phone, exactly where they were on August 15, 1945. Allow 90 minutes minimum.
Open in Google Maps →The Cinnamon Club
FoodWalk 8 minutes south from the War Rooms along King Charles Street, past the back of Westminster Abbey, into Great Smith Street — a Victorian library building with warm light glowing through tall windows is tonight's destination. The Cinnamon Club serves elevated Indian cuisine in the grandest setting imaginable: tandoori lamb chops (£28) with charred edges and a pink center, Old Delhi butter chicken (£22) that redefines everything you thought you knew about curry. Budget £45-60 per person.
Tip: Book at least 2 days ahead and request a table in the main library hall — the bar-area tables lack the grandeur. Avoid the restaurants around Victoria Station: most are overpriced tourist traps with reheated food.
Open in Google Maps →A Thousand Years on the Thames — Crown Jewels to Riverside Smoke
Tower of London
LandmarkArrive at opening — this is critical. Head straight to the Crown Jewels before the tour buses unload at 10:00; the 45-minute queue that forms later simply doesn't exist at 9:00. The Tower is a thousand years of treason, execution, and treasure compressed into a riverside fortress. Join a free Yeoman Warder tour every 30 minutes from the main entrance for stories no guidebook captures.
Tip: Tuesday to Saturday the Tower opens at 09:00; Sunday and Monday at 10:00 — plan accordingly. Go to the Crown Jewels in the Waterloo Block first, then join a Yeoman Warder tour. The ravens are easiest to spot on Tower Green near the Bloody Tower.
Open in Google Maps →Tower Bridge
LandmarkExit the Tower's east gate, walk 5 minutes along the Thames to Tower Bridge's north tower entrance. Morning sun from the east lights up the bridge's blue-and-white Victorian Gothic towers — this is the best light direction for photography. Take the glass-floor walkway 42 meters above the river and look down to see the Thames flowing beneath your feet.
Tip: The best photo OF Tower Bridge is not from on it — cross to the south side, walk 50 meters west to the Girl with a Dolphin fountain. That angle captures Tower Bridge with the Tower of London behind it.
Open in Google Maps →Padella
FoodCross Tower Bridge to the south bank, walk 12 minutes west along the river — old warehouses converted to galleries on your right, the City skyline across the water on your left. Padella is London's most obsessed-over pasta bar: handmade fresh, extraordinary quality, absurdly cheap. The pappardelle with 8-hour beef shin ragù (£8.50) and cacio e pepe (£7.50) are non-negotiable. Budget £12-18 per person.
Tip: No reservations — queue only. Arrive by 12:15 and the wait is under 15 minutes; after 12:30 it doubles. Counter seats facing the open kitchen are the best show in town. Order at least two types of pasta to share — portions are designed for sharing.
Open in Google Maps →St Paul's Cathedral
ReligiousWalk 10 minutes west to the Millennium Bridge — this steel footbridge frames St Paul's dome dead center, and the walk across is one of London's most cinematic moments. Afternoon light from the west illuminates the Portland stone facade in warm gold. Climb to the Whispering Gallery (259 steps) for the acoustic trick, then continue to the Golden Gallery (528 steps total) for London's best free panorama.
Tip: The Whispering Gallery (259 steps) is the smart compromise if you skip the full 528-step climb. The dome closes at 16:00 — start climbing by 15:00 at the latest. Closed Sundays for worship.
Open in Google Maps →Hawksmoor Guildhall
FoodFrom St Paul's east door, walk 8 minutes along Cheapside into the quiet lanes of the financial district — Basinghall Street hides London's best steakhouse in a building most walk right past. Hawksmoor's 35-day dry-aged bone-in prime rib (£38) is the reason Londoners book two weeks ahead. Finish with the sticky toffee pudding (£9.50) — the city's most copied dessert. Budget £50-70 per person.
Tip: Book online 3-5 days ahead — walk-ins almost never work. The pre-theatre menu (before 18:30) offers the same beef at lower cost if your schedule allows. Skip the restaurants on Tower Bridge's south side — most are chains charging riverside premiums for mediocre food.
Open in Google Maps →The Gentlest Goodbye — Between Ancient Civilizations and Street Performers
British Museum
MuseumThe museum opens at 10:00 — the Great Court's glass ceiling is most beautiful in morning light, when sun angles through Norman Foster's latticed dome create geometric shadows on the white stone floor. Go straight to Room 4 for the Rosetta Stone, Room 18 for the Parthenon Marbles, and Rooms 62-63 for the Egyptian mummies. These three highlights take 90 minutes; the rest is for whatever catches your eye.
Tip: Free entry, no ticket needed — but booking a timed-entry slot on the website avoids the morning queue. The back entrance on Montague Place is almost always shorter than the main gate on Great Russell Street.
Open in Google Maps →Dishoom Covent Garden
FoodExit through the museum's south door on Montague Place, walk 12 minutes south down Museum Street — past independent bookshops and quiet cafés — across Shaftesbury Avenue to Upper St Martin's Lane. Dishoom is London's love letter to Bombay's old Irani cafés: the bacon naan roll (£9.90) is the single most talked-about dish in the city, and the black daal (£8.50) has been slow-cooked for 24 hours. Budget £20-28 per person.
Tip: Weekdays before 12:30: walk right in. Weekends: queue opens at 11:30, expect 20-30 minutes. Don't leave without the house chai (£4.50) — spiced in-house, possibly the best cup of tea in London.
Open in Google Maps →Covent Garden
NeighborhoodStep out of Dishoom, turn left, and you're at Covent Garden's main piazza in 2 minutes. Afternoon between 2 and 4 is when the best street performers claim the lower-level stage in the old market hall — opera singers, acrobats, magicians working the crowd. Browse the Apple Market stalls for handmade crafts, then duck into Neal's Yard through a tiny alley off Shorts Gardens — a hidden courtyard painted in every color.
Tip: Neal's Yard is through a tiny alley off Shorts Gardens — follow the sign for Neal's Yard Remedies. This hidden courtyard is London's most Instagrammed secret and almost empty on weekday afternoons. Skip the chain restaurants on the Piazza; they survive on location, not food.
Open in Google Maps →National Gallery
MuseumWalk 8 minutes south from Covent Garden through King Street, past the church of St Martin-in-the-Fields, into Trafalgar Square — the National Gallery fills the entire north side. Head to Room 43 for Van Gogh's Sunflowers, Room 34 for Turner's Fighting Temeraire, and Room 41 for the Impressionists. Late afternoon light through the west-facing skylights gives the paintings an almost living warmth.
Tip: Free entry, no booking needed. The Sainsbury Wing (Rooms 51-66, Renaissance masters) is far emptier than the main building. Friday evenings the gallery stays open until 21:00 with live music in the central hall — magical if your schedule allows.
Open in Google Maps →Rules
FoodFrom the gallery, walk 10 minutes north up St Martin's Lane back toward Covent Garden, turn into Maiden Lane — a narrow street most visitors walk right past. Rules has occupied this red-painted Georgian townhouse since 1798, making it London's oldest restaurant. The game pie (seasonal, ~£26) is a house tradition for two centuries; finish with treacle sponge pudding (£9.75) and a glass of port. Budget £40-55 per person.
Tip: Book 2-3 days ahead for a ground-floor booth behind the bar — more character than upstairs. Rules has its own estate in the Pennines supplying game; the seasonal game menu (October-February) is the real reason locals come. Avoid Leicester Square restaurants in every direction — London's worst tourist-trap concentration.
Open in Google Maps →First Light — The Moments That Make You Stop
Westminster Abbey
ReligiousFirst in at 9:30 — the nave is yours alone and morning light streams through the Great West Window. Every monarch since 1066 was crowned here; walk from the Coronation Chair through Poets' Corner to the Chapter House, where the original 13th-century tiled floor is one of England's hidden masterpieces.
Tip: Start at Poets' Corner before the crowd forms at the Nave. The Chapter House is included in the ticket but 70% of visitors miss it — it has England's finest medieval floor.
Open in Google Maps →The Cinnamon Club
FoodFrom the Abbey's south door, walk 5 minutes down Great Smith Street to the Old Westminster Library — now London's most stunning Indian restaurant. The lunch set menu (2 courses, £26) is a revelation: try the tandoori stone bass or the slow-braised venison biryani.
Tip: Book lunch online — walk-ins wait 20+ minutes. The set menu changes seasonally and is far better value than à la carte.
Open in Google Maps →Buckingham Palace
LandmarkWalk north through St James's Park for 15 minutes — the lake is home to pelicans fed daily at 14:30, and the Palace reveals itself gradually through the plane trees. The Victoria Memorial forecourt gives you the classic photograph; the guards in bearskins stand motionless at the gates.
Tip: The Changing of the Guard (11:00, Mon/Wed/Fri/Sun, daily in summer) draws crushing crowds — the iconic photo is available at any time without them. Best angle is from the Victoria Memorial steps.
Open in Google Maps →Tate Modern
MuseumRetrace The Mall to Admiralty Arch, down Whitehall past Downing Street's black door, across Westminster Bridge with Big Ben overhead — this 25-minute walk is London's greatest free tour. Inside, the Turbine Hall's raw scale stuns; head to Level 10 of the Blavatnik Building for London's best free panorama with St Paul's framed across the river.
Tip: Permanent collection is free — skip paid exhibitions unless the artist matters to you. Level 10 viewing terrace is best before 16:00 for light. The Rothko Room on Level 2 is the emotional highlight.
Open in Google Maps →Padella
FoodWalk east along Bankside for 10 minutes, past Clink Street's medieval prison ruins and the Golden Hinde replica. Join the queue at this legendary pasta bar by Borough Market — the pappardelle with 8-hour beef shin ragù (£8.50) is London's best-value meal; pici cacio e pepe (£7) is the purist's order.
Tip: Queue at 18:30 to sit by 19:00 — no reservations. All 7 pastas are good but the beef shin ragù is non-negotiable. Avoid restaurants on the main road near London Bridge — most serve frozen pasta to tourists.
Open in Google Maps →A Thousand Years from Dome to Dungeon
St Paul's Cathedral
ReligiousSt Paul's opens at 8:30 — arrive early to climb 528 steps before the crowds. Stop at the Whispering Gallery to hear your voice carry 30 meters along the curved wall, then push to the Stone Gallery for an unobstructed panorama of London in morning light.
Tip: Climb first when legs are fresh. The Stone Gallery (outdoor, 378 steps) has better photo angles than the Golden Gallery above — wider and unobstructed. Rest on the Whispering Gallery bench before the final push.
Open in Google Maps →The Counting House
FoodWalk east through the City's medieval lanes for 15 minutes — duck through Change Alley where London's first coffee houses traded stocks in the 1680s. This pub occupies a former NatWest banking hall: soaring dome, chandeliers, ornate plasterwork — steak and ale pie (£15) or fish and chips (£16) under a Victorian ceiling.
Tip: Sit in the main hall under the dome — don't let them seat you in the annexe. Change Alley is where the South Sea Bubble burst in 1720.
Open in Google Maps →Tower of London
LandmarkContinue east along Leadenhall Street for 15 minutes — glance into Leadenhall Market's painted Victorian arcades where Diagon Alley was filmed. A thousand-year-old fortress that has been palace, prison, and execution ground: join a Yeoman Warder tour (free with ticket, every 30 min) for darkly humorous storytelling, then see the Crown Jewels last when afternoon crowds thin.
Tip: The Yeoman Warder tour is worth far more than wandering alone — budget a full hour for it. Crown Jewels queue is shortest after 15:00. Skip the gift shop.
Open in Google Maps →Tower Bridge
LandmarkWalk out the Tower's east exit and the bridge stands right ahead — more dramatic in person than any photograph. Buy the Exhibition ticket to cross glass-floor walkways 42 meters above the Thames; late-afternoon western light turns the ironwork golden.
Tip: The glass floor on the west walkway gives the best downward shot — boats pass directly beneath. Sunset from the south walkway is spectacular with the City skyline behind you.
Open in Google Maps →Pizarro
FoodCross to the south side of Tower Bridge and walk 15 minutes through Shad Thames — a narrow canyon of converted warehouses with iron walkways overhead. José Pizarro's restaurant on Bermondsey Street serves Spanish cooking worthy of San Sebastián: Galician octopus (£14) and Ibérico pork pluma (£22) are essential.
Tip: Book for 19:00 or later. Peek into José next door (his original standing tapas bar). Do not eat anywhere near the Tower of London — it's all overpriced tourist food.
Open in Google Maps →Mummies, Masters, and a Secret Underground Palace
British Museum
MuseumThe world's greatest museum of human civilization — free, opens at 10:00. Start in Room 4 with the Rosetta Stone, climb to the Egyptian mummies (Rooms 62-63), cross to the Parthenon Marbles (Room 18) and the Assyrian lion hunt reliefs (Room 10) — carved 2,700 years ago with breathtaking precision.
Tip: Room 10 (Assyrian lion hunt reliefs) is the most underrated gallery — breathtaking carvings and always empty. The Great Court café is a good midway rest stop.
Open in Google Maps →Dishoom
FoodWalk south through Bloomsbury's Georgian squares for 10 minutes to Upper St Martin's Lane. London's most-loved Bombay café in a gorgeous high-ceilinged room: the black daal (£7.50, simmered 24 hours) is legendary, and the chicken ruby curry (£14.50) with garlic naan (£4.50) completes the meal.
Tip: Book lunch online 2 weeks ahead or face a 45-minute queue. Ask for the main hall, not the basement. The house chai is one of the best in London.
Open in Google Maps →Covent Garden
NeighborhoodStep outside Dishoom and you're in Covent Garden — London's original market, now a covered piazza with world-class street performers. Duck through the narrow alley off Neal Street into Neal's Yard: a tiny courtyard painted in every color and the most photographed corner of the West End.
Tip: The Apple Market (main piazza) sells handmade crafts — skip Jubilee Market around the corner (cheap imports). Neal's Yard photographs best from the entrance archway.
Open in Google Maps →National Gallery
MuseumWalk south for 5 minutes past the Strand to Trafalgar Square. One of the world's greatest painting collections, entirely free — head to Room 43 for Van Gogh's Sunflowers and the Impressionists; late-afternoon skylight gives canvases a warm glow no reproduction captures.
Tip: Enter from Orange Street (rear) to skip Trafalgar Square crowds. Room 34 has Sunflowers; Room 43 has Monet and Cézanne. Open until 21:00 on Fridays.
Open in Google Maps →Brasserie Zédel
FoodWalk 10 minutes north through Piccadilly Circus to Sherwood Street, take the staircase underground into a soaring Art Deco brasserie — the former ballroom of the Regent Palace Hotel. Prix fixe £14.50 for two courses: steak haché or choucroute alsacienne, in central London's most beautiful dining room.
Tip: No reservation needed — just walk in and descend. The prix fixe is central London's best-kept value secret. The cabaret bar downstairs (Crazy Coqs) is London's most hidden live-music venue.
Open in Google Maps →The Day You Stop Being a Tourist
Regent's Park
ParkEnter through York Gate on Marylebone Road and walk to the Inner Circle. Queen Mary's Gardens hold 12,000 roses across 85 varieties in summer; even off-season the formal garden is immaculate, morning light is soft on the lake, and you'll barely see another tourist.
Tip: The plane tree avenue from York Gate to the Inner Circle is one of London's most photogenic walks. Roses peak June through September.
Open in Google Maps →Daunt Books
ShoppingExit the park from York Gate and walk south on Marylebone High Street for 5 minutes. London's most beautiful bookshop: a long oak gallery beneath an Edwardian stained-glass skylight, books arranged by country — browsing feels like planning your next journey.
Tip: The rear gallery under the skylight is the signature photo — go upstairs for the best angle looking down. La Fromagerie two doors away is London's finest cheese shop.
Open in Google Maps →The Golden Hind
FoodTurn left off the high street into Marylebone Lane — a winding medieval lane older than the grid around it. The Golden Hind has fried fish since 1914: Greek-Cypriot family, beef-dripping chips, batter so crisp it audibly shatters — cod and chips (£14) or lemon sole (£16) with mushy peas.
Tip: Arrive at 12:30 — the tiny room fills by 13:00. Ask for extra tartar sauce. Never eat fish and chips near tourist areas — chains use frozen fish and vegetable oil.
Open in Google Maps →The Wallace Collection
MuseumWalk 5 minutes south to Manchester Square. A palatial townhouse with a collection rivaling national museums — free: Frans Hals' Laughing Cavalier, Titian, Rembrandt, one of Europe's finest armouries, and 18th-century French rooms that feel like a private wing of Versailles.
Tip: Start in the Great Gallery (first floor) for the masterpieces — you'll have Rembrandt to yourself. Most London tourists have never heard of this museum; that's why it's perfect.
Open in Google Maps →Lurra
FoodWalk 10 minutes west through quiet residential streets to Seymour Place — a destination lane drawing food-obsessed Londoners citywide. Lurra is a Basque grill built around fire: the Galician txuleta (dry-aged, charcoal-grilled, carved tableside, £60 for two) is one of London's great steak experiences, with Basque cider poured from height.
Tip: Book 3 days ahead. The txuleta is the reason to come — don't order well-done. Burnt Basque cheesecake (£9) is the best in London. Donostia next door (same owners) is the fallback if full.
Open in Google Maps →The Empire's Silhouette — Your First Breathless Glimpse of London
Westminster Abbey
LandmarkArrive 15 minutes before the 9:30 opening — you'll be among the first inside, and the nave will be nearly empty. Walk straight to the Henry VII Lady Chapel at the far end: the pendant fan-vault ceiling, carved from pale limestone 500 years ago, is the single most beautiful piece of Gothic architecture in England. Then loop back through Poets' Corner, where Chaucer, Dickens, and Handel are buried beneath your feet.
Tip: Skip the audio guide (£5) — the free vergers stationed around the abbey tell far better stories. The Henry VII Lady Chapel ceiling is best appreciated standing in the centre aisle looking straight up — phone cameras can't capture it, but your eyes can.
Open in Google Maps →The Cinnamon Club
FoodTurn right out of the Abbey, walk 3 minutes down Great Smith Street. This is Indian fine dining inside the Old Westminster Library — leather-bound books still line the walls, and MPs from Parliament next door fill the room at lunch. The tandoori lamb chops (£28) are smoky and perfect; the Kerala sea bass curry (£24) is the sleeper hit. Pair with a Kingfisher on tap. Budget £35-45 per person.
Tip: Book lunch at least 2 days ahead — request the main dining room (the library hall), not the bar area. The lunch set menu (£28 for 2 courses) is the smart play if you want to control the bill.
Open in Google Maps →St James's Park & Buckingham Palace
ParkWalk 5 minutes north from the restaurant into St James's Park. Pelicans have lived on the lake here since 1664 — a gift from a Russian ambassador. Cross the Blue Bridge at the lake's centre: looking west, Buckingham Palace is framed by weeping willows; looking east, the Horse Guards Parade towers rise above the trees. Continue through to the Palace's front gate. At this hour the afternoon sun hits the Victoria Memorial perfectly, and the morning tour-bus crowds are long gone.
Tip: The Changing of the Guard (11:00, Mon/Wed/Fri/Sun) is a tourist trap — you'll stand behind 6 rows of people and see nothing. The palace is far more photogenic at 14:00 with afternoon sun, the crowds gone, and the Victoria Memorial all to yourself.
Open in Google Maps →Churchill War Rooms
MuseumRetrace your steps through St James's Park, 10 minutes south to Clive Steps on King Charles Street. Descend underground into the actual bunker where Churchill directed World War II. The Map Room is frozen exactly as it was on the day the war ended in 1945 — pins still in the maps, phones still on the desks. The air is thick and close; you can feel the weight of history pressing down. A perfect late-afternoon activity: low-effort, climate-controlled, endlessly absorbing.
Tip: The Churchill Museum section has a 15-metre interactive table covering every year of his life — most people rush past it. Spend 20 minutes there. Skip the gift shop entirely: overpriced tourist tat.
Open in Google Maps →The Wolseley
FoodWalk 15 minutes north through Green Park — the trees will be golden in the late sun. The Wolseley is a grand European café on Piccadilly, built inside a former Wolseley car showroom with soaring arched ceilings and black-and-gold décor. It feels like dining inside a cathedral. The Wiener schnitzel (£29.50) is benchmark-setting; the kedgeree (£19.50) is the most London dish on the menu. Budget £35-50 per person.
Tip: Book 2-3 days ahead and request the main dining room — the counter seats are walk-in but cramped. If you can't get a reservation, arrive at exactly 18:45 before the dinner rush; the bar area often has immediate seating.
Open in Google Maps →Both Banks of the Thames — From a Thousand-Year Fortress to Modern Art
Tower of London
LandmarkTake the Tube to Tower Hill (Circle/District line). Arrive at 9:00 sharp when the gates open. Turn left immediately after entry and head straight to the Crown Jewels — at opening, the queue is under 5 minutes (by 11:00 it's 45). After the jewels, join a Yeoman Warder tour from the main entrance — these retired soldiers tell bloody, hilarious stories about executions, ravens, and royal prisoners. Then the White Tower at your own pace: the armour collection includes Henry VIII's increasingly large suits as he grew fatter with age.
Tip: The Crown Jewels have a moving walkway that forces you past in 30 seconds. Walk to the end, then double back along the static viewing area on the other side — you can stand there as long as you want. Almost nobody does this.
Open in Google Maps →Borough Market
FoodCross Tower Bridge on foot — stop at the midpoint and look back for a perfect framing of the Tower with the Thames below (the morning east light still catches the stone beautifully). From the south side, follow the river path west 15 minutes to Borough Market. This is not a sit-down lunch — graze your way through. Kappacasein's raclette (£8, watch them scrape molten cheese onto potatoes), Bread Ahead's salted caramel doughnut (£4.50, fresh from the fryer), Neal's Yard Dairy cheese samples (free, ask for Stichelton). Budget £15-20.
Tip: The market's soul is in the back section around Southwark Cathedral — artisan producers, cheese mongers, the best stalls. The front entrance near Borough High Street is tourist-oriented and overpriced. Thursday to Saturday are busiest; arrive before noon on weekdays for elbow room.
Open in Google Maps →Tate Modern
MuseumWalk 5 minutes west along the river from Borough Market — you'll pass the Golden Hinde replica and Clink Prison Museum. Tate Modern is free, housed in the former Bankside Power Station. Don't try to see everything. Start on Level 4: the Rothko Room is a dim, meditative chapel of deep red canvases that stops people in their tracks. Then Level 3 for Picasso and Dalí. Take the escalator to the Level 10 viewing platform: St Paul's Cathedral floats directly across the river, framed by the Millennium Bridge — the best free view in London.
Tip: The Turbine Hall always has a massive free installation — check what's on before you go. The Level 6 Members Bar sometimes admits non-members after 15:00 with unsold tables — ask at the desk, worst case they say no.
Open in Google Maps →South Bank Riverside Walk
NeighborhoodExit Tate Modern's west door and follow the river westward. You'll pass Shakespeare's Globe (a photo stop — the reconstructed playhouse is beautiful from outside), cross under Blackfriars Bridge where buskers play in the echo, pass the brutalist National Theatre and the second-hand bookstalls beneath Waterloo Bridge, and end at the Southbank Centre. The entire north bank skyline — St Paul's, the Gherkin, the Shard — unfolds as you walk. At this hour, the setting sun gilds everything across the water.
Tip: Skip the London Eye — £32 for a 30-minute queue and a view worse than Tate Modern Level 10. If you want a river experience, take the Thames Clipper from Bankside Pier to Westminster (£8 with Oyster, every 20 min) — faster and more atmospheric than any tourist cruise.
Open in Google Maps →Padella
FoodWalk back east along the river 20 minutes to Borough, or take the Tube one stop from Waterloo to London Bridge. Padella is the most beloved pasta restaurant in London — everything is hand-rolled in front of you. The pappardelle with 8-hour beef shin ragù (£8.50) is the stuff of legend; the cacio e pepe (£7) is as good as anything in Rome. No reservations — queue starts moving fast around 19:00. Budget £12-18 per person with wine.
Tip: The queue looks daunting but moves every 3-4 minutes — rarely more than 20 minutes total. Solo diners and pairs get seated fastest at the bar counter. If it's raining, their sister restaurant Pastaio in Soho takes reservations — similar quality, different vibe.
Open in Google Maps →Humanity's Living Room — From the Rosetta Stone to the West End Lights
British Museum
MuseumTake the Tube to Holborn or Russell Square. Enter from Montague Place (the back entrance on the north side) — the main Great Russell Street entrance always has a queue. Go directly to Room 4: the Rosetta Stone, the single most important object in the history of language, stands in a glass case looking deceptively small. Then Rooms 62-63: the Egyptian death and afterlife galleries, mummies with wrappings still intact after 3,000 years. Finally Room 18: the Parthenon Marbles, carved for the Acropolis in Athens — controversial, breathtaking, unmissable. These three stops alone justify the visit.
Tip: Trying to see everything guarantees you'll enjoy nothing. These three rooms are 90 minutes of world-class focus. With extra time, add Room 40 (medieval Lewis Chessmen) and Room 2a (the Enlightenment Gallery — the museum's original 1827 reading room with floor-to-ceiling curiosities). Enter before 10:30 to beat the school groups.
Open in Google Maps →Noble Rot
FoodWalk south from the museum 8 minutes through Bloomsbury's quiet Georgian squares — Lamb's Conduit Street is one of London's most charming local streets, lined with independent bookshops and tailors. Noble Rot is a wine bar and restaurant in a narrow Georgian townhouse. The food is seasonal British with French technique: crispy pig's cheek with lentils (£16), grilled lamb rump with anchovy butter (£28), and one of London's best natural wine lists. This is the one proper reservation restaurant of the trip — it seats 40 people and fills every service. Budget £35-45 per person.
Tip: Book online at least 3 days ahead. Ask for a glass of something 'unusual' and let the staff choose — they're wine nerds who live for this. That's when this place truly shines. The lunch set menu is not always listed online but often available — ask when booking.
Open in Google Maps →Covent Garden & Neal's Yard
NeighborhoodWalk south 12 minutes from Noble Rot through Bloomsbury into Covent Garden. The old market building has free world-class street performers — opera singers on the balcony, magicians in the lower courtyard. Spend 20 minutes watching, then duck north into Neal's Yard: a hidden courtyard of buildings painted every colour imaginable, with natural cosmetics shops and tiny cafés. Continue to Seven Dials, a junction of seven streets with independent boutiques. This is London's best free afternoon — colourful, theatrical, full of surprises around every corner.
Tip: Neal's Yard is tiny and easy to miss — enter from the narrow alley off Shorts Gardens (between the wholefood shop and the pub). Most photogenic between 15:00-16:00 when the sun clears the rooftops and lights up the painted walls.
Open in Google Maps →Flat Iron
FoodWalk 3 minutes from Seven Dials to Henrietta Street. Flat Iron is famous for exactly one thing: a perfect flat iron steak for £14. Charred, pink in the middle, served on a wooden board with a cleaver stuck in it. Creamed spinach (£4.50) on the side. A glass of Malbec (£7). In and out in 45 minutes — full, happy, and with time and budget left for the theatre. No reservations, queue moves fast. Budget £18-25 per person.
Tip: The mini cleaver they give you to cut the steak is yours to keep — it's their signature. Skip dessert (forgettable). This Henrietta Street branch is the original and best; avoid the Drury Lane location (worse atmosphere).
Open in Google Maps →West End Theatre Show
EntertainmentWalk 5 minutes to the theatre district around Shaftesbury Avenue. The West End is one of only two places on Earth — the other is Broadway — with this density of world-class live theatre. Long-running productions always include several genuine masterpieces. Book at official theatre websites, never from ticket touts on Leicester Square who sell fakes at inflated prices.
Tip: The TKTS booth at Leicester Square (the one with the clock tower) sells same-day discounted tickets at up to 50% off — opens 10:00, best selection goes fast. Upper Circle seats in most theatres have better sightlines than expensive stalls — and cost half the price. Avoid everything on Leicester Square itself: fake tickets, scam restaurants, and tourist trap shops.
Open in Google Maps →The Other London — Graffiti, Spice, and the Rebel East End
Shoreditch Street Art Walking Tour
NeighborhoodTake the Overground to Shoreditch High Street. This is London's open-air gallery — Banksy, ROA, Stik, and dozens of artists paint these walls, and the art changes constantly. Start at Great Eastern Street and work south: duck into Rivington Street for a Banksy original, through the car park on Great Eastern Street where massive murals rotate monthly, down Fashion Street, and into Brick Lane. Every alley hides something. This is one of those experiences that only works on foot, in this city, at street level — a genuine deep-walk experience you cannot replicate anywhere else.
Tip: The best murals are in alleys, not on main streets — follow any narrow lane that looks like a dead end. If you want a guided experience, Alternative London runs excellent free (tip-based) street art tours departing at 11:00 from Old Spitalfields Market — their guides are actual street artists.
Open in Google Maps →Dishoom Shoreditch
FoodYour street art walk ends at Brick Lane; walk 5 minutes north to Boundary Street. Dishoom recreates the Irani cafés of 1960s Bombay — ceiling fans, marble tables, sepia photographs. It is possibly the most loved restaurant in London. The black daal, simmered for 24 hours (£8.90), is the dish that made them famous. The bacon naan roll (£9.50) is the best brunch item in the city. The lamb biryani (£16.90) arrives in a sealed pot they crack open at the table. Arrive by 12:45 — by 13:15 there's always a queue. Budget £18-25 per person.
Tip: Order the house chai (£4) — it arrives in a proper steel tumbler and is better than anything you'll find in most of India. This Shoreditch branch is their biggest with the shortest queues. Avoid the King's Cross branch entirely (tourist overflow, 90-minute waits).
Open in Google Maps →Brick Lane & Old Spitalfields Market
NeighborhoodWalk 5 minutes south from Dishoom back into Brick Lane. This is London's most layered neighbourhood: Huguenot silk weavers in the 17th century, Jewish immigrants in the 19th, Bangladeshi community from the 1970s — each wave left its mark on the architecture, food, and street signs (you'll see Bengali, Hebrew, and English on the same buildings). Browse vintage shops in the Old Truman Brewery complex, then walk west to Old Spitalfields Market for independent designers and crafts. This afternoon is free-form — wander at your own pace, duck into whatever catches your eye.
Tip: The Brick Lane curry houses with touts standing outside dragging you in are tourist traps — mediocre food, inflated prices. The real Bangladeshi food is at Tayyabs on Fieldgate Street (10 min south, cash only, legendary dry lamb chops £4.90) or Graam Bangla (no fuss, huge portions). Don't be lured by the 'free poppadom and drink' offers.
Open in Google Maps →Gunpowder
FoodFrom Old Spitalfields Market, walk 2 minutes south to White's Row. Gunpowder is a tiny 28-seat Indian restaurant serving family recipes from the owners' home kitchens in Kolkata and Hyderabad. Nothing on this menu exists in any other Indian restaurant in London. The spiced venison doughnut (£9) and Kashmiri lamb chops (£14) are extraordinary. Share 4-5 dishes between two — it's designed for sharing. Budget £28-35 per person.
Tip: Book ahead — 28 seats fill instantly. Request a table by the open kitchen window if available; you'll watch the chefs work at arm's length. This is the kind of restaurant that makes you rethink what 'Indian food' means.
Open in Google Maps →The Quiet Farewell — A Last Afternoon in the Gardens and a Pint Goodbye
Victoria and Albert Museum
MuseumTake the Tube to South Kensington (Piccadilly line, 3 stops from Green Park). The tunnel exit leads directly into the museum — zero queue. The V&A is the world's greatest museum of decorative arts and far less crowded than the British Museum. Start with the Cast Courts (Room 46): two enormous halls of full-scale plaster casts of Europe's greatest sculptures, including Trajan's Column split in two and Michelangelo's David. Then the Raphael Cartoons (Room 48a): seven massive tapestry designs painted by Raphael in 1515. End with the Jewellery Gallery (Rooms 91-93) on the top floor.
Tip: The V&A Café in the original Morris, Gamble & Poynter rooms is itself a work of art — Victorian tilework, stained glass, painted ceilings. Even if you don't eat, walk through it. It's the oldest museum restaurant in the world, opened 1868.
Open in Google Maps →Comptoir Libanais
FoodWalk out of the V&A's Cromwell Road exit, turn right, and stroll 5 minutes to Exhibition Road. This bright, cheerful Lebanese café is the perfect light lunch on your last day. The mezze sharing plate (£14.90) with hummus, falafel, tabbouleh and warm flatbread is enough for one. The lamb shawarma wrap (£11.50) is the other move. Fresh mint lemonade (£4.50) to drink. In and out in 40 minutes, leaving the entire afternoon free.
Tip: Sit outside if sunny — Exhibition Road is pedestrianised and the outdoor tables face the V&A's grand façade. The lunch deal (not always on the board — ask at the counter) is around £12 for a main plus drink.
Open in Google Maps →Kensington Gardens & Hyde Park
ParkWalk 10 minutes north through South Kensington's quiet residential streets into Kensington Gardens. Pass Kensington Palace — Princess Diana's former home — and the sunken garden planted in her memory. Follow the Long Water east: you'll find the Peter Pan statue (J.M. Barrie had it installed overnight in 1912 — Londoners woke up to discover it there). Cross the Serpentine into Hyde Park. Find a deckchair by the water and sit. This is how Londoners actually use the park — doing absolutely nothing. On your last afternoon, you've earned this.
Tip: Deckchairs are £1.80/hour (pay the attendant who wanders past). The Serpentine Lido is open May-September for a cold swim if you're brave. Sunset from the Serpentine's west shore is unexpectedly stunning — if your flight is tomorrow morning, stay for golden hour.
Open in Google Maps →The Churchill Arms
FoodWalk 12 minutes west from Kensington Palace through quiet residential Kensington to Kensington Church Street. The Churchill Arms is London's most photographed pub — the entire exterior is buried under flowers and hanging baskets (the landlord plants 90 window boxes twice a year). But it's not just a photo op: the back of the pub hides a tiny, authentic Thai kitchen that's been serving some of London's best and cheapest Thai food since 1989. Pad thai (£10.90), green curry (£11.50), and a pint of Fuller's London Pride (£6.20). Your farewell dinner in a pub that sums up everything London is: eccentric, layered, and impossible to predict.
Tip: The Thai kitchen is first-come-first-served — arrive at 18:45 for immediate seating; by 19:30 there's a 20-minute wait. Eat in the conservatory at the back (where the Thai food is served), not the front pub room. Photograph the flower-covered exterior before going in — it's spectacular in any season and makes the perfect last London photo.
Open in Google Maps →The First Heartbeat — London as You've Always Imagined It
Westminster Abbey
ReligiousStep out of Westminster Station and Big Ben towers over you—but don't stop yet. Walk straight to the Abbey's north entrance; doors open at 9:30 and you'll be among the first inside the nave where every English monarch since 1066 has been crowned. The Poets' Corner alone is worth the visit—Darwin, Dickens, Newton, all resting under one roof.
Tip: Enter through the north door, head straight to Poets' Corner in the south transept first—it's shoulder-to-shoulder by 11:00. The 700-year-old Coronation Chair is easy to walk past; look for it near the shrine of Edward the Confessor.
Open in Google Maps →Churchill War Rooms
MuseumWalk 5 minutes north through Parliament Square, past the Churchill statue himself scowling at Parliament. Descend underground into the nerve centre where Churchill directed Britain's war effort. The Map Room is frozen in time—pins still in the maps, phones still on the desks, exactly as the day the war ended.
Tip: Book tickets online in advance—walk-in queues reach 45 minutes by midday. The audio guide is included and genuinely excellent; the Churchill Museum section alone takes 40 minutes.
Open in Google Maps →Inn the Park
FoodWalk 5 minutes west into St James's Park to this glass-fronted restaurant nestled among the trees, designed by Hopkins Architects. The terrace overlooks the lake where pelicans strut past your table. Order the seasonal British pie (£16) or the fish and chips (£18). Pelican feeding happens at 14:30 right outside—time your coffee for the show.
Tip: Grab a terrace table facing the lake—first come, first served. If the restaurant is full, the café counter does excellent sandwiches for half the price. This is one of the only restaurants actually inside a Royal Park.
Open in Google Maps →St James's Park & Buckingham Palace
ParkFrom the restaurant, walk west along the lake to the Blue Bridge in the centre of the park—London's best-kept photo secret: Buckingham Palace framed by willows to the west, Horse Guards and the Foreign Office skyline to the east. Continue to the palace; the sheer scale up close is something photos never capture. The afternoon sun lights up the Victoria Memorial perfectly.
Tip: The Blue Bridge faces west—afternoon sun backlights the palace into a perfect silhouette. Skip the Changing of the Guard unless you're there by 10:30; the crowd makes it unwatchable. Instead, see the mounted guards at Horse Guards Parade (5 min east)—equally impressive, a tenth of the crowd.
Open in Google Maps →Humanity's Attic and a Night in the West End
British Museum
MuseumThe world's attic, and it's free. Norman Foster's glass-roofed Great Court alone justifies the visit. With three hours, be strategic: the Rosetta Stone (Room 4), the Parthenon Marbles (Room 18), and the Egyptian mummies (Rooms 62-63 upstairs). Go upstairs first—the mummy galleries are the most popular but the upper floor empties out by 11:00.
Tip: Enter from the Montague Place entrance at the back—almost nobody uses it, while the Great Russell Street entrance has a 20-minute queue by 10:00. The museum has 8 million objects; don't try to see them all.
Open in Google Maps →Roti King
FoodWalk 10 minutes north from the museum's back exit through quiet Bloomsbury streets to this cult-favourite Malaysian canteen near Euston station. The roti canai (£5.50) is London's best—flaky, buttery, with dhal on the side. Add a laksa (£9.50) if you're hungry. Fluorescent lights, shared tables, no frills—every seat is worth the queue.
Tip: Arrive by 12:30 to beat the Euston office-worker rush. Queue moves fast—15 minutes max. Get the roti canai with dhal, not curry—trust the regulars.
Open in Google Maps →Covent Garden & Neal's Yard
NeighborhoodTake the tube one stop from Euston Square to Holborn, then walk 10 minutes south to Covent Garden. The old market hall has world-class street performers—stay for one act. Duck into Neal's Yard, a hidden courtyard painted in every colour, best shot from the entrance looking in. Seven Dials, a minute's walk away, is where the interesting shops are—far better than Oxford Street.
Tip: Neal's Yard is most photogenic before 15:00 when sunlight hits the painted walls. For dinner before tonight's show, Flat Iron in Covent Garden does an excellent steak for just £12—queue at 17:30 for a quick pre-theatre meal. No reservation needed.
Open in Google Maps →West End Musical
EntertainmentThe West End is to London what Broadway is to New York—but the theatres are more intimate and the tickets friendlier. Les Misérables at the Sondheim Theatre and Wicked at the Apollo Victoria are long-running spectacles that transcend language. From Covent Garden, every major theatre is within a 5-minute walk.
Tip: Stalls rows E–K are the sweet spot: close enough for faces, far enough for the full stage picture. The TKTS booth in Leicester Square sells same-day discounted tickets from 10:00, but booking online 2-3 days ahead usually gets better seats at similar prices. Shows start at 19:30 sharp—be seated by 19:15.
Open in Google Maps →Tower Shadows and Riverside Soul
Tower of London
LandmarkA thousand years of power, betrayal, and execution in one fortress. Arrive right at 09:00 opening and head straight for the Crown Jewels—by 10:30 the queue stretches to 45 minutes. The Yeoman Warder tours (free with admission) leave every 30 minutes and are genuinely hilarious—dark British humour about beheadings. The White Tower in the centre has a stunning royal armour collection.
Tip: Crown Jewels FIRST, then join the next Yeoman Warder tour. Book online to save £5 and skip the ticket queue. Opening is 09:00 Tuesday–Saturday; Sunday–Monday opens at 10:00—plan accordingly.
Open in Google Maps →Borough Market
FoodWalk onto Tower Bridge—cross slowly, the views east and west along the Thames are extraordinary. On the south side, follow the river path west for 15 minutes past HMS Belfast to Borough Market. London's oldest food market, a thousand years running. Get a Kappacasein cheese toastie (£7) or a Mei Mei's roast duck wrap (£10). Eat standing up, surrounded by the roar of the market.
Tip: Closed Sundays. Skip the paella stalls near the entrance—tourist trap, overpriced. The best stalls are in the covered section at the back. Bread Ahead doughnuts (£4.50) are London's finest—grab one for dessert.
Open in Google Maps →Tate Modern
MuseumWalk west along the riverside for 10 minutes—you'll pass Shakespeare's Globe on your right, worth a photo stop. Tate Modern inhabits a former power station; the vast Turbine Hall alone justifies the visit. Head to Level 4 for the permanent collection: Rothko, Warhol, Picasso, Dalí. The viewing platform on Level 10 offers a free panoramic view of St Paul's Cathedral and the Thames.
Tip: Go to Level 10 first—it closes 30 minutes before the museum. The Rothko room on Level 4 is deliberately dim; sit for 5 minutes and let it work. Skip paid exhibitions unless you've checked reviews—quality varies.
Open in Google Maps →South Bank Riverside Walk
NeighborhoodStep out of Tate Modern and cross the Millennium Bridge—the steel blade that wobbles in Harry Potter. St Paul's Cathedral fills your view ahead. Double back to the south bank and walk west: past the National Theatre, the second-hand bookstalls sheltering under Waterloo Bridge, Gabriel's Wharf, all the way to the London Eye glowing in the evening light. This stretch of the Thames is where London feels most alive.
Tip: The bookstalls under Waterloo Bridge are open daily—real finds for £1-3. Don't pay for overpriced cocktails at OXO Tower; grab a pint at the Founders Arms pub (£6.50) for the same St Paul's view. The 'charity clipboard' people along the South Bank are legitimate but pushy—a polite 'no thank you' is fine.
Open in Google Maps →Kensington Elegance to Portobello Bohemia
Victoria and Albert Museum
MuseumThe world's greatest museum of art and design, and it's free. The new Exhibition Road entrance leads into the serene Sackler Courtyard. Focus on three things: the Cast Courts (Room 46—full-size replicas of Trajan's Column and Michelangelo's David towering two storeys), the Raphael Cartoons (Room 48—seven monumental tapestry designs commissioned by the Pope), and the V&A Café in the original Victorian refreshment rooms—the most beautiful museum café in the world.
Tip: Use the Exhibition Road entrance (not Cromwell Road)—shorter queue and you land in the courtyard. The Cast Courts are often empty yet are the most jaw-dropping rooms in the building. Have coffee in the original Morris, Gamble & Poynter rooms—the tiled walls alone are an exhibit.
Open in Google Maps →Launceston Place
FoodWalk 10 minutes west through quiet Kensington residential streets—white stucco townhouses, wrought-iron balconies, diplomats' Range Rovers. Launceston Place is a Michelin-starred neighbourhood restaurant in a Victorian townhouse. The set lunch (2 courses £35, 3 courses £45) changes seasonally: expect Dorset crab with heritage tomato, or Suffolk lamb with wild garlic. This is your fine dining moment—intimate, unhurried, the kind of meal you'll remember.
Tip: Book 2-3 days ahead for lunch. Ask for a window table. The wine pairing adds £30; the house white by the glass (£9) is perfectly fine. If fully booked, Kitchen W8 across the street is the Michelin-quality backup.
Open in Google Maps →Hyde Park & Kensington Gardens
ParkWalk 5 minutes north and enter Kensington Gardens through the south gate. The Albert Memorial is absurdly ornate—gold glittering in the afternoon sun. Pass the Serpentine Gallery (free, always a provocative show) and cross into Hyde Park at the Long Water. Afternoon light filtering through ancient oaks is the closest London gets to an English countryside painting. Head northwest toward the Bayswater edge of the park.
Tip: The Peter Pan statue by the Long Water is a quiet photo spot most tourists miss. The Serpentine Gallery is always free and changes exhibitions regularly—check what's showing. Notting Hill is a 10-minute walk from the park's northwest exit.
Open in Google Maps →Notting Hill & Portobello Road
NeighborhoodExit Hyde Park at Queensway and walk north into Notting Hill. Portobello Road is lined with antique shops, vintage boutiques, and independent bookshops even on weekdays. The pastel-painted houses on Lancaster Road and Denbigh Terrace are the ones from every Instagram post you've seen. Walk the full length—the vibe shifts from antiques at the south end to street food and vintage at the north.
Tip: The full antiques market is Saturday only, but permanent shops are open daily and blissfully uncrowded on weekdays. Most-photographed houses: Denbigh Terrace and Lancaster Road. For dinner, Cocotte on Westbourne Grove does superb rotisserie chicken (£14). Skip the overpriced antique stalls right at the Notting Hill Gate end—the real finds are further north.
Open in Google Maps →The City of Dreaming Spires — 800 Years of Stone and Light
Bodleian Library & Radcliffe Camera
LandmarkTake the 08:01 GWR train from London Paddington—buy an off-peak return in advance at gwr.com for £25-30. Arrive Oxford by 09:00 and walk 15 minutes east into the old city. The Radcliffe Camera—a perfect circle in honey-coloured stone—is Oxford's most photographed building. Book a 60-minute Bodleian Library tour (£10) to see the medieval Duke Humfrey's Library, the real-life Hogwarts library.
Tip: Book the Bodleian tour at bodleian.ox.ac.uk at least 3 days ahead—they sell out. Best photo of the Radcliffe Camera: stand in the gap between the Bodleian and the Church of St Mary the Virgin, shooting south. GWR trains run every 15-30 minutes; no need to stress about a specific departure.
Open in Google Maps →Christ Church College
LandmarkWalk 5 minutes south down St Aldate's Street. Christ Church is Oxford's grandest college—the Great Hall directly inspired the Hogwarts dining hall, and you'll recognise it instantly. The cloisters, the Tom Tower gatehouse, and England's smallest cathedral are all included. Lewis Carroll taught mathematics here and based Alice in Wonderland on the dean's daughter; look for the Alice door in the garden.
Tip: The Great Hall closes some days 11:45-14:00 for student dining—check christchurch.ox.ac.uk before you go. Enter through the Meadow Gate from the south to skip the main entrance queue. Don't miss the tiny cathedral inside—the Becket window is stunning.
Open in Google Maps →Oxford Covered Market
FoodWalk 5 minutes north back up St Aldate's to this covered arcade that has fed Oxford since 1774. Grab a pie at Pieminister (steak & ale, £6.50) or a falafel wrap at Sasi's (£7). For dessert, Ben's Cookies started right here—the chocolate chunk cookie (£2.50) is legendary. Find a bench, eat slowly, and watch Oxford flow past.
Tip: Closed Sundays. Alpha Bar has the best fresh juices. The market gets quiet after 14:00—good light for photos of the Victorian ironwork ceiling.
Open in Google Maps →Bridge of Sighs & Ashmolean Museum
MuseumWalk north through the market to New College Lane—Hertford Bridge (the 'Bridge of Sighs') spans the lane overhead, a miniature Venice in Oxford stone. Continue 5 minutes west to the Ashmolean Museum, the world's oldest public museum (1683). The Egyptian galleries rival the British Museum's, and it's free and uncrowded. Aim for a return train around 17:00—Oxford station is a 15-minute walk west.
Tip: Return trains to Paddington run every 15-30 minutes until late evening—no need to rush. If you have spare time, the rooftop restaurant terrace has a view over the Bodleian's spires. University Parks (5 min north) is the locals' favourite green escape.
Open in Google Maps →The Gentlest Goodbye — A Hidden Masterpiece and an Afternoon Cup
The Wallace Collection
MuseumA 5-minute walk from Bond Street Station, this 18th-century mansion houses one of the world's finest art collections—and almost no one comes. Hertford House feels like walking into an aristocrat's private home: Fragonard's 'The Swing' in a rose-silk drawing room, a world-class armoury filling the ground floor, Frans Hals' 'The Laughing Cavalier' greeting you on the staircase. Free, quiet, magnificent.
Tip: The Great Gallery on the first floor has the masterpieces—don't get swallowed by the ground floor armoury (though it's magnificent). 'The Laughing Cavalier' isn't actually laughing—look at his mouth. The courtyard café does excellent coffee and pastries.
Open in Google Maps →Afternoon Tea at Sketch
FoodWalk 5 minutes south through Mayfair's elegant back streets to Sketch on Conduit Street. The Gallery room—entirely pink, walls covered in David Shrigley's witty line drawings—is one of London's most photographed interiors. The afternoon tea (from £59) includes finger sandwiches, warm scones with clotted cream and strawberry jam, and a tower of pastries. This is not just tea—it's a London institution, an art installation, and your farewell feast.
Tip: Book at sketch.london at least a week ahead—walk-ins are impossible. Request a table in the Gallery (the pink room), not the Parlour or Glade. Don't miss the bathrooms—individual egg-shaped pods, an attraction in themselves. Go easy on the sandwiches; save room for the scones, the real star.
Open in Google Maps →Burlington Arcade & Bond Street
ShoppingWalk 3 minutes south to Burlington Arcade, a Regency-era covered passage from 1819, still patrolled by top-hatted Beadles enforcing rules against singing, running, and opening umbrellas. Chanel, Manolo Blahnik, and master perfumers in boutiques smaller than your bedroom. Continue onto Old Bond Street—window-shop past Cartier, Asprey, and the heritage jewellers.
Tip: Penhaligon's at the south end of Burlington Arcade offers free fragrance consultations—a memorable souvenir made of scent. Closes at 19:00. On Bond Street, even if you're not buying, Cartier's flagship and Asprey's craftsmanship displays are worth stepping into.
Open in Google Maps →Liberty London & Carnaby Street
ShoppingWalk 5 minutes north through Savile Row—the birthplace of bespoke tailoring—to Liberty London on Great Marlborough Street. This mock-Tudor building, made from the timbers of two old warships, is as much an attraction as its contents. The third-floor Liberty-print fabrics and haberdashery are unique souvenirs. Step outside to Carnaby Street for a final stroll. Your London story began by the Thames six days ago—it ends here, in the streets where the city feels most alive.
Tip: Best photo of Liberty: the corner of Great Marlborough Street and Kingly Street, the timber frame fills the shot. Skip the ground floor (standard luxury brands) and head straight to the third floor for Liberty-print fabrics—the only souvenir unique to London. Oxford Circus and Piccadilly Circus stations are both 5 minutes away—easy Piccadilly Line to Heathrow or connections to any rail terminal.
Open in Google Maps →The London That Takes Your Breath Away
Westminster Abbey
ReligiousArrive right at opening when the nave is nearly empty and morning light streams through the rose window. This is where every British monarch since 1066 has been crowned — stand on the Coronation Chair spot and feel 960 years of history beneath your feet. The Poets' Corner alone is worth the visit: Chaucer, Dickens, Hardy, all within arm's reach.
Tip: Enter from the North Door (main entrance on Broad Sanctuary). Skip the audio guide — the free vergers' talks every 30 min are far better, they tell stories not in any guidebook.
Open in Google Maps →Houses of Parliament & Big Ben
LandmarkStep out of the Abbey and Big Ben is right there — literally 50 metres away across the road. Walk to Westminster Bridge for the classic postcard angle: Big Ben on the left, the Thames stretching ahead, the London Eye on the right. Mid-morning light hits the clock tower perfectly from the east.
Tip: Stand at the south end of Westminster Bridge (the side closer to the Abbey) for the best photo composition. The north end gets crowded with tour groups. Don't bother queuing for the London Eye — £36 for 30 minutes in a glass pod is London's most overpriced tourist trap.
Open in Google Maps →The Cinnamon Club
FoodWalk south along Abingdon Street, 5 minutes into the quiet backstreets of Westminster. This restaurant is inside the Old Westminster Library — a stunning Victorian building with book-lined walls. It serves elevated Indian cuisine that Parliament members eat at daily. Order the Tandoori Monkfish (£28) or the Old Delhi Butter Chicken (£22). The set lunch menu is £28 for two courses, extraordinary value for this level of cooking.
Tip: Book the set lunch online 2-3 days ahead — it fills with civil servants by 12:30. Ask for a table in the main library room, not the extension.
Open in Google Maps →St James's Park & Buckingham Palace
ParkFrom the restaurant, walk north through the back streets past the Supreme Court, 10 minutes into St James's Park — London's most beautiful royal park. The lake in the centre frames Buckingham Palace perfectly from the Blue Bridge. Afternoon light is behind you, ideal for photos of the Palace. Walk slowly through the park to the Palace gates. The Changing of the Guard happens at 11:00 on alternate days, but in the afternoon the forecourt is empty and you can get right up to the gilded gates without any crowd.
Tip: The pelicans on the lake get fed daily at 14:30 — the park staff toss fish near Duck Island, it's a delightful unscripted London moment. Stand on the Blue Bridge facing west for the Palace-framed-by-willows shot.
Open in Google Maps →Ten Thousand Years in One Morning — Then the River at Golden Hour
British Museum
MuseumThe museum opens at 10:00 but arrive at 09:30 to be in the first wave through the Great Court. Go directly to Room 4 for the Rosetta Stone before the crowds form. Then Room 18 for the Parthenon Marbles — stand at the far end facing back for the full gallery perspective. Room 33 for Chinese ceramics and jade will feel personal. The Egyptian galleries (Rooms 62-63) upstairs are best saved for last — most tour groups start there and leave by 11:30.
Tip: Enter from the Montague Place entrance at the back — the Great Russell Street front entrance always has a longer queue. The museum suggests £5 donation but it's genuinely free.
Open in Google Maps →Noble Rot
FoodExit from the museum's south gate and walk 5 minutes down Lamb's Conduit Street — one of Bloomsbury's loveliest pedestrian-friendly lanes, lined with independent shops. Noble Rot is a wine bar and restaurant beloved by London's food writers. The cooking is rustic French-British with perfect wine pairings. Try the Dorset Crab on Toast (£16) or the Duck Leg with Puy Lentils (£24). The wine list is legendary — ask for a glass of something unusual by the sommelier's pick, around £9-14.
Tip: Walk-ins only for lunch — no reservations. Arrive by 13:15 to get a table. Sit at the bar if tables are full; you'll get the same menu and better chat with the staff.
Open in Google Maps →Tower Bridge
LandmarkTake the Piccadilly Line from Holborn to Tower Hill (15 minutes). Emerge from the station and the Tower of London's stone walls are directly ahead — walk past them along the river path towards Tower Bridge. Late afternoon light from the west illuminates the bridge's blue-and-white towers beautifully. Walk across the bridge and take the glass-floor walkway at the top — looking straight down at the Thames 42 metres below is genuinely thrilling.
Tip: The best photo angle of Tower Bridge is NOT from the bridge itself — it's from the south bank, on the Queen's Walk near City Hall. Cross the bridge, turn left, walk 3 minutes, then look back.
Open in Google Maps →José Tapas Bar
FoodFrom Tower Bridge's south side, walk west along the river for 15 minutes through Shad Thames — this narrow cobblestoned lane between old warehouses is one of London's most atmospheric streets, you'll feel like you stepped into a film set. Continue to Bermondsey Street where José awaits — a tiny, standing-room tapas bar that's been called London's best. The Jamon Ibérico de Bellota (£14) is carved to order. The Gambas al Ajillo (£11) arrives sizzling. The Padron Peppers (£6) are perfect with a glass of Manzanilla sherry (£5). Budget around £30-40 per person.
Tip: No reservations, first come first served. Arrive at 18:45 to beat the after-work rush. It's standing only and tiny — this is part of the charm. If there's a queue, José's sister restaurant Pizarro is 3 doors down and also excellent, with actual seats.
Open in Google Maps →The Other Side of London — Markets, Street Art, and the East End's Soul
Columbia Road Flower Market
ShoppingSunday only. This narrow Victorian street erupts into a riot of colour and scent every Sunday morning. Arrive at 09:00 — by 10:30 it's shoulder-to-shoulder. The vendors' cockney calls are half the show. Even if you don't buy flowers, the surrounding shops open their doors only on Sundays: vintage ceramics, artisan perfume, handmade chocolates. The light through the canopy of blooms is magical for photos.
Tip: Come from the Ravenscroft Street end (east) — the west end gets jammed first. If you want to buy flowers to brighten your hotel room, prices drop by 30-50% after 13:00 as vendors want to clear stock, but variety is best early.
Open in Google Maps →Brick Lane & Shoreditch Street Art
NeighborhoodWalk south from Columbia Road for 10 minutes — you'll pass through Ezra Street with its tiny antique shops, then cut through the backstreets where some of London's best street art covers every surface. Brick Lane itself is a sensory overload: Bangladeshi curry houses, vintage shops, vinyl record stores, and the smell of freshly baked beigels drifting from the 24-hour bakeries. This is London's most culturally layered street — Huguenot, Jewish, Bangladeshi, hipster, all stacked on top of each other.
Tip: The two 24-hour beigel shops at the north end of Brick Lane are legendary. Beigel Bake (the yellow one at No.159) has the better salt beef beigel (£5.50) — don't be put off by the queue, it moves fast. Ignore the curry restaurant touts on the street — the food in those places is mediocre.
Open in Google Maps →Smokestak
FoodFrom Brick Lane walk 3 minutes west to Shoreditch High Street. Smokestak is London's best barbecue — an industrial-chic space where brisket hangs in a huge custom smoker visible from your table. The 35-Day Aged Beef Brisket (£16) is smoky, tender, and life-changing. Add the Burnt Ends with Pickled Chilli (£10) and the Smoked Bone Marrow (£9). This isn't American BBQ — it's something uniquely London.
Tip: Weekend lunch is walk-in only. Arrive right at 12:00 opening for no wait. By 13:00 there's a 20-minute queue. Sit at the bar counter facing the smoker — the best seats in the house.
Open in Google Maps →Victoria Park
ParkTake the Overground from Shoreditch High Street one stop to Cambridge Heath (5 minutes), then walk 8 minutes east into Victoria Park — East London's beloved green lung. This is not a tourist park; this is where East Londoners actually live their lives: joggers, dog walkers, families picnicking, friends playing football. Find a bench by the boating lake, buy a flat white from Pavilion Café on the water's edge, and just sit. Late afternoon sun over the lake is golden.
Tip: The Pavilion Café (lakeside, east end of the park) does the best flat white in East London (£3.50). On warm days, the Chinese Pagoda area near the west boating lake is the prettiest spot to sit.
Open in Google Maps →Where Britain Keeps Its Masterpieces — South Kensington's Quiet Grandeur
Victoria and Albert Museum
MuseumThe V&A opens at 10:00; arrive at 09:30 to enter through the quieter Exhibition Road entrance on the east side. This is the world's greatest museum of decorative arts — fashion, jewellery, sculpture, textiles, ceramics spanning 5,000 years. The Cast Courts (Rooms 46a-46b) are staggering: full-size plaster copies of Trajan's Column and Michelangelo's David crammed into a Victorian glass hall. The Jewellery Gallery (Rooms 91-93) on the top floor is uncrowded and breathtaking. End in the John Madejski Garden courtyard — the most beautiful hidden courtyard in London.
Tip: The V&A Café in the original refreshment rooms (Morris, Gamble, and Poynter Rooms) is the most beautiful museum café in the world — ornate Victorian tiled walls, stained glass, columns. Have a coffee here even if you're not hungry. It's free to enter.
Open in Google Maps →Tendril
FoodExit the V&A from the Cromwell Road entrance and walk 8 minutes south down Pelham Street, past pretty pastel townhouses into the quiet residential streets behind South Kensington station. Tendril is a plant-based fine dining restaurant that will change how you think about vegetables. The 5-course set lunch (£38) is extraordinary — dishes like Celeriac with Truffle and Hazelnut or Beetroot with Black Garlic are plated like art. Even committed carnivores leave converted.
Tip: Book 3-4 days ahead for weekend lunch. Ask for the wine pairing (£32) — it's curated by one of London's best sommeliers and worth every penny.
Open in Google Maps →Hyde Park & Kensington Gardens
ParkWalk north from the restaurant for 10 minutes through quiet residential crescents to reach Hyde Park at the south end near the Albert Memorial — a wildly ornate golden monument to Queen Victoria's husband that most tourists walk right past. Enter Kensington Gardens and stroll north along the Long Water. Find the Peter Pan Statue — it was placed here secretly overnight in 1912, and children still come to rub its bronze toes for good luck. Continue to the Italian Gardens at the north end, then find a deckchair by the Serpentine and do nothing until golden hour.
Tip: Deckchairs by the Serpentine cost £2/hour — cash or card. The best golden hour spot is the bench facing east from the Italian Gardens, where the setting sun lights up the water and the city skyline beyond.
Open in Google Maps →Launceston Place
FoodWalk south from the park for 12 minutes down Kensington Church Street, past antique shops, then turn onto this quiet mews-like street. Launceston Place is a Michelin-starred neighbourhood restaurant in a beautiful Victorian townhouse — exactly the kind of intimate, serious dining that Kensington does best. The Seasonal Tasting Menu (£85) is 6 courses of modern British brilliance. The Cornish Turbot and the Yorkshire Grouse (in season) are signature dishes. The wine list focuses on small European producers.
Tip: Book 5-7 days ahead. Request the ground floor table by the window — evening light fills the room beautifully. The 3-course set menu (£55) is available on weekday evenings and is the best fine dining deal in Kensington.
Open in Google Maps →Out of the City — A Day the Countryside Wrote for You
Cotswolds Day Trip — Bourton-on-the-Water, Bibury & Stow-on-the-Wold
LandmarkTake the 08:28 GWR train from London Paddington to Moreton-in-Marsh (1h30, around £25-40 return with advance booking). From Moreton, take the Pulhams bus 801 to Bourton-on-the-Water (20 min, £3). Start here — the River Windrush runs through the village centre under low stone bridges, and in morning light the honey-coloured Cotswold stone glows warm amber. Walk along the river, cross the miniature model village, and absorb the impossibly pretty English countryside. Then bus or taxi to Bibury (20 min) — Arlington Row's medieval weavers' cottages are the most photographed houses in England.
Tip: Book train tickets 2-3 weeks ahead on GWR.com for the cheapest advance fares. At Bourton, the Motor Museum and Model Village are tourist traps — skip them and just walk along the river. At Bibury, photograph Arlington Row from the footpath across the stream, not from the road — the reflection doubles the beauty.
Open in Google Maps →The Wheatsheaf Inn, Northleach
FoodFrom Bibury, take a 10-minute taxi north to the quiet market town of Northleach. The Wheatsheaf Inn is a coaching inn turned gastropub with rooms — stone floors, open fire, and food that takes Cotswolds ingredients seriously. The Longhorn Beef Burger (£18) with hand-cut chips is the best pub burger in the region. The Pan-Fried Trout with Samphire (£22) uses fish from local streams. A pint of local ale is £6. This is the countryside lunch you came for.
Tip: No need to book for lunch — it's a pub, just walk in. Sit in the garden if the weather's good. Ask for whatever guest ale they have on cask — it changes weekly and is always from a Cotswolds brewery.
Open in Google Maps →Stow-on-the-Wold
NeighborhoodTaxi or bus 20 minutes north to Stow-on-the-Wold — the highest town in the Cotswolds. The Market Square is surrounded by antique shops, and the narrow alleyways (called 'tures') between buildings were originally designed to funnel sheep to market. St Edward's Church has a famous yew-tree-framed door that looks like a portal to Middle-earth. In the afternoon the town empties of day-trippers and you can wander the antique shops and tea rooms in peace. Catch the bus back to Moreton-in-Marsh for the train home.
Tip: The last direct train from Moreton-in-Marsh to Paddington is around 20:30 — check GWR timetable for the day. The 17:30 or 18:30 services are comfortable options. Don't try to drive the Cotswolds yourself — the narrow lanes, left-hand driving, and limited parking make it stressful.
Open in Google Maps →The Wolseley
FoodBack in London, take the Bakerloo Line from Paddington to Piccadilly Circus (15 minutes) and walk 3 minutes to The Wolseley on Piccadilly. This grand European café-restaurant in a 1920s car showroom is where London goes for a civilised late dinner. The Wiener Schnitzel (£29) is enormous and perfectly executed. The Steak Tartare (£19) is prepared tableside. The room — all arched ceilings, marble pillars, and warm lighting — makes you feel like you're in a Wes Anderson film.
Tip: Book ahead — even at 20:00 it fills up. Ask for a table in the main salon, not the side room. The late-night menu (after 22:00) offers smaller dishes if you just want something light after the train.
Open in Google Maps →The River Knows All the Stories — A Day Along the Thames
Tate Modern
MuseumStart at this converted power station on the South Bank — the Turbine Hall alone is worth the trip. The building's raw industrial scale makes even massive artworks feel intimate. Head to Level 4 for the permanent collection highlights: Rothko, Warhol, Dalí, Giacometti. The Blavatnik Building's viewing platform on Level 10 gives a free panoramic view of the city — St Paul's Cathedral is directly across the river, perfectly framed.
Tip: Enter from the river entrance (north side) for the dramatic Turbine Hall descent. Skip the expensive special exhibitions — the free permanent collection is world-class. The Level 10 viewing platform closes 30 min before the museum; go early to avoid missing it.
Open in Google Maps →Borough Market
FoodWalk east along the Thames Path from Tate Modern for 15 minutes — you'll pass the Globe Theatre (Shakespeare's reconstructed playhouse), cross under Southwark Bridge with its green-and-gold ironwork, and the medieval mass of Southwark Cathedral appears ahead. Borough Market is right beside it. This 1,000-year-old market is London's greatest food hall. Don't sit in a restaurant — graze from the stalls. Kappacasein's Raclette (£8) — melted Swiss cheese scraped onto potatoes. Bread Ahead's Doughnuts (£4.50). Brindisa's Chorizo Roll (£7). Neal's Yard Dairy for world-class British cheese.
Tip: Weekday lunchtimes (Tue-Fri) are the best time — local office workers eat here and the quality stalls are open without weekend tourist crush. Saturday is heaving. Monday most stalls are closed. Kappacasein's raclette queue looks long but moves fast — 10 min max.
Open in Google Maps →South Bank Walk to Westminster
NeighborhoodFrom Borough Market, walk west along the South Bank — this is London's finest urban walk and you should take it slowly. Pass the BFI Southbank cinema, the skateboarders under the Brutalist concrete of the Southbank Centre, the second-hand book stalls under Waterloo Bridge (open daily in any weather), the National Theatre's terraces where Londoners sit with coffee. The views across the river shift with every bend — Parliament, the Embankment, Cleopatra's Needle. Find a bench, or settle into one of the free Southbank Centre deckchairs, and watch the river.
Tip: The second-hand book stalls under Waterloo Bridge are a London institution since the 1980s — perfect for finding a vintage Penguin paperback to read in the park. Prices are fair, £3-8 for most books. This stretch of the South Bank is also the best place to see Big Ben lit up at dusk.
Open in Google Maps →Brat
FoodTake the Northern Line from Waterloo to Old Street (15 minutes). Walk 5 minutes east to Brat on Redchurch Street — a Michelin-starred restaurant built around a wood-fired grill on the top floor of a Shoreditch pub. Everything is cooked over fire. The Whole Turbot for Two (£80, to share) is the signature — a whole flatfish grilled to crispy-skinned perfection, served with nothing but a lemon. The Grilled Bread with Smoked Butter (£5) is extraordinary. Basque-inspired, brutally simple, unforgettable.
Tip: Book 2-3 weeks ahead — this is one of London's hardest reservations. If you can't get a table upstairs, the ground floor bar serves a shorter menu with the same kitchen, no booking needed. The Turbot is for two — order it confidently, it's the reason this restaurant exists.
Open in Google Maps →One Last Morning — The London You'll Miss
Notting Hill & Portobello Road Market
ShoppingTake the Central Line to Notting Hill Gate and walk north down Pembridge Road to Portobello Road. In the early morning the antique dealers at the south end are just setting up — this is when the serious collectors come, and you can browse without the midday chaos. The pastel-painted Victorian houses along the street are impossibly photogenic. Walk the full length of the market: antiques give way to fruit and veg stalls, then vintage clothing, then street food under the Westway flyover. The transition tells the story of London's layers.
Tip: Saturday is the main market day with everything open. Other days have fewer stalls but antique shops on the south end are open daily except Sunday. The best photo spot is at the junction of Portobello Road and Lancaster Road — the colourful houses curve gently uphill with the market stalls below.
Open in Google Maps →Farm Girl Café
FoodWalk 3 minutes south down Portobello Road and turn right onto Westbourne Grove. Farm Girl is a light-filled café where Notting Hill locals actually have brunch — Australians and New Zealanders opened it, so the coffee is genuinely excellent (flat whites, not filter). The Açaí Bowl (£12) is generous and beautiful. The Avocado Toast with Dukkah and Poached Eggs (£14) is the benchmark version. The Rose Latte (£5.50) is Instagram-famous but also genuinely delicious.
Tip: Go on a weekday to avoid the weekend brunch queue (30-40 min on Saturday). The back garden terrace is the best seating — warm, quiet, and sunny. They also do excellent takeaway if you want to eat in the park nearby.
Open in Google Maps →Kensington Palace & Gardens
LandmarkWalk east through Notting Hill for 12 minutes, past the quiet residential squares with private garden squares behind iron railings — this is where Hugh Grant ran through the seasons in that film. Enter Kensington Gardens from the west and approach the Palace. This is where Princess Diana lived, and the Sunken Garden in front was redesigned as a memorial to her — it's stunning in any season. Tour the King's State Apartments for the painted ceilings and the modest rooms where Queen Victoria was born. Then find a bench in the Orangery garden and sit with the afternoon sun.
Tip: Buy tickets online to skip the queue. The Sunken Garden is free to view from the path even without a Palace ticket. The best time for photos is early afternoon when the sun is behind you facing the garden. Don't confuse the Orangery (now a restaurant) with the ticket entrance — the Palace entrance is around the east side.
Open in Google Maps →The River Café
FoodTake a taxi or Uber 20 minutes southwest to Hammersmith, to a quiet stretch of the Thames you'd never find as a tourist. The River Café is one of the most important restaurants in British food history — Ruth Rogers and Rose Gray trained a generation of chefs here (Jamie Oliver started as their dishwasher). The food is simply prepared Italian with perfect British ingredients. The Wood-Roasted Whole Sea Bass (market price, around £38) is definitive. The Chocolate Nemesis (£14) is the most famous chocolate cake in London. Sit on the riverside terrace as the sun sets over the Thames for your last London evening.
Tip: Book 1-2 weeks ahead. Request a terrace table — in summer, sunset over the river from this spot is one of London's most magical views. The Chocolate Nemesis is non-negotiable, even if you're full. This is your farewell to London — make it count.
Open in Google Maps →Plan this trip around London
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Frequently asked questions
How many days do you need in London?
Most travelers enjoy London in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.
What's the best time to visit London?
The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.
What's the daily budget for London?
A practical starting point is about €80 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.
What are the must-see attractions in London?
A good first shortlist for London includes Buckingham Palace, Palace of Westminster & Big Ben, St Paul's Cathedral.