Welcome to
London
United Kingdom
London is one of the world's great cities — a place that has reinvented itself across two millennia while never losing its sense of history and ceremony. You can walk from the Tower of London to Tate Modern in under an hour, passing pubs, market stalls, and world-class architecture along the way. What makes London special is its diversity: it is simultaneously a royal capital, a global financial centre, a street food paradise, and a hub of music and fashion that consistently shapes global culture.
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29 places

Borough Market
London's oldest food market, still feeding the city after 1,000 years.

British Museum
Eight million objects, two million years of human history, one building in Bloomsbury.

Buckingham Palace
The working royal residence that lets you peek behind the gates.

Camden Market
London's most anarchic market, where counterculture meets serious street food.

Churchill War Rooms
Churchill's underground command centre, preserved exactly as the war left it.

Covent Garden
London's most theatrical public square, where street performers meet market halls.

Greenwich
Where Earth's timekeeping begins, on a hill above the Thames.

Hampton Court Palace
Henry VIII's riverside palace, with the maze, gardens, and six centuries of royal intrigue intact.

Hyde Park
350 acres of royal parkland at the heart of one of the world's busiest cities.

Kensington Palace
A working royal palace with 300 years of history open to the public.

Kew Gardens
300 acres of living science, history, and extraordinary botanical beauty just outside London.

London Eye
A slow-spinning giant wheel with some of the best views in London.

National Gallery
Seven centuries of Western art, free to enter, right on Trafalgar Square.

Natural History Museum
A cathedral-like Victorian building packed with 80 million natural specimens.

Notting Hill
London's most photogenic neighbourhood, built around a legendary Saturday market.

Portobello Road Market
A mile-long street market where serious antiques meet Saturday chaos and great street food.

Regent's Park
London's grandest royal park, with roses, open water, and a zoo thrown in.

Shakespeare's Globe Theatre
A living reconstruction of Shakespeare's original 1599 open-air theatre on the Thames.

Shoreditch
East London's creative heartland, where street art meets late-night energy.

Sketch London
London's most theatrical restaurant, where the dining room is the spectacle.

Sky Garden
A glass-domed sky garden atop one of London's most recognisable skyscrapers, free to enter.

St Paul's Cathedral
Wren's masterpiece dome defines London's skyline and its soul.

Tate Modern
A former power station turned home to the world's most radical modern art.

The Shard
London's tallest building delivers a 360-degree view over the entire city.

Tower Bridge
Victorian engineering marvel with glass walkways 42 metres above the Thames.

Tower of London
Nine centuries of royal power, imprisonment, and execution in one riverside fortress.

Trafalgar Square
London's civic heartbeat: lions, Nelson's Column, and constant human drama.

V&A Museum
Three hundred years of human creativity packed into one extraordinary South Kensington building.

Westminster Abbey
A thousand years of British history buried beneath one extraordinary Gothic roof.
Why should you go to London
What other travelers have to say, based on real reviews.
