London Travel Planning & Itineraries
The most international capital in Europe. 9 million people, 300+ languages, and a city that somehow blends medieval Westminster with a skyline of glass towers without either feeling fake. Endless museums, theatre at every level, green parks bigger than most cities, and neighbourhoods so distinct they feel like different countries. Expensive and complicated — rewarding if you give it a week.
Our AI planner helps you pace your London days, pick the right neighbourhoods, and build a route that makes sense.

Planning Your London Trip
Best Time to Visit
May-June and September-October are the sweet spots — mild temperatures, long daylight, parks in bloom. July-August are warm and touristy. December is magical for lights and Christmas markets but cold and dark (4pm sunsets). Rain is possible any month — a light jacket year-round is non-negotiable.
Budget Overview
Budget: $110-150 USD/day (hostel or budget hotel in zone 2-3, pub lunch GBP12-16, Oyster card on tube). London is one of the most expensive cities on Earth; there is no cheap London. Mid-range: $280-450 USD/day (4-star in zones 1-2, gastropub dinners, 2-3 theatre or museum activities, black cabs occasionally). Luxury: $900+ USD/day (Claridge's, The Savoy, The Connaught, Michelin dinners, private driver).
Getting There
Fly into Heathrow (LHR) for most long-haul or Gatwick (LGW), Stansted (STN), Luton (LTN), or London City (LCY) for Europe. From YYZ, LHR is 7 hours direct on Air Canada or British Airways. Heathrow to central London: Heathrow Express (15 min, GBP25), Elizabeth Line (30 min, GBP12), or Piccadilly Line tube (50 min, GBP5.50). Avoid London Luton and Stansted if you're arriving late — they're 1-1.5 hours from central London.
Getting Around
Contactless tap-in, tap-out on the Tube, buses, and Overground — no need for an Oyster card; just use your credit card or phone. Daily fare cap is ~GBP8.50. Walking between Covent Garden, Soho, and Westminster is faster than the tube for short hops. Black cabs are pricey but iconic; Uber/Bolt are cheaper. Skip the hop-on bus tours — the #11 bus from Victoria does the same route for GBP1.75.
Common London planning mistakes
Buying the Oyster card
You dont need one — contactless credit cards and Apple Pay work identically with the same daily cap. Oyster cards are a relic.
Eating in Leicester Square
The restaurants around Leicester Square and Piccadilly are tourist traps. Walk 5 minutes to Soho for proper food.
Ignoring the free museums
The British Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, V&A, and Natural History Museum are all free. Most tourists only do one.
Not booking theatre tickets ahead
Use todaytix or the TKTS booth in Leicester Square for same-day discounts, but West End hits are often sold out weeks in advance.
London Neighbourhoods
Covent Garden / Soho
The theatre district with restaurants, shopping, and West End shows. Central and walkable to everything tourist-focused. Lively day and night. Best for: first-timers, theatre lovers.
South Bank
Riverfront with the Tate Modern, Shakespeare's Globe, the London Eye, and National Theatre. Museum-dense and walkable. Best for: families, culture seekers.
Notting Hill
Elegant residential neighbourhood with pastel houses, Portobello Market, and the rom-com aesthetic. Quieter and more residential. Best for: couples, repeat visitors.
Shoreditch
East London's hip creative hub. Street art, craft cocktail bars, vintage shops, the best coffee scene. Best for: younger travelers, foodies.
Mayfair
The luxury district with the fanciest hotels, private clubs, Bond Street shopping. Quiet after business hours. Best for: luxury travelers, repeat visitors.
Kensington
Elegant museum district with the V&A, Natural History, and Science Museum. Close to Hyde Park. Best for: families, museum lovers.
London Food & Drink
Dishoom
Every location has a 90-minute queue for dinner. Bacon naan and black daal are mandatory. Breakfast bookings possible — go at 8am.
St. John
Smithfield original. Nose-to-tail cooking, bone marrow + parsley salad. Book 2-3 weeks ahead.
Padella
Borough Market. No reservations, 30-60 min queue. GBP9-13 pasta, pici cacio e pepe is mandatory.
Brat
Shoreditch. Tomos Parrys whole turbot over coals. 1 Michelin, among UK best.
Gymkhana
Mayfair. Game biryani, suckling pig vindaloo. Lunch menu is the value move.
Borough Market
Best market in London. Bread Ahead doughnuts, Kappacasein raclette toastie, Monmouth coffee. Go Thursday mornings.
Nightjar
Shoreditch. Prohibition-era drinks, live jazz, dress smart. Book ahead.
Day Trips from London
Oxford
60 min by trainColleges, Radcliffe Camera, Christ Church (Harry Potter hall). 60 min by train. Combine with the Cotswolds.
Windsor Castle
30 min by trainRoyal residence, still used by the family. Half-day trip. Combine with Eton or Stonehenge.
Brighton
60 min by trainSeaside town with the Royal Pavilion, Lanes antique district, and a quirky beach. Full day.
Stonehenge + Bath
90 min to BathFull-day tour. Stonehenge is small but iconic; Bath is a gorgeous Georgian town with Roman baths. Combine via tour bus.
Ready to build your London days?
Tell us your dates, pace, and interests — we’ll draft a day-by-day London itinerary in under a minute.
A Sample London Itinerary
Here’s a flavour of what our AI planner builds. Generate your own personalized London itinerary in 60 seconds.
Arrive + Westminster Classics
- •Heathrow → Piccadilly Line
- •Big Ben + Westminster Abbey
- •Churchill War Rooms
- •Pub dinner at The Harp (covent garden)
British Museum + Soho + West End
- •British Museum (free, 2-3 hours)
- •Lunch at Dishoom Covent Garden
- •Soho walk + Neals Yard
- •West End show + late-night at Nightjar
Tower + Borough Market + Shoreditch
- •Tower of London + Crown Jewels
- •Borough Market lunch crawl
- •Shoreditch street art walk
- •Dinner at Brat (Basque grill)
Notting Hill + Kensington
- •Portobello Road Market (Saturday)
- •V&A Museum or Natural History Museum
- •Hyde Park + Kensington Palace
- •Afternoon tea at Claridges or Fortnum & Mason
London Travel Guides
Everything you need to plan London like a local — curated hotels, restaurant picks, neighbourhood maps, and hidden gems. Instant PDF download.
London Travel FAQ
How many days do I need in London?
Five to seven days minimum for first-timers. Three days only hits the absolute icons. London's scale is closer to New York than Paris — each neighbourhood could fill a day. Add more days if you want West End shows, Camden Market, day trips to Oxford or Bath.
How do I do the Tube?
Get a contactless card (Visa or Mastercard debit/credit) — tap in and out at every Tube station, bus, and train. The daily cap means you can't overspend. Download Citymapper — it's dramatically better than Google Maps for London transit.
Are the museums really free?
Yes — the British Museum, National Gallery, V&A, Natural History, Science Museum, Tate Modern, Tate Britain are all free entry for permanent collections. Special exhibitions are ticketed (£15-25). You could do a week of serious museum-hopping for zero entry cost.
Is London safe?
Yes, very safe for a major city. Pickpockets on the Tube and in Oxford Street crowds are the main risk. Avoid empty night buses alone. The usual rule: keep phones in inside pockets, don't put bags on the back of chairs at restaurants, and don't wave a wallet on the street.
Should I do a day trip?
Yes — Bath, Oxford, or Windsor are all 60-90 minutes by train and worth a day. Skip the organized bus tours to Stonehenge plus Bath plus Windsor (too much driving). Pick one, go by train, return by dinner.
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