UK Travel Guide: London, Edinburgh, Cotswolds & Where to Go in 2026
The UK’s blend of history, culture, and innovation offers diverse experiences. LocalsInsider travel guide covers authentic pubs, boutique hotels, and cultural hotspots across Britain.
The United Kingdom is the trip that needs more than London. London is, of course, one of the great cities of the world — Clare Smyth's three-Michelin-star Core in Notting Hill, Fergus Henderson's St. JOHN that influenced a generation, Mayfair's Connaught Bar consistently ranked World's Best Bar. But the UK opens up the further you get from the M25. Edinburgh is one of the most physically beautiful cities in Europe. The Cotswolds and Devon deliver the cottage fantasy. The Lake District is England's answer to the Alps — Wordsworth country, 214 Wainwright fells, weather that produced the Romantic poets.
Our UK coverage — 29 articles — runs from London neighborhood guides to country-wide trip planning, plus the casino and rewards content for visitors planning longer stays.
The travel personality: The Cultural Cosmopolitan
Quick facts
Live right now
Best time to visit
| Season | Why go |
|---|---|
| May–September | Pack for rain regardless of month — even sunny summer has surprises |
| April, October | Shoulder season — fewer tourists, often cheaper, weather still good |
| November–March (gloomier, but pub season) | Off-season — quiet, best deals, plan around weather |
Top cities to visit
Experiences you'll probably love
- Theatre in London's West End
- Edinburgh during the August Fringe Festival
- Sunday roast in a Cotswolds gastropub
- Walking the Pennine Way or West Highland Way
- Cornish coast paths and Cornish cream tea
Not many tourists know about…
- Margate — overlooked Kent coast revitalised by art scene
- The Yorkshire Dales for proper rural England
- Bath's hot springs and Georgian architecture
- Pembrokeshire coast in Wales — secret beaches
- Cambridge over Oxford for college punting
- The Isles of Scilly off Cornwall's tip
If you visit only once, make it this
England's most photographed wilderness — the Lake District has 16 lakes, the Wainwrights (214 fells classified by walking writer Alfred Wainwright), Wordsworth's Dove Cottage in Grasmere, and the kind of weather that produced the Romantic poets. Best walked September-October when the colors turn and the crowds thin.
Train from London Euston to Penrith (3 hours), then car. Base in Ambleside or Grasmere.
Where to walk & breathe
UNESCO-listed 300-acre living plant collection in southwest London — the Palm House and Temperate House are 19th-century iron-and-glass cathedrals, the Treetop Walkway runs 18m above the canopy, and Kew's seed bank holds 2.4 billion seeds. Stunning in any season.
Tube to Kew Gardens station. £18-23 entry depending on day. Allow half a day minimum.
Museums worth your time
Rosetta Stone, Elgin Marbles, Egyptian mummies — controversial holdings but the world's most comprehensive museum of human history. Free entry.
Visit website →Converted 1947 Bankside Power Station on the South Bank — Turbine Hall installations, Rothko, Warhol, the rooftop with views across the Thames to St Paul's. Free permanent collection.
Visit website →Architect Sir John Soane's preserved 1837 house — sarcophagus of Seti I in the basement, Hogarth's Rake's Progress paintings, every surface covered in art and antiquities. London's most idiosyncratic museum.
Visit website →The Insider's Edit
The UK had an extraordinary year on the world's rankings — additions worth noting:
The Art Deco Mayfair grande dame.
With Hélène Darroze (three Michelin stars) and the city's best bar — Connaught Bar.
The Old War Office converted to a hotel.
Maybourne's all-suite Knightsbridge property.
A 2026 opening at The Whiteley — Six Senses' UK debut.
A working Georgian estate with cider press, cyclamen garden, and Roman Villa replica.
Soane's own house preserved unchanged since 1837 — pair with Tate Modern for one blockbuster, one tiny perfect collection.
Where to eat
Three Michelin stars (the only female chef in the UK with three). The 'Potato and Roe' dish is the signature — refined British cuisine via Northern Irish roots. World's 50 Best #12.
Fergus Henderson's nose-to-tail British institution since 1994 — bone marrow on toast, roasted bone marrow, the Eccles cake with Lancashire. The restaurant that influenced an entire generation of chefs.
Pierre Gagnaire's three-Michelin-star restaurant inside artist David Shrigley's pink-hued former Christian Dior townhouse. The pink Gallery dining room is one of the most photographed in London.
Brazilian chef Rafael Cagali's two-Michelin-star tasting menu in Bethnal Green — opened 2019, expanded 2024. Brazilian-Italian fusion built around heritage ingredients. East London's most ambitious dining room.
Where to stay
Maybourne Hotels' Mayfair flagship — Hélène Darroze's Michelin-starred restaurant, the Connaught Bar (consistently ranked World's Best Bar by 50 Best Bars), Tadao Ando-designed water feature in the courtyard.
Art Deco grande dame since 1898 — Foyer & Reading Room afternoon tea, Davies and Brook restaurant, the famously discrete service. Where royalty actually stays in London.
Opened 2021 in the former Bow Street Magistrates' Court — vaulted Atrium restaurant with year-round palms, original courtroom decor, Sydney Pollack-y design. Side Hustle bar is Covent Garden's coolest hidden spot.
Country house hotel in Devon — Elizabethan manor, the 'kitchen garden restaurant' uses only ingredients from within 25 miles, lakeside walks. One of 9 Pig properties; this one's the most grand.
Realistic daily budget
Per person, per day. Excludes flights. Peak season can run 20-40% higher.
Travel safety & inclusivity
Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.
Major festivals
Need a visa for United Kingdom?
Most travelers need an eVisa or travel authorization to enter United Kingdom. Apply online in minutes through our trusted partner:
Apply for your United Kingdom eVisa →Powered by evisas.com · We'll open your nationality-specific requirements page in a new tab.
Partner link — Locals Insider may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. Always confirm the latest requirements with the official embassy.
Not sure if United Kingdom is right for your next trip? We'll compare 53 destinations against your travel style. Take our country matcher quiz →
Frequently asked questions about United Kingdom
Do I need an ETA to visit the UK?
Since 25 February 2026, almost all visa-free visitors to the UK — including citizens of the US, Canada, Australia, Japan, the EU, and around 50 other countries — must obtain an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) before boarding. It costs £20, is valid for two years and multiple entries, allows stays up to six months per visit, and is digitally linked to your passport. Apply via the official UK ETA app — most applications are approved automatically within minutes, but allow at least three working days in case of review. British and Irish citizens are exempt. The UK is not in the Schengen Area, so a Schengen visa does NOT cover travel here. Final entry is still decided by a Border Force officer at arrival.
Is London worth the money, or should I base myself elsewhere?
London is one of the world's great cities and probably the most expensive in Europe — but for a first UK trip, it's still the right base. It has over 70 Michelin-starred restaurants, world-leading museums (almost all free), and excellent transit. Plan four full days minimum. Where to stay matters more than which hotel: South Bank or Bloomsbury for first-timers, Shoreditch or King's Cross for repeat visitors. If you have more than a week, base in London for the first half and then move — Edinburgh (3 hours by train) for Scotland's most beautiful city, Bath or York for compact historical depth, or the Cotswolds for countryside. Train travel here is excellent if you book 6–8 weeks ahead; walk-up fares are punishing.
Where's the best place in the UK for whisky?
The Isle of Islay, off Scotland's west coast — eight working distilleries on a single island, each with a distinct character. Laphroaig, Lagavulin, and Ardbeg cluster on the south coast for the most aggressively peated whiskies; Bowmore and Bunnahabhain are gentler. A long weekend gives you three or four distillery tours. The Speyside region in northeast Scotland is the alternative — more distilleries (over 50), softer whiskies, and the famous Speyside Way walking trail connecting them. Base in Aberlour or Dufftown. Most distillery tours need to be booked 2–4 weeks ahead in peak summer. If you're flying in: Glasgow for Islay (then ferry from Kennacraig or fly to Islay airport), Aberdeen or Inverness for Speyside.
When is the best time to visit the UK?
Late May to early September is the safe answer — temperatures 18–24°C, long evenings (sunset past 9pm in June), gardens at their best, festivals everywhere (Edinburgh's in August, Glastonbury in late June, Wimbledon in July). It's also the most expensive and crowded period. April, October, and the Christmas market season in late November–December are the shoulder sweet spots — fewer crowds, lower prices, atmospheric grey light. Winter (January–February) is bleak weather-wise but unbeatable for theatre, museums, and pubs by a fire. Wherever you go, pack for rain in any season — "there's no such thing as bad weather, only inappropriate clothing" is essentially British policy. Booked-in-advance train fares are massively cheaper than walk-up.
Do I need to tip in the UK?
Tipping in the UK is appreciated but never aggressive — and far gentler than the US. Restaurants: 10–12.5% is standard; check whether a "service charge" is already on the bill (common in London) — if so, no extra tip needed. Pubs: No tip if you're buying drinks at the bar; 10% if you have table service for food. Taxis and rideshares: Round up to the nearest pound, or 10% for longer journeys. Hotels: A couple of pounds for housekeeping if you choose to; £1–2 for porters. Hairdressers, tour guides: 10% if you were happy. Coffee shops, takeaways, and counter service — no tipping expected. UK staff are paid at least minimum wage by law, so tips are genuine appreciation rather than a substitute salary.
Locals Insider's Articles About United Kingdom
Articles in this section are written by Locals Insider editorial team. Want to share your experience about United Kingdom? Email us at hello@localsinsider.com.






















