London Travel Guide: Where to Stay, Eat, and What's New for 2026

Locals Insider · United Kingdom

London is the UK capital that, despite being one of the world's most-visited cities, still rewards detailed planning more than most — 270 Tube stations across 32 boroughs, eight of the world's top-50 museums (all free), the densest pub-and-curry-house scene in Europe, and the most concentrated Michelin-and-pop-up dining culture outside Tokyo. The historic City of London and Westminster anchor the heritage; Shoreditch, Soho, and Notting Hill provide the cultural-creative neighbourhoods; and the post-2012-Olympics East End regeneration has properly arrived.

This guide is built for first-timers but stays useful on the third trip. We've started with where to base yourself — the neighborhood you pick changes the city you experience — and worked through the hotels, restaurants and museums we actually send our own friends to. There are six restaurants with three Michelin stars, eighty more with one or two, and the boutique hotels scene most cities would call a lifetime's worth.

London London travel guide

Quick facts

Population 8.9M (Greater London 9.5M)
Language English
Currency GBP (£)
Time zone GMT (UTC+0)
Famous for: Theaters, museums (most are free), royal pageantry, world-class dining, Sunday roasts, the world's busiest financial center.
Fun fact: London has 8.9 million residents speaking around 300 languages — making it possibly the most linguistically diverse city in human history.

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Where to base yourself

First-time visitor? Pick a neighborhood that matches your vibe and stay there.

Mayfair

The Old-Money London

Georgian townhouses, private members' clubs, the most concentrated luxury shopping in Europe. Walk Berkeley Square at dusk and you'll understand why this is the postcode.

Best for: First-timers who want the icons within walking distance, anyone treating themselves

Feels like: An invitation-only city above the public one

Soho

The Late-Night London

The theater district at its rowdiest — small bars, late-license restaurants, jazz cellars from 1959 still going. Stays awake when the rest of the city falls asleep.

Best for: Couples wanting the energy, anyone for whom dinner ends after midnight

Feels like: A neighborhood that's been Soho for 150 years and hasn't apologized for it

Covent Garden

The First-Timer's London

The market piazza, the Royal Opera House, street performers, and the most walkable base for hitting the National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, and the West End theaters without ever needing the Tube.

Best for: First-time visitors, families, anyone who wants to walk everywhere

Feels like: Central in the way New York's Midtown is central — useful, busy, never quiet

Notting Hill

The Postcard London

The pastel terraces of Portobello Road, Saturday's vintage market, the residential Mews tucked behind. Smaller than its film reputation; quieter than Mayfair.

Best for: Couples on a second trip, anyone seeking the prettiest streets

Feels like: Sunday-morning London with a coffee from a corner deli

Shoreditch

The Creative London

Brick Lane, vintage shops, street art that gets replaced weekly, and London's most concentrated young restaurant scene. Where the city's creative work happens.

Best for: Younger travelers, anyone interested in design, food obsessives

Feels like: Brooklyn before it was Brooklyn, still moving

South Kensington

The Museums London

Three of London's biggest museums (V&A, Natural History, Science) within 200 meters of each other, surrounded by the Edwardian streets of Brompton and Knightsbridge.

Best for: Families, anyone wanting culture without the crowds of central

Feels like: Civilized London — stately, walkable, slightly slower

Marylebone

The Quietly-Perfect London

A village-y central neighborhood with the Wallace Collection, Marylebone High Street's independent shops, and the Sunday farmers' market. Most central neighborhood that doesn't feel central.

Best for: Second-time visitors, design lovers, anyone who's tired of crowds

Feels like: The London that Londoners actually live in — but central

The Insider's Edit

Three picks London regulars send their friends to — curated from Tatler 2026, the World's 50 Best lists, and verified hospitality reporting.

Claridge's

#16 World's 50 Best Hotels 2025; the Art Deco Mayfair grand dame.

The Connaught

#29 World's 50 Best; Hélène Darroze (three Michelin stars) and the Connaught Bar.

Henry's Townhouse

On Tatler's 2026 list; an intimate Marylebone townhouse hotel.

Where to stay

Luxury
Claridge's
Brook Street, Mayfair, London W1K 4HR

The Art Deco Mayfair grand dame. #16 on World's 50 Best Hotels 2025 and arguably the single most photographed hotel lobby in Britain. Where royalty, prime ministers and the Roosevelts have stayed since 1856. The Foyer for afternoon tea is the experience even non-guests book months ahead.

“London at its most theatrical.”

£900-2,500 / night Book →
Luxury
The Connaught
Carlos Place, Mayfair, London W1K 2AL

#29 on World's 50 Best Hotels 2025. Hélène Darroze's three-Michelin-star restaurant is here, and the Connaught Bar is regularly ranked the best in the world. The flagship of the Maybourne Group — quieter than Claridge's, but no less serious.

“Reservations needed weeks ahead just for the bar.”

£850-2,200 / night Book →
New 2026
Raffles London at The OWO
57 Whitehall, London SW1A 2BX

The Old War Office — the building Churchill ran World War II from — converted to a hotel in 2023. #31 on World's 50 Best Hotels 2025 (new entry). Houses Mauro Colagreco's three-Michelin-star restaurant.

“Possibly the most spectacular hotel opening in London this century.”

£1,000-3,000 / night Book →
New 2026
The Emory
Old Barrack Yard, Knightsbridge, London SW1X 7NP

Maybourne's all-suite Knightsbridge property — sister to The Connaught and Claridge's. #32 on World's 50 Best Hotels 2025 (new entry). 60 suites only, designed by Rémi Tessier and André Fu among others.

“Most exclusive new-build hotel in London right now.”

£1,500-4,000 / night Book →
New 2026
Six Senses London at The Whiteley
Queensway, Bayswater, London W2 4YN

Six Senses' UK debut, opening 2026 in the restored Whiteley building — London's first department store, dating from 1911. A vast spa, residential-feeling suites, and the wellness-first ethos that made Six Senses famous in Asia.

“The most anticipated London opening of the year.”

£700-1,800 / night Book →
Historical boutique
Henry's Townhouse
6 Upper Berkeley Street, Marylebone, London W1H 7PE

On Tatler's 2026 list of the 101 Best Hotels in the World. An intimate Marylebone townhouse hotel — once the home of Jane Austen's brother Henry — restored as a 9-bedroom private members'-feel hotel.

“The kind of place where the keys are handed to you with your name.”

£600-1,400 / night Book →
Historical boutique
The Rookery
Peters Lane, Cowcross Street, Clerkenwell, London EC1M 6DS

33 individually decorated rooms in a Georgian building near Smithfield. Four-poster beds, antiques, velvet armchairs, working fireplaces.

“We featured it in our boutique hotels round-up — peaceful corner near the Barbican, but a short walk to St Paul's.”

£280-450 / night Book →
Historical boutique
Hazlitt's
6 Frith Street, Soho, London W1D 3JA

30 rooms across a series of 1718 Georgian houses, named for essayist William Hazlitt who died here. Antiques, original artworks, period features. Right in the middle of Soho but somehow quiet.

“A favorite of writers — guests have included Bill Bryson and JK Rowling.”

£260-420 / night Book →
Design
The Ned
27 Poultry, City of London, London EC2R 8AJ

Soho House Group's transformation of Sir Edwin Lutyens' 1924 Midland Bank building. Nine restaurants, a rooftop pool, and a members' club downstairs.

“The lobby alone is worth visiting — a vast banking hall now full of live jazz and dinner.”

£300-700 / night Book →
Design
Hotel Café Royal
68 Regent Street, Piccadilly, London W1B 4DY

The 1865 Café Royal — Oscar Wilde's haunt — reborn as a David Chipperfield-restored hotel. Houses Alex Dilling's two-Michelin-starred restaurant.

“Among London's most under-rated luxury hotels.”

£500-1,400 / night Book →
Boutique
The Hoxton, Shoreditch
81 Great Eastern Street, Shoreditch, London EC2A 3HU

The original Hoxton — the boutique-hotel chain that defined design-friendly mid-priced city stays. Buzzy lobby, Hoxton Grill restaurant, a properly Shoreditch crowd.

“Great value for what feels like a much pricier hotel.”

£180-330 / night Book →
Aparthotel
Citizen M Tower of London
40 Trinity Square, London EC3N 4DJ

Tech-forward, design-savvy, compact rooms with everything that matters and nothing that doesn't. Lounge feels like a startup HQ.

“Across from the Tower of London — best-value central stay we recommend.”

£150-280 / night Book →

Where to eat

Michelin
Restaurant Gordon Ramsay
68 Royal Hospital Road, Chelsea, London SW3 4HP

Gordon Ramsay's flagship — three Michelin stars since 2001, the oldest three-star in London. Run now by chef Kim Ratcharoen after Matt Abé's departure to launch Bonheur.

“Refined French cuisine, the gastronomic anchor of Chelsea.”

£200-280 tasting menu Reserve →
Michelin
Hélène Darroze at The Connaught
Carlos Place, Mayfair, London W1K 2AL

Three Michelin stars. Hélène Darroze's southwestern-French cooking inside The Connaught — emotional, seasonal, deeply rooted in her family of restaurateurs in Landes.

“Among the most consistently praised tasting menus in Europe.”

£180-260 tasting menu Reserve →
New 2026
Bonheur by Matt Abé
Mayfair, London

Two Michelin stars within months of opening in 2026. Matt Abé — chef de cuisine at Restaurant Gordon Ramsay for eight years — launched his own restaurant and earned his stars almost immediately.

“Modern French with elite-level finishing.”

£160-220 tasting menu Reserve →
Traditional
St. JOHN
26 St John Street, Smithfield, London EC1M 4AY

Fergus Henderson's nose-to-tail British cooking — the restaurant that invented modern British food in 1994. Roast bone marrow with parsley salad is the signature; the whole-pig dinners are legendary. White-tiled walls, no music, the most British room in London.

“Locals book lunch.”

£40-70 per person Reserve →

Where to have breakfast

Indian all-day
Permit Room
294 Portobello Road, Notting Hill, London W10 5TE

Dishoom's lighter, more bar-focused sister concept — 1970s post-prohibition Indian drinking-den aesthetic, breakfast served from 8am. We wrote a full review last year — the chef's bacon naan roll has become a weekend institution.

“There's a small B&B upstairs.”

Australian brunch
Granger & Co
175 Westbourne Grove, Notting Hill, London W11 2SB

The London outpost of the Sydney institution. Bill Granger brought ricotta hotcakes, scrambled eggs done properly, and the original Australian brunch template to Notting Hill in 2011.

“Queues at weekends — go on a Tuesday.”

Brunch
Caravan King's Cross
Granary Building, 1 Granary Square, King's Cross, London N1C 4AA

Brunch in the converted Granary Building behind Coal Drops Yard. Their own roasted coffee, properly cooked eggs, and a menu that pulls from everywhere — South Indian, Korean, Italian.

“Best when you can sit on the canal-side terrace.”

Farm-to-table
Daylesford Organic
208-212 Westbourne Grove, Notting Hill, London W11 2RH

The London outpost of the Gloucestershire organic farm. Sourdough, eggs from the farm, proper coffee.

“A Westbourne Grove institution for Saturday mornings — both shop and café in one building.”

Bakery
Pophams Bakery
197 Richmond Avenue, Islington, London N1 0LN

The cult bakery whose Marmite-and-cheddar croissant became internet-famous. Bacon-and-maple a close second.

“Sit-down with proper coffee or grab-and-go — the queue clears by 11am.”

Hidden bars and old-school spots

Cocktail
Connaught Bar
Carlos Place, Mayfair, London W1K 2AL

Repeatedly named World's Best Bar by World's 50 Best Bars (twice #1, multiple top-5 finishes). Agostino Perrone's martini trolley — wheeled to your table, flavoured with bespoke bitters from his collection — is the experience.

“Book ahead; jacket suggested.”

Classic
American Bar at The Savoy
Strand, London WC2R 0EU

The oldest surviving cocktail bar in Britain — opened 1893. The Savoy's bartender Ada Coleman invented the Hanky Panky here. Live jazz nightly.

“Refurbished in 2020 but the soul is intact.”

Modern cocktail
Tayer + Elementary
152 Old Street, Shoreditch, London EC1V 9BW

Two bars in one space: the casual Elementary at the front, the high-precision Tayer behind. Run by Monica Berg and Alex Kratena (both ex-Artesian).

“Among the world's most influential bars right now — World's 50 Best #5, 2024.”

Whisky
Milroy's of Soho
3 Greek Street, Soho, London W1D 4NX

Soho's whisky specialist since 1964 — over 700 whiskies in the upstairs shop, a hidden speakeasy (The Vault) accessed through the bookshelf downstairs.

“The original behind-the-bookshelf bar; everyone else copied them.”

Late-night cocktail
Sketch's East Bar
9 Conduit Street, Mayfair, London W1S 2XG

The pod-shaped East Bar inside the Sketch building — the bathroom pods alone are an Instagram pilgrimage. Late-license, eclectic crowd, properly mixed drinks.

“The whole Sketch building is worth a visit even if you don't eat there.”

Historic pub
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese
145 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2BU

Rebuilt in 1667 after the Great Fire. Charles Dickens drank here. Mark Twain too. Sawdust-floored, low-ceilinged, deeply atmospheric — and despite the tourists, still a proper London pub.

“Order the ale and ask for the cellar tour.”

Wine cellar
Gordon's Wine Bar
47 Villiers Street, Embankment, London WC2N 6NE

London's oldest wine bar — opened 1890, the cellars (literally below ground, candle-lit, walls dripping with damp) are unchanged. Cold meats, cheese boards, and a sherry list that goes back decades.

“The terrace upstairs catches summer evening light.”

Museums worth your time

The British Museum Encyclopedic
Great Russell Street, Bloomsbury, London WC1B 3DG

8 million objects spanning human history. The Rosetta Stone, the Parthenon Marbles, Egyptian mummies, Sutton Hoo treasure. Free entry. Pick three galleries and stop — anyone who tries to see it all leaves exhausted.

“Bloomsbury location, opposite Russell Square.”

Visit website →
Tate Modern Contemporary
Bankside, London SE1 9TG

The Turbine Hall — once a turbine room in the Bankside Power Station — is the most ambitious large-scale installation space in the world. Free permanent collection.

“The view from the Blavatnik Building's top floor across the Thames is the bonus.”

Visit website →
Sir John Soane's Museum Historic house
13 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3BP

Sir John Soane's own 1837 home, preserved unchanged at his bequest. A vertical labyrinth of Egyptian sarcophagi, paintings (the Hogarth Rake's Progress sequence), and architectural models. Quietly perfect; the most magical small museum in London.

“Free entry.”

Visit website →
Victoria and Albert Museum Decorative arts and design
Cromwell Road, South Kensington, London SW7 2RL

The world's leading museum of art, design and performance — 2.8 million objects across 4.5 miles of galleries. The Cast Courts (full-scale replicas of Trajan's Column and Michelangelo's David) are the surprise.

“Free permanent collection.”

Visit website →
The National Gallery Old Masters
Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN

Western European painting from the 1200s to 1900 — Van Gogh's Sunflowers, Velázquez's Rokeby Venus, Turner's Fighting Temeraire. Free entry.

“On Trafalgar Square, so easy to combine with the National Portrait Gallery next door.”

Visit website →
Wallace Collection Old Masters
Hertford House, Manchester Square, Marylebone, London W1U 3BN

Frans Hals' Laughing Cavalier, Fragonard's Swing, the finest Sèvres porcelain collection in the world — all in a Marylebone townhouse that still feels like a home. Free entry.

“Always quieter than the bigger museums and arguably better.”

Visit website →

Only-here places

Highgate Cemetery Historic
Swain's Lane, Highgate, London N6 6PJ

The Victorian Gothic cemetery where Karl Marx, George Eliot, and Douglas Adams are buried. The West Cemetery (Egyptian Avenue, Lebanon Circle) is the cinematic one — guided tours only.

“Atmospheric in a way no London park is.”

Visit website →
Leighton House Museum Artist's house
12 Holland Park Road, Holland Park, London W14 8LZ

Frederic Leighton's 1870s home — a Holland Park townhouse where the Arab Hall (Damascus tiles, gold mosaic, marble fountain, dome) feels like stepping into a Persian miniature. Recently restored.

“The most unexpected interior in London.”

Visit website →
Hampstead Heath Ponds Wild swimming
Hampstead, London NW3

Three open-air swimming ponds (Men's, Ladies', Mixed) on Hampstead Heath — Londoners swim outdoors year-round. Wooden changing huts, no chlorine, properly cold.

“Most Londoners discover them too late in their relationship with the city.”

Visit website →
Dennis Severs' House Immersive house
18 Folgate Street, Spitalfields, London E1 6BX

An 18th-century Spitalfields silk-weaver's house presented as a 'still-life drama' — visitors walk through in silence by candlelight, as if the occupants have just stepped out. Half art installation, half ghost story.

“Strictly limited admission.”

Visit website →
Borough Market Food market
8 Southwark Street, Borough, London SE1 1TL

London's oldest food market — operating in some form since 1014. Now a 100-stall covered market under the railway arches at London Bridge. Saturday is full chaos; Wednesday is sane.

“The crowd of food obsessives is the real attraction.”

Visit website →
Kew Gardens (Royal Botanic) Botanic gardens
Richmond, London TW9 3AE

121 hectares of plants — UNESCO World Heritage. The Palm House and Temperate House (the largest Victorian glasshouse in the world) are the showpieces. The Treetop Walkway is 18 meters above the ground.

“Easily a full day.”

Visit website →
Little Venice canal walk Waterside walk
Maida Vale, London W9

Walk the Regent's Canal from Little Venice through Regent's Park (with the zoo on your left) to Camden Lock — about 5km of canalside London most tourists never see. Narrowboats, houseboats, willows.

“Among the loveliest unscheduled walks in London.”

Visit website →

Tours & things to do in London

In partnership with GetYourGuide, Locals Insider recommends these tours and things to do in London.

Nature & quiet

Hyde Park Royal Park
London W2 2UH

350 acres in the middle of London. The Serpentine for boating and swimming (yes, in winter too — the Christmas Day Serpentine race is a thing). Speakers' Corner on Sunday mornings.

“Big enough to disappear in.”

Hampstead Heath Heath
Hampstead, London NW3

320 hectares of properly wild parkland on a hill in North London. The view from Parliament Hill across the city skyline is the iconic London view. Swimming ponds, woodland, summer fairs.

“Felt by Londoners as the city's most precious lung.”

Richmond Park Royal Park
Richmond, London TW10

London's largest park — 1,000 hectares with 600 wild deer roaming. Cycle the perimeter (12km), climb King Henry's Mound for the protected sight-line of St Paul's Cathedral 16km away.

“Closest thing to wilderness within London.”

Regent's Canal towpath Canal walk
London N1

13.8km of car-free walking from Little Venice to Limehouse — passes Regent's Park, Camden, King's Cross's Coal Drops Yard, Islington and Victoria Park.

“A way to walk across London without realizing how much you've covered.”

St James's Park Royal Park
London SW1A 2BJ

The oldest of London's Royal Parks (1532) — between Buckingham Palace and Horse Guards Parade. The pelicans (gifted in 1664 by the Russian Ambassador, still resident) are the surprise.

“Best in late spring when the lake is full of cygnets.”

City festivals

  • January
    London International Mime Festival

    Three weeks of visual theater, puppetry and movement-based performance across multiple venues. Since 1977.

  • May
    Chelsea Flower Show

    The RHS's flagship event in the Royal Hospital Chelsea grounds. Tickets sell out in minutes when released in autumn.

  • June-July
    Wimbledon Championships

    The oldest tennis tournament in the world — two weeks of grass-court tennis in SW19. The Queue is part of the institution.

  • August
    Notting Hill Carnival

    Europe's largest street carnival — 2 million people, Caribbean culture, sound systems, dancers. The August bank holiday weekend.

  • October
    London Film Festival

    The BFI's annual showcase — twelve days, three hundred films, major premieres and red-carpet events across the West End.

Travel safety & inclusivity

Safety index
8/10

Very safe by global standards. Pickpocketing is the main risk — common on the Tube and tourist areas. Mind your phone in crowded pubs and stations.

LGBTQ+ friendliness
9/10

London is one of the world's most LGBTQ+-friendly cities — full legal protections, robust scene in Soho and Vauxhall, Pride is a major civic event. Same-sex marriage legal since 2014.

Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.

Frequently asked about London

Where do locals eat in London?

Three picks across the spectrum of how Londoners actually eat.

For the iconic British institution: St. JOHN, at 26 St John Street, Clerkenwell, London EC1M 4AY. Fergus Henderson's nose-to-tail British restaurant since 1994 — bone marrow on toast with parsley salad, roast bone marrow, Welsh rarebit, Eccles cakes. The whitewashed former smokehouse interior is unchanged in three decades.

For the modern, hard-to-book hot table: The Devonshire, at 17 Denman Street, Soho, London W1D 7HW. The Oisín Rogers-Charlie Carroll-Ashley Palmer-Watts Soho pub-and-grill that's been the city's hardest reservation since opening in 2023 — slow-cooked beef, Guinness, a 28-day-aged steak from the upstairs grill, the upstairs dining room running at proper restaurant-grade.

For the affordable, no-reservation pasta hit: Padella, at 6 Southwark Street, Borough Market, London SE1 1TQ. Hand-rolled pasta, around £10-15 per plate, the most consistent queue in central London. Pici cacio e pepe is the order.

Where can I get the best seafood with champagne or sparkling wine in London?

For London seafood with a proper champagne and English sparkling-wine list, the reference is Bibendum Oyster Bar, on the ground floor of the iconic 1911 Michelin House at 81 Fulham Road, Chelsea, London SW3 6RD.

A pristine seafood-and-shellfish bar inside the original Art Nouveau Michelin tyre-fitting building, with a proper raw bar (oysters from Carlingford, Maldon, and Mersea), platters of crab and langoustines, plus a serious Champagne list and a growing English sparkling section (Nyetimber, Gusbourne, Hambledon). Walk-in friendly for the bar seats.

Above is Claude Bosi's two-Michelin-star Bibendum restaurant in the original Michelin House upstairs dining room — the room is one of London's most architecturally distinctive dining spaces. For pure English-sparkling focus, Wright Brothers Soho at 13 Kingly Street, London W1B 5PW is the other classic call.

Which historical boutique hotel should I stay at in London?

For old-world boutique stays in London with serious history, the reference is Brown's Hotel, at 33 Albemarle Street, Mayfair, London W1S 4BP.

London's oldest luxury hotel, opened in 1837 by James Brown (Lord Byron's former valet). Theodore Roosevelt stayed during his Africa trip; Rudyard Kipling honeymooned here and wrote The Jungle Book in his suite (the Kipling Suite is still bookable); Agatha Christie used the hotel as the setting for At Bertram's Hotel. Now part of the Rocco Forte collection, with 115 rooms across a row of expanded Georgian townhouses. The English Tea Room serves the most-respected traditional afternoon tea in London.

Pricing from around £700/night. Bookings via the Rocco Forte site. For a smaller boutique alternative, The Zetter Townhouse Marylebone at 28-30 Seymour Street, W1H 7JB is the design-forward choice.

What is the LGBTQ+ scene like in London?

London has one of the longest-established and most visible LGBTQ+ scenes in Europe. Same-sex marriage has been legal since 2014, and the city hosts London Pride in early July (around 1.5 million attendees annually).

The neighborhoods: Historically Soho (centred on Old Compton Street and the side streets W1) is the gay heart of London — bars, clubs, drag venues, sex shops. Vauxhall (south of the river) is the late-night clubbing district. East London (Hackney, Dalston) has the alternative-queer scene.

The bars: The Admiral Duncan at 54 Old Compton Street, Soho, W1D 4UB is the central Soho landmark — proper old gay pub, casual and inclusive. For drag, The Royal Vauxhall Tavern at 372 Kennington Lane, Vauxhall, SE11 5HY is Grade-II-listed and the oldest surviving LGBTQ+ venue in London.

Saunas: Sweatbox Soho at 1-2 Ramillies Street, W1F 7LN is the central men's sauna and the most accessible from Oxford Circus tube. Pleasuredrome at Arch 124, Cornwall Road, Waterloo, SE1 8XE is 24-hour and the busiest in London.

What unique small museum, new 2024-2026 landmark, or 1-3 day itinerary should I plan for London?

The famous-person small museum: Dennis Severs' House, at 18 Folgate Street, Spitalfields, London E1 6BX. American artist Dennis Severs (1948-1999) lived in this 1724 Huguenot silk-weaver's house and created a "still-life drama" through its ten rooms — each set up as if a family from a different period (1724 to 1914) just stepped out moments ago. Visited in silence by candlelight. The most theatrically immersive small-museum experience in London. Booking essential. dennissevershouse.co.uk

The 2024-2026 must-see: The V&A East Storehouse opened in 2025 at Olympic Park, Stratford, London E20 — the V&A's working storage made publicly walkable for the first time, with 250,000 objects on view across 16,000 square metres. Diller Scofidio + Renfro design. Free admission. The most architecturally significant new cultural opening in London since the Tate Modern extension.

1-3 day itinerary: Day 1 — Westminster + the central royal core (Westminster Abbey, Big Ben, Buckingham Palace exterior, walk through St James's to Trafalgar Square, late afternoon at the National Gallery, pub dinner). Day 2 — South Kensington museum cluster (V&A, Natural History Museum, Science Museum — all free), evening at the Royal Opera House or a West End show, dinner at St. JOHN. Day 3 — East London (Spitalfields and Dennis Severs' House morning, Shoreditch street art and food halls afternoon, V&A East Storehouse late, pub crawl in Hackney or dinner in Soho).

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Articles in this section are written by the Locals Insider editorial team. Got a London tip we missed? Email us at hello@localsinsider.com — we read every one.

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