London
United Kingdom United Kingdom 🌦️ 15°C · Now ★ Best Time Now

London

United Kingdom

#Iconic #Cultural #Cuisine
United Kingdom

London at a glance

As of 2026

As of 2026, London travel is best in May, Jun, Sep, from about $130/day (budget, ex-flights), with a 3-day itinerary. Top sight: Tower of London.

Daily budget

$130+

Budget tier · excl. flights

Direct flights

From major hubs

LHR / LGW / STN / LTN

Visa

Visa-free 90 days

For most Western passports

Exchange

$1 ≈ £0.75

GBP · indicative rate

Best time

May, Jun, Sep

Now is ideal!

Climate

Temperate oceanic (cool wet

Now 🌦️ 15°C

Local time

01:23

GMT (UTC+0) / BST (UTC+1 summer)

Language

English

Why visit London?

London is one of the world's great capitals — 2,000 years of continuous history compressed into 1,572 km² with 8.9 million people. The city stitches together Roman walls, medieval streets, Victorian railways, and 21st-century glass towers without ever feeling like a museum. Three days hits the bucket list; seven days starts to feel like Londoners actually live here.

The Tower of London is the city's oldest occupied building — William the Conqueror built it in 1078 as a fortress, then it became a royal palace, prison, and finally home of the Crown Jewels (3,094 stones, including the 530-carat Cullinan I diamond). Entry is £35 / $44 — pricey but justified. Beefeater (Yeoman Warder) tours run free every 30 minutes; budget 2-3 hours total. The White Tower's medieval armory and the ravens (legend says the kingdom falls if they leave) are the under-promoted highlights.

The British Museum (free entry, like all major UK national museums) holds 8 million objects — the Rosetta Stone, Egyptian mummies, Parthenon Marbles, Sutton Hoo treasures. The free policy is one of London's defining cultural decisions. Plan 3-4 hours minimum. Closed Christmas Day and a few bank holidays. The Great Court, with Norman Foster's glass roof, is the architectural climax.

Westminster Abbey ($45 entry) is where every English monarch since 1066 has been crowned, and where Princess Diana, Stephen Hawking, Charles Darwin, and Isaac Newton are buried. Big Ben (officially the Elizabeth Tower) is next door — recently reopened to the public after 5-year restoration. The Houses of Parliament tour (Saturday mornings, £35) lets you stand in the Commons chamber.

Buckingham Palace's Changing of the Guard ceremony at 11 AM (Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, Friday — check schedule) is the iconic free experience. Arrive by 10 AM for good viewing positions at the front gates or along The Mall. The State Rooms inside are open to public only July-October ($45 entry).

The London Eye (£40 / $50) is the 135m observation wheel on the South Bank — 30-minute capsule rides with panoramic views. Sunset bookings sell out 2-3 weeks ahead in summer. The Shard (£35 / $44) at 310m is London's tallest building and gives a higher view but is further south.

Tower Bridge ($14 entry to glass walkway) is the bascule bridge that opens for ships — most photographed bridge in the world. The walkway gives a Thames view from above. The lift mechanism museum below is included.

For West End theater, London is essentially New York's equal — 39 major theaters in the West End district. Long-running musicals: The Lion King, Mamma Mia, Wicked, Les Misérables. New 2026: The Great Gatsby. TKTS booth in Leicester Square sells same-day discount tickets up to 50% off; Today Tix app is the digital equivalent. Premium musicals £80-180 evenings, $100-220.

For real London food at honest prices, leave central. Borough Market (London Bridge) is the city's iconic food market — 100+ stalls, world cuisine. Brick Lane in East London has the legendary curry restaurants (Tayyabs is the local favorite, $30-50/person). Soho has the cheap eats and Chinese restaurants. For traditional fish & chips, Poppies in Spitalfields ($18-25) is the canonical experience.

The Tube (London Underground) runs 11 lines, 270 stations. Single fares £6.30 / $8 (paper ticket — never buy these), but contactless tap-to-pay (Visa/Mastercard/Apple Pay) caps at £8.50 / $11 daily for zones 1-2. Use contactless — no need to buy an Oyster Card unless you specifically want one. Bus is £1.75 / $2.20 single, capped at £5.25 / $6.65 daily. The Tube is fast but London buses are scenic — top deck of a red double-decker is genuinely a London moment.

Day trips. Stonehenge (2 hours by bus, day tour $80-120 with Bath included) is the canonical UK day trip. Oxford or Cambridge (90-minute train, $20-50 each way) for university and Harry Potter filming locations. The Cotswolds (full-day tour $80-110) for postcard English villages. Edinburgh (4.5h by LNER train, $50-150 each way; book 2-3 weeks ahead for cheap fares) for a 1-night side trip.

A few practical realities. London is expensive. Hotels easily $250-400/night in Zone 1; Brooklyn-equivalents (Camden, Bethnal Green, Greenwich) are 30-40% cheaper. Tipping is appreciated but not mandatory: 10-12.5% at restaurants (often added as "service charge" — check the bill), £1-2 for cabs, £1/drink at bars optional.

Safety: London is generally safe but pickpocketing on the Tube and at major tourist sites (Trafalgar Square, Westminster, Covent Garden) is real. Keep wallet in front pocket, phone away from doors. The Knightsbridge moped phone-snatching trend (2017-2023) has reduced but be aware. Late-night walking in central is fine; avoid empty Tube stations at 2-3 AM.

Bottom line: London rewards walkers and museum-goers. The free museum policy, walkability, and density of bucket-list sights make it one of the most efficient capital-city stops. Five days is the sweet spot. Add 1-2 days for Edinburgh or Cotswolds if your trip allows.

Things to do in London

Royal & Iconic

Tower of London

England's oldest occupied building (1078). William the Conqueror's fortress, royal palace, infamous prison, and home of the Crown Jewels — 3,094 stones including the 530-carat Cullinan I diamond. Beefeater (Yeoman Warder) tours run free every 30 minutes.

Entry £35 / $44 9:00-17:30 (winter until 16:30) 2-3 hours
Tip: Pre-book online 2-3 weeks ahead for the cheapest rate. Beefeater tours start every 30 min from the entrance — join the first one for context. Crown Jewels exhibit gets crushing crowds 11 AM-2 PM; visit at 9:00 opening.

Westminster Abbey

1,000-year coronation church where every English monarch since 1066 was crowned. Burial place of Princess Diana, Stephen Hawking, Charles Darwin, Isaac Newton. Recently reopened Queen's Diamond Jubilee Galleries upstairs (£10 add-on) give the best floor view.

Entry £35 / $45 (audio guide included) 9:30-15:30 (Sat until 13:30); closed Sundays 1.5-2 hours
Tip: Closed Sundays for worship. Photography forbidden inside main church. Combine with Houses of Parliament tour (Saturday mornings only, £35).

Buckingham Palace + Changing of the Guard

The official London residence of the British monarch. Changing of the Guard ceremony at 11:00 (Sun/Mon/Wed/Fri, sometimes daily — check schedule). State Rooms open July-October only.

State Rooms £35 / $45 (summer only); Changing of Guard free Ceremony 11:00; State Rooms 9:30-19:30 (summer only) 30 min ceremony; 2 hours State Rooms
Tip: Arrive by 10:00 for good Changing of Guard viewing — the front gates and along The Mall are best. Schedule changes weekly; verify on royal.uk before your visit.

Museums (mostly free)

British Museum

8 million objects spanning 2 million years of human history. Rosetta Stone, Egyptian mummies, Parthenon Marbles, Sutton Hoo treasures. The Great Court with Norman Foster's glass roof is the architectural climax.

Free entry (special exhibitions £15-22) 10:00-17:00 (Fri until 20:30) 3-4 hours
Tip: Closed Christmas Day. Free 30-40 minute museum tours run from the Great Court daily. Free WiFi throughout. Café and shop on the lower ground floor.

National Gallery

2,300 European paintings from 1250 to 1900 — Van Gogh's Sunflowers, Botticelli's Venus and Mars, Velázquez's Rokeby Venus, Turner's Fighting Temeraire. Trafalgar Square location.

Free entry (special exhibitions £20+) 10:00-18:00 (Fri until 21:00) 2-3 hours
Tip: Friday night free entry until 9 PM is the local move — fewer crowds, evening light. Free 60-minute tours run twice daily. The Sainsbury Wing has the earliest masterpieces.

Natural History Museum

Hintze Hall's 25m blue whale skeleton replaces the iconic Diplodocus. Egyptian mummies, dinosaur fossils, Vault of treasures (rarest gemstones), Wildlife Garden. Free entry.

Free entry (special exhibitions £15-22) 10:00-17:50 (last entry 17:00) 2-3 hours
Tip: Wednesday evening free until 21:00 (every 2-3 weeks) is the under-the-radar visit. Combine with V&A Museum (next door) for a full museum day in South Kensington.

Modern & Markets

London Eye

135m observation wheel on the South Bank — 30-minute capsule rides with panoramic Thames views. Built for the millennium; now London's most-visited paid attraction.

Standard £40 / $50; Fast Track £60 / $76 11:00-18:00 (extended summer) 30 min ride + 30 min queue
Tip: Sunset bookings sell out 2-3 weeks ahead in summer. The view includes Houses of Parliament, Westminster Abbey, St Paul's Cathedral. The Shard (310m) gives higher view but further south.

Borough Market

London's iconic food market under London Bridge — 100+ stalls, world cuisine, artisan producers. Open Wednesday-Sunday, full operating hours Friday-Saturday.

Free entry; meals £8-20 / $10-25 Wed-Fri 10:00-17:00; Sat 8:00-17:00 2-3 hours
Tip: Saturday is the full market day but most crowded. Wednesday-Friday calmer with full vendor selection. Brindisa Spanish stall, Monmouth Coffee, Bread Ahead bakery are the local recommendations.

Tower Bridge

London's iconic Victorian bascule bridge that opens for tall ships. The glass walkway 42m above the Thames + Victorian Engine Room museum below.

Glass walkway + Engine Room £14 / $18 9:30-18:00 (last entry 17:00) 1-1.5 hours
Tip: Opening times for the bridge (when it lifts) are posted on towerbridge.org.uk — book your visit to see one in person. Free walk across the bridge any time.

Day Trips & Royal Estates

Windsor Castle

The world's oldest and largest occupied castle — official residence of the British monarch for 1,000 years, still actively used by the King for state functions. The St. George's Chapel holds the tombs of Henry VIII, Queen Elizabeth II (interred September 2022), and Prince Philip. The State Apartments are open when the King is not in residence — check the royal calendar before booking. Add Eton College across the river (the school that produced 20 British Prime Ministers) for the canonical Windsor half-day.

£33 / $42 adult (timed entry, includes audio guide) 10:00-17:15 (closes 16:15 in winter); closed Tue-Wed Half day (3-4 hours on-site + 30 min each way train)
Tip: Train from London Paddington to Windsor & Eton Central — £12 / $15 round trip, 30 minutes via Slough. Pre-book online to skip the entry queue (saves 30-60 minutes in peak season). Changing of the Guard happens here 11:00 Mon/Wed/Fri/Sat — less crowded than Buckingham Palace's. The Long Walk (the 4.5km straight tree-lined avenue from the castle south) is the postcard photo angle.

Greenwich (Royal Observatory + National Maritime Museum)

The Thames-side district where time itself is set — the Royal Observatory holds the Prime Meridian (longitude 0°) where you straddle the East-West line for the canonical photo. Adjacent are the National Maritime Museum (free), the Cutty Sark tea clipper (the last surviving 1869 tea-trade ship, raised on dry dock so you can walk underneath the hull), and the Old Royal Naval College's Painted Hall — known as 'Britain's Sistine Chapel' for the 40,000-square-foot baroque ceiling. Greenwich Market is the Saturday-Sunday craft and food destination.

Royal Observatory £20 / $25; Cutty Sark £20 / $25; Painted Hall £15 / $19; Maritime Museum free Most sites 10:00-17:00 daily Full day or half day from central London
Tip: Take the Uber Boat / Thames Clipper from Westminster Pier — £14 / $18 each way, 40 minutes, the canonical Greenwich approach with the city skyline as backdrop. DLR is the faster option (25 min, £4 / $5 with contactless). Pair the Prime Meridian photo with the Painted Hall and a Greenwich Market lunch for the full Greenwich day.

Hampton Court Palace

Henry VIII's Tudor pleasure palace 30 minutes southwest of central London — a 1,000-room complex where six of his wives lived, where Anne Boleyn's ghost reportedly screams in the Haunted Gallery, and where the famous Hampton Court Maze (planted 1690, the world's oldest surviving hedge maze) takes most visitors 45 minutes to escape. The kitchens recreate Tudor cooking on the original 16th-century fireplaces with actors in costume. Significantly less crowded than the Tower of London with arguably more atmosphere.

£26 / $33 adult (palace + gardens + maze) 10:00-17:30 daily (closes 16:30 in winter) Half day (3-4 hours on-site + 35 min each way train)
Tip: Train from London Waterloo to Hampton Court — £12 / $15 round trip, 35 minutes. The Royal Tennis Court (the only one in England still active, where Henry VIII played) gives daily demonstrations at 14:00. The 60-acre gardens include the Privy Garden as Henry VIII designed it; allow 90 minutes after the palace. Combine with a Thames riverside lunch at Kingston-upon-Thames (next station back toward London).

Stonehenge + Bath (full-day combo)

The canonical English countryside day — the 5,000-year-old Stonehenge prehistoric circle (UNESCO World Heritage, the visitor center holds the actual neolithic skeletons found nearby) followed by Bath, the Georgian spa town built around natural hot springs the Romans used 2,000 years ago. The Roman Baths complex is the highlight (you can't bathe in the original Roman pools, but the Thermae Bath Spa next door uses the same source water at £40 / $50 for a 2-hour session). The Royal Crescent and Pulteney Bridge are the architecture photos every Bath visit produces.

Day tour from London £80-130 / $100-165 (Golden Tours, Evan Evans); self-drive £40 / $50 fuel + £25 / $32 Stonehenge + £30 / $38 Roman Baths Stonehenge 9:30-19:00 summer / -17:00 winter; Roman Baths 9:30-21:00 summer / -17:00 winter Full day (12 hours pickup-to-return)
Tip: The guided bus tour is the canonical choice for non-drivers — driving Stonehenge + Bath without a guide is workable but the parking and entry timing get tight. Stonehenge in the morning (before 11 AM) is significantly quieter than the afternoon coach-tour rush. Bath's Sally Lunn's bakery (open since 1680) is the canonical Bath lunch — the eponymous brioche-like bun is the city's signature.

Oxford or Cambridge (university city day trip)

The two canonical English university cities are 1-1.5 hours from London by train and make a one-day choice between Oxford (the older one, founded ~1096; Bodleian Library, Christ Church College the Harry Potter Great Hall, Radcliffe Camera dome) and Cambridge (the punting one; King's College Chapel, the Mathematical Bridge, the Backs lawn-strolling area). Oxford is the bigger city with denser sights; Cambridge is the prettier walk with the Cam River punting (£25 / $32 per person for a 45-min chauffeured ride). Both are college-tour walkable in a day.

Train round trip Oxford £30 / $38, Cambridge £35 / $44; college entries £5-15 each Most colleges 10:00-17:00 (some close mornings during exam season May-June) Full day from London
Tip: Oxford is the better pick if you've not done either — denser sights and the Bodleian's underground tour (£12 / $15 including the Radcliffe Camera interior) is the canonical Oxford experience. Cambridge is the better summer pick for the punting and the open lawn-stroll vibe. Train from London Paddington to Oxford (1h) or King's Cross to Cambridge (45 min). Pre-book a college tour through the Oxford or Cambridge official tourist sites for the best access.

Travel cost

Per person, per day (excludes flights)

Hostel + local food + public transport

$130

≈ £97.50 GBP

Per person / day (excl. flights)

🏠Hotel
38%$50
🍽️Food
27%$35
🚇Transit
12%$15
🎫Activities
23%$30

📅 Total cost by trip duration (incl. flights)

3 days

$580

≈ £435.00

5 days

$880

≈ £660.00

7 days

$1,180

≈ £885.00

Flight estimate: $400-1,200 from US/Asia (LHR direct from major hubs) (round-trip estimate)

💡London's accommodation is the budget killer. Camden, Bethnal Green, Greenwich are 30-40% cheaper than Zone 1 (Westminster, Soho, Mayfair) for similar quality, with 15-20 min Tube to central. Free museums (British Museum, National Gallery, Natural History, Tate Modern, V&A) cut activity costs significantly. Use contactless payment for Tube — daily cap of £8.50 beats individual ticket prices.

Monthly weather

Currently in London: 🌦️ 15°C

🌤️

London now (Jun)

High 21°C / Low 13°C· Mild★ Best Time

Jan

🍂

8°

3°

Cool

Feb

🍂

9°

3°

Cool

Mar

🌥️

12°

5°

Cool

Apr

15°

7°

Mild

May

18°

10°

Mild

Best

Jun

🌤️

21°

13°

Mild

Best

Jul

🌤️

24°

15°

Pleasant

Aug

🌤️

23°

15°

Pleasant

Sep

🌤️

20°

13°

Mild

Best

Oct

16°

10°

Mild

Nov

🌥️

12°

6°

Cool

Dec

🍂

9°

4°

Cool

This MonthBest TimeOther

Practical information

Getting there
Heathrow (LHR) Express to Paddington: £25 / $32, 15 minutes — fastest. Heathrow Underground (Piccadilly Line) to central London: £5.60 / $7, 60 minutes. Gatwick (LGW) Express to Victoria: £20 / $25, 30 minutes. Stansted (STN) Express to Liverpool Street: £20 / $25, 50 minutes. Black taxi from any airport: £80-150 / $100-190. Avoid Uber from airports — surge pricing makes it expensive.
Getting around
London Underground (the Tube) — 11 lines, 270 stations. Use contactless payment (Visa/Mastercard/Apple Pay tap) instead of buying paper tickets — daily cap £8.50 / $11 for zones 1-2. Single bus fare £1.75 / $2.20 (capped at £5.25 daily). Black taxis are metered and expensive — Uber/Bolt usually cheaper. Walking is the underrated method — central London is more compact than it looks.
Money & payments
British Pound (GBP). £1 ≈ $1.27 (April 2026). London is heavily card-friendly — even pubs and small shops take contactless. Always carry £20-40 cash for small markets, public toilets, and tipping. ATMs at banks (Barclays, Lloyds, Santander) charge no foreign-card fee. Avoid airport currency counters and Travelex (3-7% over market rate).
Language
English. UK English is functionally identical to US English with vocabulary differences (lift = elevator, queue = line, tube = subway, chips = french fries, crisps = chips). 'Cheers' is the universal informal thank-you/goodbye. Cab drivers and pub regulars love a friendly greeting.
Cultural tips
Queue strictly — Brits take line discipline seriously. Stand on the right of escalators, walk on the left (UK standard). Tipping is appreciated but not mandatory: 10-12.5% at restaurants (often added as 'service charge' — check the bill before tipping again), £1-2 for cabs, £1/drink at bars optional. 'Excuse me' for navigating crowds. Sundays many shops close early (5-6 PM); pubs typically close at 11 PM.

Money & payment

Currency

British Pound (GBP, £). £1 ≈ $1.27 (April 2026).

Card acceptance

Universal — Visa/Mastercard/AmEx work everywhere. Contactless standard. Even pubs and small markets take tap-to-pay.

Tipping

Service is sometimes included (check the bill — labeled 'service charge' or 'gratuity'). If not, 10-12.5% at sit-down restaurants is standard. £1-2 per drink at bars optional. £1-2 for cabs.

ATM

Use bank-branded ATMs (Barclays, Lloyds, Santander) for no foreign-card fees. Avoid Travelex and Euronet (5-12% premium). Wise/Revolut/Charles Schwab cards give the best rates.

Recommended itinerary

London 3-day route

Day 1 Royal & Iconic London

09

09:00

Tower of London + Crown Jewels

Pre-book skip-the-line; budget 2-3 hours

🎫 16% off — Book lowest price
12

12:30

Tower Bridge + lunch at Borough Market

Climb the bridge ($14) + Borough Market food stalls

14

14:30

Westminster Abbey + Big Ben

Coronation church, royal weddings; pre-book

🎫 12% off — Book lowest price
16

16:30

London Eye sunset

30-min capsule ride; book sunset slot 2 weeks ahead

🎫 12% off — Book lowest price
20

20:00

Soho or Covent Garden dinner + West End show

Use TodayTix for same-day discount Broadway equivalents

Day 2 Museums & British Museum

09

09:00

British Museum (free entry)

Rosetta Stone, Egyptian Mummies, Parthenon Marbles. Plan 3-4 hours.

13

13:00

Lunch in Bloomsbury

Pubs and cafés around the museum

14

14:30

British Library or Sherlock Holmes Museum

Magna Carta + Beatles lyrics free at British Library

16

16:30

Camden Market + Regent's Park walk

Camden Lock food stalls + canal-side walk

19

19:30

Indian dinner on Brick Lane

London's curry capital — Tayyabs is the local favorite

Day 3 Royal Parks & Day Trip

09

09:00

Buckingham Palace + Changing of the Guard (11:00)

Free outdoor ceremony; arrive 10:00 for good viewing position

12

12:00

Hyde Park + Kensington Gardens stroll

Diana Memorial Fountain, Albert Memorial

14

14:00

Natural History Museum (free)

Diplodocus skeleton, Hintze Hall, gem collection

17

17:00

Notting Hill + Portobello Road

Saturday antique market, Pastel-painted houses

20

20:00

Pub dinner in Notting Hill

Traditional fish & chips at The Cow

Where to stay

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London hotel price comparison

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* Centered on Westminster / South Bank — the most hotel-dense area in London

Top tours & activities in London

Top-rated by travelers

Frequently asked questions

Most common questions from travelers to London

Q How much does a day in London cost?
A

Budget travelers spend $130/day, mostly on accommodation (£40-60 hostel). Mid-range averages $350/day with a 3-star Zone 1 hotel ($180-280) and table-service meals. Luxury starts at $1,100/day. London is one of the world's most expensive cities for accommodation but reasonable for food (free museums + £8-15 meals at pub or Borough Market) and transport (£8.50 daily Tube cap).

Q How many days do I need in London?
A

5 days minimum hits iconic sights. Day 1: Tower of London + Tower Bridge + Borough Market. Day 2: British Museum + Westminster Abbey + Big Ben + London Eye. Day 3: Buckingham Palace + Changing of the Guard + Hyde Park + Natural History Museum. Day 4: Camden Market + British Library + Notting Hill. Day 5: Day trip to Stonehenge or Oxford. 7+ days for proper neighborhood exploration including Greenwich and East London.

Q When is the best time to visit London?
A

May, June, and September are sweet spots — temperatures 17-22°C / 63-72°F, manageable crowds, long daylight (sunset 9 PM in June). July-August is hot and humid by London standards with biggest crowds. December has Christmas markets, ice skating, and lights but cold rain (4-9°C / 39-48°F). January-February cheapest but coldest.

Q Do I need a visa for London?
A

Visa-free 6 months for US, UK, EU, Canada, Australia, NZ, Japan, Korea passports. From 2026, ETA pre-authorization (£10) is required for visa-exempt countries — apply online at least 72 hours before flight. Other passports require Standard Visitor visa (£100, processed in 3 weeks).

Q Is London safe for tourists?
A

Generally safe day or night in central London. Main caution: pickpocketing on the Tube and at major tourist sites (Trafalgar Square, Westminster, Covent Garden, Oxford Circus). Keep wallet in front pocket, phone away from Tube doors. Late-night walking in central is fine; avoid empty Tube stations at 2-3 AM. Knightsbridge moped phone-snatching trend (2017-2023) has reduced but be aware. Solo female travelers report London as one of Europe's easier cities.

Q Does English work in London?
A

Yes — English is the official language. UK English is functionally identical to US English with vocabulary differences. Diverse accents (cockney, multicultural London English, posh) but all are mutually intelligible. Hotel staff, museum staff, restaurant staff all speak standard English.

Q What food is London famous for?
A

Iconic: Fish & chips ($18-25 at Poppies in Spitalfields), Sunday roast at traditional pubs ($25-40), Indian curry on Brick Lane ($30-50 at Tayyabs), full English breakfast ($15-25), afternoon tea at The Ritz or Claridge's ($85-120). London's strength is its diversity — Borough Market (world cuisine), Soho (cheap eats and Chinese), Camden (alternative). Traditional pub food is enjoying a resurgence.

Q How does the Tube work in London?
A

11 lines, 270 stations, runs 5:30-24:30 daily (Night Tube on lines 1, 14 Friday/Saturday). Use contactless payment — tap any credit card or phone, daily cap £8.50 / $11 for zones 1-2. Single fares £6.30 if you buy paper (never buy paper). Hold doors close — beware pickpockets near doors. Apps: 'TfL' or 'Citymapper' for live arrival times.

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