London, United Kingdom

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

London is a global city where medieval towers stand beside glass skyscrapers, world-class museums charge no admission, the theatre rivals Broadway, and over 300 languages are spoken in its extraordinarily diverse neighborhoods.

Royal London

Tower of London, Buckingham Palace, Westminster Abbey, and Kensington Palace—1,000 years of monarchy.

Free Museums

British Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, V&A, Natural History—world-class collections, zero admission.

Theatre & Performance

40+ West End theatres, Shakespeare's Globe, the Proms, and cutting-edge fringe venues.

Food & Markets

70+ Michelin stars, Borough Market, street food revolutions, and historic pubs since the 1600s.

Neighborhoods

Shoreditch, Notting Hill, Camden, Brixton—300 languages spoken across radically diverse communities.

Parks & Green Spaces

Hyde Park, Richmond's deer, Hampstead Heath ponds—3,000+ hectares of green in a global metropolis.

History

Founded as Londinium by the Romans in AD 43, London grew through Saxon, Viking, and Norman rule to become medieval Europe's largest city. The Great Fire of 1666 destroyed much of the medieval city, enabling Wren's churches (including St. Paul's Cathedral) to define the rebuilt skyline. The British Empire made London the world's capital in the 19th century. The Blitz tested but didn't break the city. Post-war immigration transformed London into one of the world's most diverse cities—Windrush, South Asian, and later global migration waves created the multicultural London that today speaks over 300 languages and draws 20+ million visitors annually.

Culture

London's food revolution has made it a global dining destination—70+ Michelin stars, Borough Market's artisan producers, Dishoom's Bombay café fare, Chinatown dim sum, and Brick Lane curries. The pub remains a cultural institution: real ale, Sunday roasts, and centuries of history in wood-paneled rooms. Afternoon tea at The Ritz or Claridge's is quintessentially London. Fish and chips from a proper chippy (not a tourist trap) is genuinely good. Festivals: Notting Hill Carnival (August — Europe's largest street festival), BBC Proms (July-September — Royal Albert Hall), London Film Festival (October), New Year's Eve Fireworks (Thames). Museums: British Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, Victoria & Albert Museum, Natural History Museum.

Practical Info

Safety: London is very safe by global city standards. Pickpocketing on the Tube (especially Central and Piccadilly lines) and at tourist attractions is the main concern. Unlicensed minicab touts at night should be avoided—use black cabs or ride-hailing apps. Emergency: 999 or 112. Language: English. London's diversity means you'll hear dozens of languages daily. Most signage and services are English-only. Currency: GBP (British Pounds). Contactless payment is ubiquitous—many London businesses are now cashless or strongly prefer card. ATMs widely available.
Travel Overview

London absorbs you into 2,000 years of history, global diversity, and relentless cultural energy. The Tower of London guards Crown Jewels where medieval kings imprisoned enemies, the British Museum houses the Rosetta Stone and Parthenon Marbles for free, and the Houses of Parliament's Gothic Revival towers define the Thames skyline beside the London Eye's modern counterpoint. But London's genius lies in its neighborhoods: Soho's theatre and dining buzz, Notting Hill's pastel houses and Portobello Market, Camden's alternative spirit, Shoreditch's street art and creative energy, and Brixton's Afro-Caribbean culture. The city's museum offering is staggering and largely free—the British Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, V&A, Natural History Museum, and Science Museum charge nothing for their permanent collections. West End theatre ranges from long-running musicals (The Phantom of the Opera ran for 37 years) to cutting-edge new writing at the Donmar and Young Vic. London's food scene has evolved dramatically from its dreary reputation—it now holds more Michelin stars than any European city except Paris, and its street food markets (Borough, Maltby Street, Mercato Metropolitano) reflect the city's 200+ nationalities. The Tube, the world's oldest underground railway, connects everything, while walking along the Thames South Bank from Westminster to Tower Bridge is one of Europe's great urban experiences.

Discover London

The Tower of London, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, has served as royal palace, prison, and execution ground since William the Conqueror built the White Tower in 1066. The Crown Jewels—including the Imperial State Crown with 2,868 diamonds—dazzle in the Jewel House, while Yeoman Warders (Beefeaters) lead tours rich with stories of imprisoned princes, beheaded queens, and daring escapes. Across the Thames, the Tower Bridge Exhibition reveals the Victorian engineering behind the famous bascule bridge, with a glass-floor walkway 42 meters above the river. Buckingham Palace, the monarch's London residence, opens its State Rooms to visitors each summer, while the Changing of the Guard ceremony (11 AM, typically every other day) draws crowds to the palace forecourt. The Houses of Parliament and Big Ben's Elizabeth Tower (recently restored) define the Thames at Westminster, and Westminster Abbey—coronation church of English monarchs since 1066—houses the tombs of monarchs, poets, and scientists in soaring Gothic naves.

Diplomatic missions in London

29 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.