Westminster is where London stops being a city and starts being a capital. The Palace of Westminster is architecturally staggering. Westminster Abbey has seen every coronation since 1066. Buckingham Palace sits at the end of The Mall. This is London at its most monumental.
Westminster is more than its landmarks. St James's Park is arguably the most beautiful of London's royal parks. Whitehall connects Parliament Square to Trafalgar Square through a corridor of government buildings. Give it the time it deserves - ideally a full day.
Curated by our editorial team. Not paid. Not sponsored. Just places we think are worth your time.
Every English monarch since 1066 has been crowned here. The Gothic architecture is breathtaking. The Poets' Corner contains memorials to Chaucer, Dickens, Austen, and Shakespeare. Allow 90 minutes and book tickets in advance - the queue without them wraps around the building.
The underground complex where Churchill directed Britain's war effort, preserved exactly as it was left in 1945. The map room, the telephone room to the White House, Churchill's bedroom - all untouched. The accompanying museum is thoughtfully curated and avoids hagiography.
The oldest of London's Royal Parks, and the most beautiful. The lake running through the centre is home to pelicans (fed daily at 2:30pm near Duck Island). The view east from the Blue Bridge - with Buckingham Palace behind you and the domes of Whitehall ahead - is the most photographed panorama in London for a reason.
Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin's Gothic Revival masterpiece is one of the most important buildings in the democratic world. UK residents can arrange free tours through their MP. International visitors can book ticketed tours on Saturdays and during summer recess - the interior is far more impressive than most expect.
Overlooking Trafalgar Square, with one of the finest collections of Western European painting in the world. Van Gogh's Sunflowers, Turner's Fighting Temeraire, Velazquez's Rokeby Venus. Free entry to the permanent collection. The building itself - a neoclassical palace on the north side of the square - sets the tone perfectly.
The working headquarters of the British monarchy. The State Rooms are open to visitors during summer (late July to September) and are genuinely spectacular - the Picture Gallery alone contains works by Rembrandt, Rubens, and Vermeer. The Changing of the Guard happens at 11am (check the schedule, it's not daily in winter).
Modern Indian fine dining in the former Westminster Library - a Grade II-listed building with book-lined walls, high ceilings, and cooking that takes Indian cuisine to a level of precision most London restaurants don't attempt. The venison biryani is exceptional.
Weekday mornings before the tour groups arrive. Early morning for the parks before they fill up.
Westminster (Jubilee, District, Circle lines) is the main station for Parliament and the Abbey. St James's Park (District, Circle) for Buckingham Palace.
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Sightseeing boat tours along the Thames passing iconic landmarks from Westminster to Greenwich.
The original London walking tour company. Expert-led tours covering history, pubs, Jack the Ripper, and more.
The official London residence of the sovereign. Witness the famous Changing of the Guard ceremony.
Sophisticated cocktail bar in the Hyatt Regency, inspired by Winston Churchill. Classic and contemporary mixology.
Art Deco West End theatre, currently home to the long-running musical Wicked.