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London itineraries

Real, day-by-day London trip plans — every place on a map, every day walkable. Built by the team behind The Walking London, who have filmed these streets for years.

First visit? Three to four days covers the headline sights — Westminster, the Tower, the South Bank, a museum day in South Kensington — without rushing. The trick to London is planning by neighbourhood: it is a huge city, but each cluster (Westminster, Southwark, Greenwich, Camden and Hampstead) is best explored on foot.

The itineraries below are real trips built in Tralendr. Open any of them to see the full day-by-day plan with every place on a map — then use it as a starting point for your own version.

London trips to open and use

A Perfect London Weekend

A Perfect London Weekend

3 days · 9 places · day-by-day on a map

London for Food Lovers

London for Food Lovers

3 days · 8 places · day-by-day on a map

Hidden London: Heaths, Canals & Curiosities

Hidden London: Heaths, Canals & Curiosities

2 days · 6 places · day-by-day on a map

London with Kids: Museums & Magic

London with Kids: Museums & Magic

4 days · 8 places · day-by-day on a map

Planning a London trip — quick answers

How many days do I need in London?

Three to four days is the sweet spot for a first visit: enough for Westminster and the royal sights, the Tower of London and Borough Market, one museum day, and one neighbourhood day (Camden, Greenwich, or Notting Hill). A focused weekend works if you group sights by area, and a week lets you add day trips like Windsor or Hampton Court.

Is London walkable?

Extremely — central London is best seen on foot, and most classic sights cluster within walkable neighbourhoods. Pair walking with the Tube or a bus for hops between areas. Tralendr grew out of The Walking London, a channel that films the city's streets in 4K, so these itineraries are built around walkable days.

What is the best time to visit London?

May to September brings long daylight hours and park season, at the cost of bigger crowds. April and October are quieter and often good value. December is festive with lights and markets. There is no bad month — pack a light rain layer year-round.

Can an AI plan my London trip?

Yes. Connect Tralendr to Claude and ask it to plan your London trip in chat — the itinerary is saved to your free Tralendr account as a real day-by-day plan with places on a map, which you can then edit and share. See tralendr.com/claude for the one-minute setup.

Are these London itineraries free to use?

Yes. Every itinerary here is free to open and explore — no account needed to view. Creating and sharing your own trips on Tralendr is also free, forever.

Want a London plan of your own? Plan it in Claude chat and it lands in your free Tralendr account — or start from scratch. Either way it stays yours, forever, free.