Updated 27 May 2026 Β· Reviewed by the tickadoo editorial team
TL;DR β The single best time to visit each London attraction
| Attraction | Best slot | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| London Eye | 6β8pm (sunset) | Sat 12β3pm |
| Tower of London | 9am opening | Sat 11amβ2pm |
| Westminster Abbey | Weekday 4pm | Sun (closed for services) |
| The View from The Shard | 30 min before sunset | Sat 1β4pm |
| Madame Tussauds | Weekday 4pm | School holidays 11am |
| Harry Potter Studio Tour | 8:30am opening | Sat 11am |
| Buckingham Palace | First slot of the day | Mid-August Sundays |
| Tower Bridge | 30 min before a bascule lift | Sat 1β3pm |
| Churchill War Rooms | Weekday 4pm | Sat 11amβ1pm |
| Kew Gardens | Weekday 10am | Sun 12β3pm |
Every recommendation below is grounded in 50 days of Google popular_times data we scraped per attraction, cross-checked against the editorial crowd patterns in each attraction's verdict page. We update the live ranking hourly using London's Open-Meteo forecast β see today's specific picks at tickets.uk/is-it-worth-it.
How we calculated the best time
For each of the 10 attractions in our scoring pool, we combined three signals:
- Crowd score β Google's
popular_timesbusyness curve, scraped over a rolling 50-day window. We invert it (low busyness β high score) and reweight so the daytime visiting window of 9amβ10pm carries the most signal. - Experience score β editorial. Some times are mechanically better regardless of crowds (the London Eye at sunset, the Shard 30 minutes before golden hour). These shift the curve.
- Weather modifier β live, pulled from Open-Meteo for central London. Heavy rain dampens outdoor and view-dependent venues. A clear sky bumps them back up. Indoor venues are unaffected.
The three signals multiply into a single 0β10 slot score. The top slot per day is what powers the "Best time today" recommendation on every tickets.uk/is-it-worth-it verdict page. This article is the editorial summary of the pattern across the year β what holds true regardless of today's weather.
Outdoor + view-based attractions
London Eye β 6β8pm in any season
The London Eye is the strongest sunset attraction in London. Our editorial crowd score peaks at 9/10 between 6pm and 8pm year-round, because most coach-tour traffic clears by 4pm and most independent visitors prefer the daytime queue. In summer (JuneβAugust), shift the slot later β the sun doesn't set until ~9pm in late June. In winter, 4pm is your golden-hour slot.
Avoid Saturdays 12β3pm at all costs. Crowd scores drop to 3/10 in our data. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings deliver the same view with half the queue. See the full hourly heatmap at the London Eye verdict.
The View from The Shard β 30 minutes before sunset
Different play to the Eye: the Shard isn't a moving experience, so the magic is the transition from day to dusk to lit skyline. Book the slot 30 minutes before sunset β most visitors are still on daytime slots, the deck is quiet, and you watch the city light up in stages. The Shard's Free Sky Guarantee means if cloud cover is bad you can rebook for free, removing the main risk.
Tower Bridge β time it to a bascule lift
Tower Bridge raises its bascules around 800 times a year for tall river traffic. The schedule is published on the bridge's official website, usually 24β48 hours ahead. Crossing the walkway during a lift is the single most photogenic moment at the attraction β and crowd scores for the walkway are usually decent because most visitors don't time it. Combine with the Tower of London next door for one of London's best 4-hour pairings β full breakdown at Tower of London vs Tower Bridge.
Kew Gardens β weekday 10am, clear day
Kew Gardens is the only attraction on this list where seasonal timing matters more than time of day. Mayβearly June is the peak window: bluebells, the Cherry Walk, the Temperate House at its best. Weekday mornings stay quiet because the school groups don't arrive until 11am. Skip Sundays β afternoon crowd scores drop into the 3s.
Indoor heritage + family attractions
Tower of London β be at the gates for 9am opening
The Tower of London has the worst queue-discipline problem in our top 10 β the Crown Jewels viewing gallery moves quickly, but the queue to get into the gallery is brutal between 11am and 2pm on Saturdays. Crowd score collapses to 2/10. The fix is mechanical: arrive at 9am sharp, do the Crown Jewels first (you'll walk through), then the White Tower and the Yeoman Warder tour. By 11am you're free.
Westminster Abbey β weekday 4pm
Westminster Abbey closes to tourists on Sundays for services. Weekday afternoons are the quietest window β most coach groups arrive at 10am, school groups by lunch, and by 3pm the abbey has thinned out considerably. The last entry is usually around 3:30pm; aim for 3pm to give yourself a full 90 minutes inside before closing.
Madame Tussauds β weekday 4pm, never during school holidays
Madame Tussauds is the most school-holiday-sensitive attraction in our ranking. During UK half-term and school holidays, every weekday morning becomes effectively a weekend β crowd scores drop into the 2/10s before lunch. In normal term-time, weekday 4pm is the sweet spot: the morning families have left, the after-school slot hasn't kicked in.
Harry Potter Studio Tour β first slot of the day
Harry Potter Studio Tour uses timed-entry slots, but the "timing" only governs entry β once inside you can spend as long as you like. The first slot (typically 8:30am) means you walk through the Great Hall before the next 50 visitors, which is the single most photographed moment in the tour. Weekday slots are quieter than weekends throughout. Detailed comparison with the alternative Madame Tussauds visit at Madame Tussauds vs Harry Potter Studio Tour.
Churchill War Rooms β weekday 4pm
Churchill War Rooms is the museum experience that benefits most from being there in the last 90 minutes before closing. The audio guide is 2 hours long; if you start late afternoon, by 5pm the school groups have left and you can finish the second half of the museum in near-silence.
Buckingham Palace State Rooms β first slot of opening week
The State Rooms only open for ~10 weeks a year (mid-July through late September). Booking the first slot of the first week is the best move β opening day at 10am is the quietest moment of the entire season. By August Saturdays you're looking at maximum capacity. Compare to other London royal options at Westminster Abbey vs Buckingham Palace.
The live weather override
The advice above holds across an average year. When today's London weather is meaningfully different β heavy rain, a heatwave, an unusually clear day β the ranking flips. We re-rank the index in real time at tickets.uk/is-it-worth-it using Open-Meteo's forecast for central London, refreshed every 30 minutes.
The rules are simple:
- Wet day: indoor attractions (Churchill War Rooms, Madame Tussauds, Harry Potter Studio Tour) get a boost. Outdoor and view-based (Eye, Shard, Tower Bridge, Kew) get marked "wait for better weather."
- Clear day: view-based attractions get a 12% boost. Indoor recommendations stay neutral.
- High wind (40+ kph): view-dependent venues take a small penalty. The Eye still runs, but the photos are worse.
Today's specific picks update on the live index β bookmark tickets.uk/is-it-worth-it.
Common questions
What's the single best time to visit a London attraction in 2026?
For outdoor and view-based attractions, the 90-minute window before sunset is universally optimal β quieter crowds, golden hour photography, lit-skyline transition. For indoor attractions, weekday late-afternoon (around 4pm) is consistently the quietest window outside of opening time.
What time should I arrive at the Tower of London to avoid queues?
9am sharp at the opening gate. Crowd scores for the Crown Jewels viewing gallery collapse from 11am onwards on Saturdays. By arriving at opening you complete the Crown Jewels and White Tower before the bottleneck builds.
Is it busier on Saturdays or Sundays at London attractions?
Saturday afternoons are consistently the worst across all 10 attractions in our top 10. Sundays are roughly comparable to weekdays for most attractions, with the exception of Westminster Abbey (closed to tourists for services on Sundays).
What time does the London Eye get quiet?
After 6pm consistently. Editorial crowd scores hit 9/10 between 6pm and 8pm year-round. In summer, push to 8pm. In winter, the 4pm slot delivers golden hour with similarly quiet queues.
How accurate is Google popular_times for London attractions?
Reliable for relative ranking (when is it busiest vs quietest in a given day), less reliable for absolute capacity. We cross-check it against editorial observation and live ticket inventory data. The live ranking on tickets.uk combines all three signals.
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