Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hamleys is a fantastic toy store and well worth a visit for kids those ages. Agree about the tower and the war rooms if your kids are into history. We just went with 10 & 12yos who were fascinated with both.
With season and neighborhood info we can narrow down a lot of other ideas.
Totally agree on Hamleys. Great toy store with staff doing demonstrations from different toys including arts and crafts and painting of nails with cute little stickers and nerf guns. Very fun store.
Agree on Tower of London and boat cruise on Thames. We went to Stonehenge during the evening sunset and inner circle tour with a tour company who also took us to Bath. Harrods and Selfridges are great department stores as well that my kids loved because there was so much to see in the food halls. My kids also loved afternoon tea. They thought it was so fancy with the tiered trays and little sandwiches, scones and desserts.
How was the bolded? We're doing a tour like that in April with our eight year old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always recommended the Tower of London as the attraction not to miss. With kids that age, you can give many of the other big ones a pass, like parliament and Big Ben. You can visit the horse parade grounds in lieu of the changing of the guard. I would set aside time for the kids to do London things that are not sightseeing necessarily - visiting the toy dept and food halls at harrods in Knightsbridge, walking through the princess Diana memorial fountain and playing at her playground in Kensington gardens, picking up food from m&s /waitrose/sainsbury/tesco and having a picnic in the park, walking around covent garden, attending a musical, eating at borough market, etc.
Battersea park has a cool ropes course for kids if they need more vigorous activity. Sadly, kidzania is closed - that was perfect for kids your age.
Agree with Tower of London, especially if you won't see any other castles on your trip. And do the Crown Jewels.
Harrods is cool but the toy department wasn't that unique 20 years ago compared to 30 years ago. It was going mass market then.
Princess Diana was a Boomer/Gen X phenomenon. Not sure that her statue is a big draw for today's littles.
I like the Pret a Manger chain for having Panera-type meals (but better). They have sandwiches, salads, kid beverages, etc. and they are all over.
If your kids are interested in archaeology, Egyptology, classical Greece, etc. I would go to the British Museum to see the Elgin Marbles, Rosetta Stone, pagan gold hoards, etc.
We usually plan no more than two attractions per day. An AM one and a PM one.
You might find a suitable walking tour from Londonwalks. They are highly reputable. Kids under 8 are free.
https://www.walks.com/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hamleys is a fantastic toy store and well worth a visit for kids those ages. Agree about the tower and the war rooms if your kids are into history. We just went with 10 & 12yos who were fascinated with both.
With season and neighborhood info we can narrow down a lot of other ideas.
Totally agree on Hamleys. Great toy store with staff doing demonstrations from different toys including arts and crafts and painting of nails with cute little stickers and nerf guns. Very fun store.
Agree on Tower of London and boat cruise on Thames. We went to Stonehenge during the evening sunset and inner circle tour with a tour company who also took us to Bath. Harrods and Selfridges are great department stores as well that my kids loved because there was so much to see in the food halls. My kids also loved afternoon tea. They thought it was so fancy with the tiered trays and little sandwiches, scones and desserts.
How was the bolded? We're doing a tour like that in April with our eight year old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hamleys is a fantastic toy store and well worth a visit for kids those ages. Agree about the tower and the war rooms if your kids are into history. We just went with 10 & 12yos who were fascinated with both.
With season and neighborhood info we can narrow down a lot of other ideas.
Totally agree on Hamleys. Great toy store with staff doing demonstrations from different toys including arts and crafts and painting of nails with cute little stickers and nerf guns. Very fun store.
Agree on Tower of London and boat cruise on Thames. We went to Stonehenge during the evening sunset and inner circle tour with a tour company who also took us to Bath. Harrods and Selfridges are great department stores as well that my kids loved because there was so much to see in the food halls. My kids also loved afternoon tea. They thought it was so fancy with the tiered trays and little sandwiches, scones and desserts.
Anonymous wrote:Hamleys is a fantastic toy store and well worth a visit for kids those ages. Agree about the tower and the war rooms if your kids are into history. We just went with 10 & 12yos who were fascinated with both.
With season and neighborhood info we can narrow down a lot of other ideas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kids are into Harry Potter, go to the Warner brothers studio and get tix well in advance of your trip! We took DD when she was 8, and she loved it.
+1 like months in advance. I waited until 2 weeks to give us some wiggle room for our itinerary, and it was all booked. Kids eventually went back, but as teens. My spouse is from the UK so we go back every couple of years.
Does anyone know if a paid tourist bus tour can get you in? That is the usual solution for "no tix online".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your kids are into Harry Potter, go to the Warner brothers studio and get tix well in advance of your trip! We took DD when she was 8, and she loved it.
+1 like months in advance. I waited until 2 weeks to give us some wiggle room for our itinerary, and it was all booked. Kids eventually went back, but as teens. My spouse is from the UK so we go back every couple of years.