Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon!
The best of Time Out straight to your inbox
We help you navigate a myriad of possibilities. Sign up for our newsletter for the best of the city.
By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news, events, offers and partner promotions.
Awesome, you're subscribed!
Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon!
By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news, events, offers and partner promotions.
Awesome, you're subscribed!
Thanks for subscribing! Look out for your first newsletter in your inbox soon!
By entering your email address you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and consent to receive emails from Time Out about news, events, offers and partner promotions.
Itâs not that we donât love them, but England is more than its boozers, Greggs and Buckingham Palace. Itâs also a country with a thriving live music scene, towering mountains and idyllic lakes, historic theatres and some of the most exciting chefs around. Itâs got huge art institutions moments away from Michelin-starred restaurants. In other words â from its natural wonders to festivals which will make you feel like youâre on a different planet â you really donât need to look far to keep yourself entertained when you visit here.Â
This country has also birthed greats like Shakespeare, The Beatles and grime music and has inspired some of the most romantic poetry out there. We have ancient, we have new, and although the weather sometimes leaves a lot to be desired, we can guarantee you a very memorable time when you take a trip to this small but mighty country. Start drawing up the bucket-list: these are the best things to do in England.Â
RECOMMENDED:Â
đ€ïžÂ The best things to do in the UKđŽó §ó ąó ·ó Źó łó ż The best places to go in Wales đ The best things to do in Londonđïž The most beautiful islands in Englandâš The most magical places in the UK
At Time Out, all of our travel guides are written by local writers who know their cities inside out. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
On the surface, the Black Cap was just like any other high street boozer: a one-armed bandit machine, a well-stocked bar, reliable regulars. But it wasnât just any old pub: since the 1960s, several generations of drag queens called it their home.Â
âIt was a drinking pub that had drag shows, that was it â real old-fashioned drag queen shows,â says Omar F. Okai, an award-winning director and choreographer. âA lot of the drag queens became really big stars, like Paul OâGrady.âÂ
The pub has been a landmark on Camden High Street since 1751. From witches, encounters with serial killer Dennis Nilsen and trailblazing drag queens like Mrs Shufflewick, Regina Fong and Paul OâGrady as Lily Savage, the Black Cap was a refuge for punters in the years leading up to the deadly AIDS epidemic and beyond.
Photograph: Roberto Herrett / Alamy Stock PhotoThe Black Cap, 2013
âYou had to pay 50p to get into the back of the bar, which was where the drag shows were,â says John Nicolaou, who worked as a bartender in the 1980s. âIt was great entertainment, and it was something you couldnât get on the straight scene. Weâd get up to 200 people a night, and when you have that many people comfortably in a place, it creates a certain atmosphere.â
That energy feels worlds away from the Black Cap that exists today. After an unsuccessful attempt from owners at the time, Faucett Inn, to sell the pub and turn it into luxury flats, the Black Cap called last orders in 2015. At times occupied by squatters, and af
Mince pies and mulled wine, reindeer and nativities â these are the obvious giveaways that Christmas is just around the corner. But everyone knows that the fun doesnât truly begin until the iconic Coca-Cola truck tour takes to the streets of the UK, spreading Christmas cheer one can of the fizzy stuff at a time.
And that time has now come and gone. Following a launch in London, the truck headed off around the UK, winding its way around the country and stopping likes of Belfast, Edinburgh, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds and Portsmouth. It finished up in Cardiff.Â
True to the season of giving the Coca-Cola Truck in 2024 was apparently an âeven bigger and more magical experienceâ, complete with festive games, lucky dips and merchandise. Coca-Cola partnered with hunger and food waste charity FareShare to donate a meal on behalf of every person that visited the Christmas Truck Tour this year.
This yearâs Coca-Cola Christmas campaign also included the 2024 ad campaigns and a digital AI experience. Hereâs everything you need to know about the Coke truck tour in 2024.Â
Coca-Cola truck locations and dates for 2024
After the London launch and stops in Scotland and Northern Ireland, the truck made its way through northern England and finished up in Wales.Â
Here were the Coca-Cola truckâs 2024 dates.
London (November 21)
Belfast, Custom House Square (December 1)
Edinburgh, Fort Kinnard (November 30)
Gateshead, Metro Centre (December 1)
Wakefield, Stonegate (December 3)
Ashton, Greene Kin
A cheap pint is increasingly hard to come by these days â especially here in London. Earlier this year, we reported on the arrival of the ÂŁ8 pint, which has started to become less of a rarity and more of an accepted part of living in the capital. But not all is lost. There are still a handful of boozers out there, fighting the good fight, serving up cheap pints for the city. The problem is knowing where to find them.Â
Thatâs why weâve rounded up all of the places you can get a slightly more affordable pint in Zone 1. At the time of writing, all of these draught pints cost £6 or less (please donât come at us if prices have changed since then).Â
Holborn/Farringdon/Soho
Horse & Wig, Holborn: ÂŁ5 Pravha, ÂŁ6 Madri, ÂŁ6 Aspalls, ÂŁ6 Guinness
The Albion, Farringdon: ÂŁ5.40 Youngâs London Original
The Marian Anderson, Farringdon: ÂŁ4 Guinness & Pravha, ÂŁ5 (all) Jubel Peach, Session Purity IPA, Blue Moon, Staropramen, Camden Hells, Madri, Harbour IPA
Freedom Bar, Soho: ÂŁ5.90 Heineken
Pelt Trader, Cannon Street: £5.50 Puns of Anarchy, £5.50 Brew York Calmer Chameleon, £5.80 Kelham Island Pale Rider, £5 Lord Marples, £6 König Pilsner, £5.70 Crafty Apple Cider
Paddington/Euston/Camden
Paddington Railway Club, Paddington: ÂŁ4.40 Madri, ÂŁ4 Coors, ÂŁ4 Carling, ÂŁ3.80 Caffreyâs, ÂŁ4.40 Guinness, ÂŁ4 Cider [Plus, happy hour Tues-Thurs, 2-5pm: everything ÂŁ3.50]
Golden Lion, Camden: ÂŁ4.90 Carling, ÂŁ5.45 Real Ale [Plus, all craft ales ÂŁ5.50 on âCraft Thursdaysâ]
Euston Tap, Euston: Cask ales from ÂŁ4, ÂŁ
For some, winter begins as soon as the mercury starts to dip below a certain chilly level. For others, itâs once the days have gotten to a certain length, with the darkness closing in before youâve even left the office.
But there are actual a few proper, official dates that mark the start of winter â and they depend on your calendar. Two of those dates have already passed, and another is coming up pretty soon.Â
When is the shortest day of the year in the UK in 2024?
Also known as the winter solstice, according to the astronomical calendar, the UK's winter begins on the shortest day of the year. So mark your calendars, because autumn is officially over on December 21 this year.
For those that go by the meteorological calendar (which is what the BBC Weather uses) winter begins on December 1. Meteorologists use three-month periods to define each season, so naturally, winter is the three coldest months - December, January and February.Â
Thereâs also a Celtic calendar still used in some parts of the UK, which recognises the start of winter as November 1.Â
What is the astronomical calendar?Â
While the meteorological calendar tracks the year based on seasons, the astronomical calendar follows what's happening up there with the planets.Â
Winter begins on the shortest day of the year according to the astronomical calendar because this is when the northern hemisphere is tilted the furthest away from the sun. It officially marks the day with the fewest hours of daylight.
How long does
Picking a secondary school for your offspring can feel like a pretty big deal. Itâs the place theyâre going to spend the next seven years of their lives in, so itâs only natural you want to make the right choice. And thereâs no shortage of great schools to choose from in the UK â our private schools, in particular, rank among the best on the planet.
But not everyone wants to fork out tens of thousands of pounds every year to send their kids to school, and you donât have to either. The UK is also home to a bunch of fantastic state schools, and the Sunday Times has just released its Parent Power guide for 2025, one of the most prestigious rankings out there. Helping parents out by providing a âreliable guide to academic achievement in schoolsâ, the Times guide ranks schools based on A-level and GCSE performance.
RECOMMENDED: đ The 10 best comprehensive schools in London.âïž The best private school in the UK is in London.
And this year, a number of state schools beat some of the priciest private schools in the UK with their results. The highest-placing fully comprehensive school was Tauheedul Islam Girlsâ High School in Blackburn, which came 196th.
The highest-placing partially selective school, meaning some students get in through test and some donât, was Dame Alice Owenâs School in Hertfordshire. Dame Alice is 37.5 percent selective.Â
Here are the top 10 fully comprehensive state secondary schools in the Timesâ 2025 Parent Power guide.
The UKâs best comprehensive state seconda
Ever found yourself throwing your clothes around, declaring you have nothing to wear and wishing you had a wardrobe like Kate Moss? Well, you could have just that, because Crisisâ annual Christmas pop-up is back in London this week, with pieces donated by the supermodel herself as well as Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher, Jessie Ware and David Gandy.Â
The week-long pop-up will return to Mayfair from today (December 9) to Saturday (December 14), with pieces donated by celebs helping raise funds for Crisis, a charity supporting people experiencing homelessness across the UK. Organised by Anda Rowland, director of Savile Row tailors Anderson & Sheppard, and menswear stylist Tom Stubbs, the pair have managed to raise over ÂŁ500,000 for the charity since launching the pop-up in 2018.Â
As well as pieces from Moss, Gallagher, Ware and Gandy, Crisis will also be flogging items from luxury brands including Marc Jacobs, Jimmy Choo and Vivienne Westwood. Thereâll also be 100 watches donated by the Watches of Switzerland Group up for grabs, with a raffle of selected goodies at the end of the week-long event.Â
The pop-up will take place at 28 Old Burlington Street in Mayfair from Monday December 8 to Saturday December 14, and is open everyday from 11am to 7pm.Â
You can find out more info on the official Crisis Instagram account here.
Did you see that? 12 more second-hand clothing supermarkets are coming to the UK.
Plus: These are the best high streets for independent shopping for Christmas in
Our names say a lot about us. Perhaps yours has been carried down through generations, perhaps youâre named after your parentsâ fave musician, maybe they just liked the way a name sounded. Whatever your name, some are undoubtedly more popular than others â but which names are Londonersâ favourites right now?Â
New data from the Office of National Statistics (ONS)Â reveals just that, showing which baby names were the most favoured in each London borough in 2023.Â
For male names, David was a clear fave in Hackney, while Leo trumped the top of the list in Richmond, Camden and Southwark (although it was joint with Noah there). Noah was also a top pick in Islington and Greenwich, while Theodore managed to sneak onto the list in Lambeth.Â
When it came to girls, Olivia was the most popular in Islington and Greenwich, while Leah and Miriam were joint faves in Hackney. Maya bagged top spot for Southwark, while Richmond had a clear preference for the name Grace. Sofia was the favourite in Camden.Â
And not that this is a competition, but there were two names that came out as more popular than the rest in London in 2023, with Muhammed and Amelia appearing to be most popular baby names in the capital.
But it wasnât just in London that they were in demand. Muhammed also proved the leading choice for boyâs names across England and Wales, while Amelia was the second-most picked out name for girls in the country after Olivia.
The ONS also observed some newbies on the list, with Hazel, Lilah, A
Christmas is the season of giving, a time to show your loved ones how much they mean to you with thoughtful gifts youâve been waiting all year to pick out. Or, more likely, it means scrambling down the high street last-minute looking for a present thatâll make do.Â
Whatever your style for getting Christmas shopping done, American Express has just released a handy list of the UKâs best high streets for independent shops. Partnering with retail experts GlobalData, the credit card company compared high streets across the country to find the ones with the most indie shops, the widest variety, the most âvibrancyâ and the highest number of millennial and gen-z business owners.Â
Stoke Newingtonâs Church Street in Hackney emerged a clear London winner, making it to fifth place on the list, and the only one in the capital.Â
And Church Street boasts plenty of delightful indie shops. Colourful books from Church Street Bookshop, vintage gems from Hilda and homeware bits and bobs from Revere the Residence are just some of the bits you can pick up from Church Street.Â
Nabbing first place in the list for the best high street in Britain was St Maryâs Street in Stamford, Lincolnshire, which scored highly for delivering âa unique experience for shoppersâ. You can see American Expressâs full list of the best UK high streets to get your Christmas shopping done here.
Did you see that weâve launched an interactive map of Londonâs best festive experiences?
Plus: two London shopping centres are offi
Egyptian cotton sheets, fluffy robes, rainfall showers, a well-stocked mini bar... all in a place with buckets of character and identity? Thereâs nothing quite like a top-notch boutique hotel. The UK has no shortage of exquisite boutique estabs â but which ones are the absolute, irrefutable best?Â
To help answer that question is Top 50 Boutique Hotels, an awards body which, as you can probably tell from the name, knows a thing or two about boutique hotels. Top 50 Boutique Hotels has just revealed its UK list for 2024, crowning the nationâs finest hotels by looking at stuff like service, experiences and the destination itself. Key members of the hospitality industry club together to name the crĂšme de la crĂšme of boutique stays.
Managing to defend its spot in first place is The Newt in Somerset. Set beside an âenchanting woodlandâ, the remodelled Georgian home comes complete with an indulgent spa and cosy fires.Â
Second on the list is Lime Wood Hotel in the New Forest National Park, favoured for its views of the rugged landscapes that you can take in from a bathtub. Hampshire grand country estate Heckfield Place in Hook ranked third.Â
The UKâs top 10 boutique hotels in 2024
The Newt in Bruton, Somerset
Lime Wood Hotel in Lyndhurst, Hampshire
Heckfield Place in Hook, Hampshire
Padstow Townhouse in Padstow, Cornwall
Grantley Hall in Ripon, Yorkshire
The Fife Arms in Braemar, Scotland
Hampton Manor in Solihull, Warwickshire
Moor Hall in Ormskirk, West LancashireÂ
Dormy House in B
Close your eyes and imagine Lapland: a toy factory complete with Christmas elves, reindeers resting on a snowy hill and a chance to say hello to Father Christmas before heâs off sneaking in and out of chimneys.Â
And what if we told you that instead of boarding a Ryanair flight to chilly Finland, you could experience all this by simply entering a âmagical doorwayâ right here in Britain? Well thatâs pretty much the deal over at LaplandUK, and the festive-themed immersive production has just announced plans to launch a second UK location.Â
Following the success of its original site in Ascot, Berkshire, which more than 300,000 Christmas-lovers tried to get tickets for this year, LaplandUK has unveiled plans to open its second site in Manchesterâs Capesthorne Hall, in the village of Siddington.Â
So if you missed out on the chance to grab tickets to this yearâs festivities (they did sell out in less than three hours after all) youâll have another chance at channelling your inner elf next year.Â
The less-good news is that the second LaplandUK wonât open in time for this festive season. Itâs expected to open in Christmas 2025. A trip to the elven village will run for 4 hours and 30 minutes, with tickets expected to go on sale next March. While the opening dates are yet to be revealed, the experience will run for its usual six weeks.Â
Each LaplandUK site takes 50 days to build and tells the theatrical story of Santa and his elves preparing for the biggest night of their year. The Manc
How much do you know about Aberdeenshire? Perhaps youâve heard of Aberdeen being called the âGrey Cityâ (thanks to its abundance of granite architecture) but the region has also got a bunch of stunning natural beauty, from sandy beaches that look out to the North Sea to the Cairngorms National Park.Â
And soon there will be a brand new museum to show off exactly what makes Aberdeenshire so great. Plans for a new multi-million Museum of Aberdeenshire and Peterhead Library have been formally submitted.Â
The project is part of the âCultural Tides: North Sea Connections in Aberdeenshireâ bid to renovate and extend the Macduff Marine Aquarium. Part of the ÂŁ20million of funding received from the UK Government will be used to refurbish the B-listed Arbuthnot House, which will host the new museum and town library.Â
Ewan Imrie, director of Collective Architecture (who prepared the plans), said: âOur extension design aims to create a landmark that will draw both locals and visitors to Peterhead, celebrating the unique identity and heritage of Aberdeenshire.âÂ
Transforming the building into a multi-use cultural space, the plans include adding an extension to the building for the library, with the gallery starting on the ground floor and a room dedicated to all things Peterhead, Aberdeenshireâs historic fishing port. A cafe will be open to the public downstairs, opening onto a walled garden, with a vision to turn the top floor of the space into a âdining destinationâ.Â
Live Life Aberdeen
For many of us, second-hand shopping is a cherished and near-sacred art form. Thereâs nothing quite like that feeling of throwing a row of hangers back before swishing through the rail, hunting for that one item that youâve been searching high and low for. It might not be so good for our wallets, especially when that one item suddenly becomes seven, but itâs good for the planet.Â
So start saving those pennies, because Charity Super.Mkt is preparing to open a dozen more shops next year, according to the Guardian. The pop-up â which began in a former Topshop in Londonâs Brent Cross shopping centre in January 2023 â has been so successful itâs now preparing to open a bunch of new sites to cater for the growing demand of preloved items.Â
Charity Super.Mkt brings together 55 local and national charities in the UK, including Crisis, Oxfam and FARA, and so far the stores have prevented 105,109kg of textile waste from reaching landfill and managed to sell ÂŁ3 million in pre-loved clothing.Â
Having opened a bunch of temporary sites across the south of England, from Oxford to Brighton, including two week stint in Londonâs Fenwickâs department store earlier this year, and a short spell in Manchester, the pre-loved market will open another 12 sites in 2025.Â
Taking over former fast fashion stores for a few months at a time, locations selected for the upcoming pop-ups include Edinburgh, Leeds, Sheffield and Londonâs Canary Wharf.
The latest pop-up opened in Londonâs Spitalfields this weeke
Christmas in London just wouldnât be the same without people moaning about Trafalgar Squareâs Christmas tree. And this yearâs arrival of the giant tree is no different, with many mocking its slightly flat appearance.
The iconic Christmas decoration made it to London on Monday (December 2) and reactions were mixed. But the Lord Mayor of Westminster, Robert Rigby, took to X to let the public know that while it âmay look slightly flat at firstâ but promised it will soon âunfurlâ into all its majestical festive glory.
Not everyoneâs convinced. LBC described how Londoners were mocking the Christmas tree as âhalf deadâ, while the Express said the public were raging that âhalf the fir is missing!â. The Daily Mail also added that the annual gift had turned up with dead âbranchesâ. Tough crowd.Â
One user on X said: âGoing to take a lot of fluffing to hide all those dead branches. Just saying,â while another poked fun at the firâs arrival with: âItâs here. Well half of it anywayâ.Â
But the tree clapped back this year, with its official X account telling users: âNow, before the haters start commenting on my branches, I have had 10 days of beauty sleep - who wouldnât look a bit flat after that kind of travel, but donât fret; itâll fluff up and shine just in time for my big moment.âÂ
Chopped down in November and transported hundreds of miles to London, spending days at sea, you probably wouldnât be looking so fresh after that journey either. Hereâs everything you need to know about this