Skip to main content
Home United KingdomAttractions

The UK's Best Attractions

Big Ben, the Tower of London, Stonehenge — and what's actually worth the ticket price.

In London: the Tower of London (Crown Jewels), Buckingham Palace's Changing of the Guard (free to watch), the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben (viewed from outside for most visitors), and the British Museum (free entry). Outside London: Stonehenge (about 2 hours away) and York (about 2 hours by train) are the classic day-trip pairing. Book timed tickets online in advance for anything with a queue — it's usually cheaper than the door price too.

The UK doesn't lack for postcard attractions — the challenge is knowing which ones are genuinely worth a slot in a short trip and which are a 45-minute queue for a photo you've already seen online. Here's the honest version: what's worth it, current ticket prices, and the booking tricks that actually save time and money.

Questions people actually ask

What are the top 3 must-see attractions in the UK?
The Tower of London (for the Crown Jewels and 1,000 years of history in one place), the British Museum (free, genuinely world-class, and open late one evening a week), and Stonehenge as a half-day trip out of London. Together they cover royal history, culture, and ancient Britain in one visit.
Do I need to book UK attraction tickets in advance?
For anything popular — the Tower of London, Buckingham Palace's State Rooms (summer only), Stonehenge, the Harry Potter Studio Tour — yes. Timed online tickets are typically cheaper than paying at the door and guarantee you a slot, especially in July and August.
Is the British Museum really free?
Yes — general admission is free (a donation is welcomed, not required), though some special exhibitions charge a separate ticket. Book a free timed entry slot online ahead of a summer visit; it gets genuinely crowded.