Trip Recap: 3 Days in London with Our Toddler and Extended Family

Trip Recap: 3 Days in London with Our Toddler and Extended Family

We paid a short-but-sweet visit to London (read our full city guide here!) when our kid was 20 months old, and three other extended family members came along for the ride. This visit was bundled with our already planned trip to Paris (read about it here!), so while it was a great way to see two cities in one combined trip, our time was unfortunately limited. Still, we made the most of it!

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Every part of The Ivy is gorgeously decorated.

Great Britain has a vast history of colonization and oppression across the globe. By 1922 it was the world’s largest empire, controlling “a quarter of Earth’s land surface” and 20 percent of the world’s population at the time.

It goes without saying that the effects of Britain’s empire-building have reverberated (in both positive and negative ways) across the entire world.

Trip Purpose

Enjoy a multi-family trip to London, especially while our 20 month old could still fly free!

Our main goals for this trip were to (all at minimal cost):

  • visit Abbey Road Studios and recreate the iconic Beatles album cover; 
  • see a couple Harry Potter filming locations; 
  • enjoy high tea; and 
  • catch a glimpse of Buckingham Palace and the London skyline along the River Thames.

AGE OF OUR KID: 20 months

LENGTH OF STAY: 3 days

TIME OF YEAR: There are great deals on flights for visits in March or April, so we visited in mid-April. We do what we can to avoid summer travel, since European summers can be hot and flights can be quite expensive!

BASE COST

  • Accommodations: ~$60/night/person
  • Transportation: $200/person for the roundtrip Eurostar train ticket from Paris
  • Tube tickets: $10/person/day
  • Food & Incidentals: $50/person/day

Add-Ons

  • Shopping and souvenirs
  • Baggage storage: $10 There was a six-hour gap between our Airbnb check-out time and our train trip back to Paris, so we found a luggage holding station near King’s Cross to store our luggage while we fit in a couple extra hours of sightseeing.

Getting There

From Paris’ Gare du Nord train station, we boarded a Eurostar train headed for London’s St. Pancras International train station. The total trip was 2.5 hours. Since we tacked on this trip to an already scheduled trip to Paris, we saved a couple hundred dollars per person on what we would’ve paid in airfare (~$500+/person) from the Bay Area.

How We Prepared

All optional, if you'd rather play it by ear:

  • Book your major transportation tickets & accommodations

Where We Stayed

We enjoyed staying at an Airbnb between Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square. It was tight, but had a washer/dryer and plenty of beds for the lot of us. Plus it was in an ideal location: walking distance to a number of restaurants, neighborhoods, and the Tube.

Trip Highlights

Read our Guide to London for the full list of recommended family-friendly activities!

Abbey Road Studios

Epic, no?

While fun to recreate the Beatles' iconic album cover, the oncoming traffic on Abbey Road waits for no one!
Angelica and her child (sitting in a stroller) each stand in front of two red telephone booths in London.

St. John's Wood

St. John’s Wood is the neighborhood in which Abbey Road Studios is located, and was also a lovely destination overall. We enjoyed walking through the quaint neighborhood, taking photos next to phone booths, and eating brunch at art-deco-inspired The Ivy. The bakeshop GAIL’S was full of delicious treats, as well!

Extra hands on deck

With our positive adult-to-kid ratio (5:1), it made it less likely for us parents to feel overwhelmed with childcare and sightseeing. My partner even opted to stay in with the kid one night, enabling me to go out with my brother and cousins for a nightcap at a speakeasy!
Angelica and four family members smile in front of Buckingham Palace.
Buckingham Palace with the fam
An ornate brick building.
The facade of St. Pancras International Station is featured in the second Harry Potter film.

Harry Potter

We unfortunately did not come across any wizards or magical beings during our trip to London, but the magic is real for us Potterheads (after all, my kid’s baby shower theme was Harry Potter!). We tried to incorporate what we could of our Harry Potter fandom into our already-packed itinerary. The most convenient Harry Potter filming locations for us to visit were King’s Cross Station, St. Pancras International Station, and Piccadilly Circus, and it was fun to simply visit and take pictures at each location.

London Chinatown

Our Airbnb was within walking distance of London Chinatown, so we made the most of it and wandered through the popular small alleys of restaurants and shops, including Pilipinx-owned Mamasons Dirty Ice Cream.

London's green and gold-embossed chinatown gate stands tall in the dusk London sky.
Chinatown gate
Two multi-colored and purple drinks sit on a shelf under Pilipinx-inspired artwork.
Mamason's Dirty Ice Cream's halo-halo and ube cocoa.

Mishaps

When things don't always go according to plan...

A child looks out the window of a train.

Timing

We planned our itinerary to reduce the number of transitions between accommodations, which all sounded like a fine plan at the time. But in the end it meant that at the top of our trip we traveled for almost 24 hours straight over a total of SIX legs (Home-SFO-Stopover in Munich-Paris-Gare du Nord-St. Pancras-Airbnb). WHEW!

 

We were also very close to missing our Eurostar train from Paris to London due to traffic through Paris’s streets—despite the fact that we had given ourselves about 5 hours to do so. If we could do it all over again, we would definitely opt to take a couple days’ rest at our first destination (in this case, Paris) before moving onto the next. As a friend pointed out, even though it might mean switching between three sets of accommodations rather than just two, we could take it as an opportunity to see and stay in another part of town.

Speaking of bad timing, we were also mistaken about the Buckingham Palace changing of the guard, so we missed it by a day! Make sure you check the schedule ahead of time.

Places You Can Skip

Some are overhyped, others just weren't memorable enough to be among our top recs.

We realized on this trip that we don’t really enjoy fish and chips, even at an institution like Poppies Fish & Chips, which has been around since 1952!

A platter of fried fish and steak cut french fries at Poppies in London

Itinerary

Here's our 3-day London itinerary. Our pace was quick, but left room for rest and on-the-go naptimes for our toddler.

DAY 1: Travel Day/Arrived in London

  • Arrived from Paris, checked into Airbnb in Soho
  • Dinner at Poppies Fish & Chips
  • Walked through Leicester Square (with a quick stop at Shake Shack)
  • Walked through London Chinatown

DAY 2: St. John’s Wood, Buckingham Palace, & Chinatown 

Adults-only evening out in Chinatown:

Angelica and two of her cousins smile under a pink-flowering tree in London.
Standing under a flowering tree in St. John's Wood
Holding her child, Angelica smiles in front of a passing train.

DAY 3: Soho, Westminster, King’s Cross, Travel to Paris

Wishlist for our Next Visit

  • Now that I’m completely hooked on the Bridgerton empire, I’d love to visit Mayfair and other places referenced by the books and Netflix series.
Angelica and five of her family members (including her child in a stroller) smile from their seats on the London Tube.

London is one of those places I’m fascinated by, and also which makes me feel a bit icky when you think about England’s history overall. Despite being a prominent leader in the “free world,” England’s brutal track record of colonization and oppression has devastated countless nations and communities.

 

Still, London is one of the most diverse cities in the world and continues to be a top destination for travelers. If ever we visit again, I would love to take a tour through more neighborhoods that more diverse populations call home.

 

What are your favorite family-friendly must-dos in London? 

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Angelica (she/her) is of Cebuano(Pilipinx)-descent and was born and raised in Huchiun Ohlone territory (the East Bay Area--pay your Shuumi Land Tax!), where she also now resides with her partner and their toddler. She loves to spend her time sipping on boba and dirty chai lattes (sometimes together), and eating pescetarian goodies at BIPOC-owned cafes and restaurants.