Amy is a London-based freelance journalist and has been writing for the Time Out UK and London sites since January 2023. She mostly covers all of the big things happening outside of the capital, including nightlife, food, culture and sustainability.

Originally from the Brecon Beacons, she’s got to know all of London’s best green spaces and will spend weekends digging through charity shops, finding new coffee spots and looking for live music. 

Amy Houghton

Amy Houghton

Contributing writer

Articles (89)

The best music festivals in London for 2026

The best music festivals in London for 2026

We’ve made it through the most depressing month of the year, the endless wait for that post-Christmas payday is finally over, and festival season 2026 is on our minds. By the time summer rolls around, Londoners will be absolutley spoilt for choice. With something taking place almost every weekend throughout the warmer months, you can forget trekking across the country to live in a field for five days; simply hop on the tube and before you know it you’re listening to your favourite artists, tinny to hand, knowing that there’s a hot shower and a cosy bed waiting for you once the day is over.  The future of events in Brockwell Park was thrown up in the air in 2025, but you’ll be glad to know that most of the south London park’s usual lineup of events will return in 2026, with Cross The Tracks, Field Day and Mighty Hoopla all in the diary for late May. And the line-up announcements for next year’s events are already coming in thick fast, with huge acts like Tyler, The Creator, Lewis Capaldi, Lorde, Lily Allen, Blood Orange and Deftones all set to take to London stages come the summer. Have a scroll through our comprehensive guide – which we keep meticulously updated with all the latest line-up announcements – and see what takes your fancy. RECOMMENDED: ⛺ The best UK music festivals🌍 The best festivals in Europe
The 8 best team-building activities in London

The 8 best team-building activities in London

Work-dos are a hard art to master. How do you find something that strengthens your team spirit and that everyone in the office, across multiple generations, is actually going to find fun?  Stuck for ideas? You’re in the right place. Whether you’re after some healthy competition among co-workers or an activity that requires all your colleagues to work together, London has a load of classic and quirky ways for your team to let their hair down. So, take notes, we’ve rounded up the best of them. These are some of the top places in the city to go to build your office bonds.  RECOMMENDED: The best office party venues to hire in LondonThe top London venues for a private bash 
The most underrated destinations in Europe for 2026 – hidden gems away from the crowds

The most underrated destinations in Europe for 2026 – hidden gems away from the crowds

In 2026, European travel is shifting fast. We’ve seen overcrowding, overheating and plenty of anti-tourism measures across the continent – and as a result, travellers are actively seeking out quieter, lesser-known destinations away from the tourist crowds. And if that sounds like you, you’re in luck – here at Time Out, underrated destinations are our bread and butter.  This list has been updated for 2026 by Time Out’s global network of local experts who have been to every single destination featured (often multiple times), highlighting destinations that are not only overlooked, but genuinely worth visiting right now. We’ve got alternative Scandinavian city breaks, remote islands only accessible by ferry, and destination dupes for some of Europe’s hottest beach holidays, from the Algarve to the Amalfi Coast.  ➡️ Discover the best city breaks in Europe for 2026 Why travel to underrated destinations in 2026? Sure, we love the classics for a reason. But if you’ve ever queued an hour for a pastry, spent your day’s budget on a coffee or had to book a museum three months in advance, you’ll know why more and more of us are searching for under-the-radar breaks: it’s the crowds. In fact, in some cities – the likes of Amsterdam, Venice, Barcelona – overtourism is so bad, they’ve been forced to clamp down on crowds with anti-tourism measures, from daily visitor limits to outright bans on new hotels. If you’re coming up against these, then we’d say that’s a pretty good reason to head some
St Patrick’s Day 2026 in London: events, parties and celebrations

St Patrick’s Day 2026 in London: events, parties and celebrations

The Irish really know how to celebrate, so when it comes to St Patrick’s Day in London, the city’s Celtic community has no problem showing us how it’s done. With an estimated 170,000 expats from the Emerald Isle living in the city, and many more Londoners with Irish heritage, the celebration of Ireland’s patron saint is always one big welcoming bash, involving plenty of dancing, hearty traditional dishes, a huge parade and as many pints of Guinness and drams of whiskey as you can handle. The Mayor of London’s annual St Patrick’s Day Festival celebration will take place on Sunday, March 15 – two days before the official holiday – and, as usual, thousands of revellers are expected to watch the parade wend its way from Hyde Park Corner to Trafalgar Square for a giant free party with Irish music, food and performances from 12noon to 6pm. If you don’t fancy braving the crowds of central London for the main event in the capital, there are still plenty of St Patrick’s Day parties and events to check out. We’ll be rounding up the best of them below as they get announced, so you’ve got plenty of time to get planning for a very green week. RECOMMENDED🍻 The best Irish pubs and bars in London☘️ Our ultimate guide to the St Patrick’s Day parade and festival🌱 The best London events in March
The best places to watch the Six Nations 2026

The best places to watch the Six Nations 2026

The Six Nations rugby tournament is almost wrapped up for another year, but not before one last weekend of action. For the final time in 2026, rugby fans will be taking over boozers, beer gardens and outdoor screens across London on Saturday to watch the three climactic fixtures. And it’s an especially exciting final round this year, with three teams battling it out at the top of the table.  France, Scotland and Ireland all have a shot at taking home the championship trophy, depending on the results of their fixtures, at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin and the Stade de France in Paris.   You could just watch on your telly at home, but if you’d prefer to catch every scrimmage, try and conversion in a lively atmosphere with a nice freshly-poured Guinness in hand, head to one of the rugby pubs, bars, beer halls, markets and social clubs listed here, where you’ll find free-flowing pints, special guest appearances and countless renditions of ‘Swing Low, Sweet Chariot’. RECOMMENDED: More great things to do in London this weekend  Fifth Round Fixtures Here are the final three matches of the Six Nations 2026: Saturday 14 March 2:10pm kickoff – Ireland vs Scotland 4:40pm kickoff – Wales vs Italy 8.10pm kickoff – France vs England Best Spots to Watch Six Nations: At A Glance 🏉 Best for pre-match fun: Bat & Ball, Stratford 🍀 Best for Irish fans: London Irish Centre, Camden 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 Best for Welsh fans: London Welsh Centre, Bloomsbury 🍻 Best for big groups: Flat Iron Square, Boroug
London events in May

London events in May

May truly is one of London’s finest months if you ask us. Not only is the city pleasantly warm and bursting with colourful spring blooms, but everyone is giddy with the possibilities of the coming summer. And most excitingly of all, there are not one, but two bank holidays on which to embark on inaugural rooftop bar excursion of the summer, rock out at one of the year’s first music festivals, lounge about in your favourite park, check out all those must-see exhibitions you’ve been meaning to catch or escape the city on a day trip or mini-break. And if that isn’t enough to keep you entertained, here’s our guide to the best events, parties, pop-ups and things to do in May 2026 in London. You’re in for one sweet, sweet month. London’s best things to do in May at a glance: 🪩 Best for party people: GALA 🌷 Best for botanists: RHS Chelsea Flower Show  🎶 Best for pop music stans: Mighty Hoopla  ✏️ Best for something new: Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration 🎭 Best for theatre-goers: 1536 at the Almeida
The best budget hotels in London for 2026

The best budget hotels in London for 2026

London has never exactly been known as a bargain destination. But the good news is that The Capital still has plenty of great places to stay without blowing your entire travel budget. Every hotel on this list has been picked by Time Out’s editors because it offers something special – whether that’s a brilliant location, standout design, or simply excellent prices. Book one of these and you’ll get the kind of buzz only a great deal can deliver. Then spend the money you’ve saved on the really important things. Like, erm… the pub. What do we mean by ‘budget’? In a city like London, ‘budget’ is always relative. Prices can vary hugely depending on the neighbourhood, time of year and even the day of the week, so finding a good deal is often about knowing where to look and booking smart. For this list, we’ve focused on places where rooms come in under £200 a night, with plenty dipping well below the £100 mark if you book ahead or travel off-peak. You’ll also find a few hostels offering dorm beds for as little as £12 per person, making them some of the cheapest ways to stay in the capital. 🛌 Our guide to the best Airbnbs in London What's the cheapest area to stay in London?  Honestly, it depends on what you're looking for! Budget hotels and hostels are scattered all over the city, so it often comes down to how far you’re willing to travel. Central areas like Shoreditch, King’s Cross and parts of the South Bank can still offer surprisingly good-value stays (which means you're in wal
Wimbledon tennis screenings in London

Wimbledon tennis screenings in London

London summer has officially kicked into gear. And that means that the Wimbledon Tennis Championships – aka the oldest, and arguably the very best, tennis tournament in the world – is back very, very soon.  This year the tournament is happening from Monday June 29 - Sunday July 12 2026. Thousands will be descending on SW19 to see the matches go down in real life but live screenings will be peppered all over London for thousands more who missed the ticket ballot or can’t be bothered to queue in the hopes of getting in day of.  With a jug of Pimms in one hand and a punnet of strawberries in the other, you’ll hardly know the difference. Even better – most watch parties won’t cost you a single penny. So, pack your picnic blanket, fill your flask and pull up a pew at a summery screening near you. Most haven't been announced for 2026 yet, but check back and more will be added closer to the time. RECOMMENDED: Our full guide to Wimbledon 2026.
Best new restaurants in London of 2026 so far

Best new restaurants in London of 2026 so far

Every week, a frankly silly amount of brilliant new restaurants, cafés and street food joints arrive in London. Which makes whittling down a shortlist of the best newbies a serious challenge. But here it is. The 20 very best new restaurants in the capital, ranked in order of greatness and deliciousness. All of them have opened over the past 12 months and been visited by our hungry critics. So go forth and take inspo from this list, which is updated regularly. Check in often to find out what we really rate on the London restaurant scene. And look here for all the info about the best new openings in March 2026. London's best new restaurants at a glance: 🍛 Central: DakaDaka, Mayfair 🍠 North: Ling Ling’s, Islington 🇹🇭 South: Kruk, Peckham 🍝 East: Tiella, Bethnal Green 🥗 West: Martino’s, Chelsea March 2026: We have a new Number 1! The newly-opened Tiella in Bethnal Green has scooped the top spot thanks to knockout regional Italian dishes from chef Dara Klein. Other fresh additions include the slinky Martino's in Chelsea, Cambodian residency Barang at The Globe in Borough Market, foodie wine bar in a one-time Clerkenwell tattoo parlour Passione Vino, perfect produce at Dockley Road Kitchen in Bermondsey, Korean fusion spot Calong in Stoke Newington, Hunanese heat at Fiery Flavors in Surrey Quays, Ukrainian elegance at Sino in Notting Hill, cool diner energy at Dover Street Counter in Mayfair, Georgian classics at DakaDaka in Mayfair, and veggie-friendly Thai at Kruk in Peck
London Fashion Week 2026: dates, tickets and what you need to know for February event

London Fashion Week 2026: dates, tickets and what you need to know for February event

Twice a year, fashion Christmas comes to London, bringing with it whole closets full of covetable new looks you’ll dream of wearing. London Fashion Week returns next week for another deep-dive into the trends and styles that will be dominating red carpets, shops and streets in autumn and winter 2026 (AW26).  Across five days, the city’s most stylish will be hanging out around the Strand and sitting front row to see fresh looks from the likes of Simone Rocha, Chopova Lowena, Harris Reed, Burberry and Fiorucci. Yes, the majority of shows are invite-only, but that doesn’t mean you can’t be in the know. Here’s all the information you need ahead of London Fashion Week AW26.  When is London Fashion Week 2026?  LFW takes place twice a year: in February and September. The next fashion week will be from Thursday February 19 to Monday February 23.  Where is London Fashion Week held?  London Fashion Week usually takes place at the British Fashion Council’s own show space at 180 The Strand. The closest tubes are Holborn and Temple. Several events will also be held at external locations across the city. How do I get tickets to London Fashion Week 2026?  We hate to be the ones to tell you but unfortunately, most of the LFW shows are invite-only, so you can’t buy tickets.  What designers should I be watching out for?  Although you may not be able to see the shows in real life, you will be able to watch them live on the London Fashion Week website. So, these are all the one’s worth tuning in
Is this Europe’s most wholesome city break?

Is this Europe’s most wholesome city break?

Tell someone you’re taking a city break to Belgium and you’re generally met with a painfully unenthusiatic ‘oh, that’s cool’. For one reason or another, that small nation bordered by holiday heavyweights like France and the Netherlands, has long been cursed with a reputation for being the most beige country on the continent. Travellers are slowly starting to see through that myth, though. Increasingly, people are booking trips to the likes of Brussels for its grand political prestige, Antwerp for its fashion crowd or Bruges for its historical cobbled streets. But what if I told you there’s another Belgian city that gives all three of those, as well as Europe’s more famous cities, a run for their money?  Thirty miles east of Bruges, Ghent is a small and endearing city that’s understatedly cool. It’s packed with stunning cycle routes and environmentally and socially conscious communities, littered with fantastic slow fashion stores and a wealth of organic shops. It’s also the veggie capital of Europe – every week its cafes and restaurants focus on serving plant-based fare as part of the ‘Veggie Thursdays’ initiative – and in 2024 it held the title of the European Youth Capital. Oh, and here’s an adorable fun fact: every time a baby is born in one of Ghent’s maternity wards, parents can press a button that causes the city’s streetlamps to flicker in celebration. Does it get more wholesome than that?  ➡️ READ MORE: The best city breaks in Europe for 2026, picked by Time Out edito
Easter weekend parties and clubnights

Easter weekend parties and clubnights

With a bounty of great parties happening in the capital this Easter bank holiday, you can dance till you drop. Here’s our round-up of the long weekend’s best parties from Thursday April 2 to Monday April 6 2026, from (hopefully) sun-soaked daytime soirees to late-night ragers at some of the city’s best clubs.  If you’ve got the stamina, you could turn Easter into a proper bender. Just don’t count on a quick resurrection in time for work on Tuesday. RECOMMENDED:The best Easter events and activities in LondonThe 50 best nights out in London

Listings and reviews (82)

Brockwell Park

Brockwell Park

What is it?  Brockwell Park is a much-needed slab of green (84 acres) just south of Brixton. Locals from the surrounding areas flock here in summer to sun-worship (if they’re lucky), fly kites, play football, swim in the outside pool, garden in the community greenhouses and parade a stunning array of dogs. The vast space was once the private grounds of Brockwell Hall and was opened to the public in 1891 by the London County Council. The hall still stands today and is one of several grade II listed buildings dotted about the park, including the emerald green Tritton Tower Clock, which was gifted to celebrate Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee.  Why go?  It's big, diverse and interesting, with numerous areas to appeal to different tastes, from the calm, rolling meadows around Tulse Hill and walled ‘Old English’ flower garden to the BMX track and sloped football pitches by the Dulwich Road. The playground in Brockwell Park is a favourite, with its aerial slide, massive sandpit and sections for different age groups; nearby you’ll find duck ponds and a huge paddling pool. There’s also a lovely little minature railway open at the weekends May to October, weather permitting – it’s not particularly massive but it’s been just £1 for a return for years now. Don’t miss:  Regular events at the park include circuses and a busy schedule of summer concerts and festivals including Wide Awake, Mighty Hoopla, Field Day and Cross the Tracks. But one of the most beloved annual events is the Lam
Dialled In

Dialled In

After a year out, Dialled In is returning to the capital city for its fifth birthday celebrations. Once again, the all-dayer will bring established and emerging artists from all over diasporic and South Asian countries and cities to east London. Unlike past editions, this year’s event will take over multiple venues throughout Dalson, from Café OTO to The Divine to Rio Cinema. It’ll see former member of The xx, Baria, make her first return to the London festival circuit in fifteen years, a rare London live set from rising star Gayathri Krishnan and the London debut of Lifafa, frontman of Peter Cat Recording Co. That’s alongside appearances from the likes of Sarathy Korwar, Mya Mehm, Anish Kumar and Raf Reza. This year will also see the festival expand into the realms of food, film, dance and comedy. 
Mother's Day Biscuiteers Afternoon Tea

Mother's Day Biscuiteers Afternoon Tea

Afternoon tea is a classic Mother’s Day activity, so you can’t go wrong with this offering from Biscuiteers, available at both its Notting Hill and Belgravia cafés for a month from March 8. The spread will include Biscuiteers’ signature hand-iced biscuits, Tregothnan tea, plus the mini sandwiches (with fillings like cheese and fig, ham and truffle and smoked salmon and cream cheese), patisserie (think coconut and mango mousse cake and strawberry and champagne macarons) and freshly baked scones crucial to any good afternoon tea. If you’re willing to spend a little extra on mumsie, you can add a glass of bubbly or a DIY biscuit icing session. There’s also a complimentary (undisclosed) gift included for the woman of the hour.
Cut A Shine Family Barn Dance: St Patrick's Day Special

Cut A Shine Family Barn Dance: St Patrick's Day Special

Gather your brood and join Hackney’s ceilidh band Cut A Shine for its afternoon of family friendly St Patrick’s barn dancing. The bandmembers will teach you and the little’uns all of the crucial ceili moves and ensure that everyone is kept fueled with traditional Irish stew and champ (vegan option available). Things will round off at 3.30pm with a disco where the kids can show off all their newly-learned Celtic choreography. Oh, and there’s a fully stocked bar of Guinness and whiskey for the grown ups. 
Anish Kapoor

Anish Kapoor

Prepare to have your senses thrown into chaos. Anish Kapoor’s first major UK exhibition in the UK took place at the Southbank Centre’s Hayward Gallery in 1998. Nearly 30 years later, the internationally acclaimed sculptor’s work is coming back to the gallery for his largest UK show to date. The exhibition displays recent pieces by Kapoor made with futuristic light-absorbing nanotechnology, as well as works that defined the early part of his career.  There will be huge disorientating mirror sculptures, a colossal PVC installation, a foreboding mass of red and black wax drooping from the ceiling, and a striking collection of carnal paintings made using silicone, resin and pigment.  
Casa Felicia

Casa Felicia

5 out of 5 stars
Homely isn’t quite the word that comes to mind when you pull back the heavy velvet curtain separating Casa Felicia from the dozy Queen’s Park street outside. Chic, for sure. Elegant, certainly. A parade of two-cover tables are packed close together in the main whitewashed dining room, and over in a far corner, there’s a booth for larger groups which is painted entirely in an intense sultry red. But the deeper into the evening we go, the more we’re taken in by this place’s unexpected down-to-earth charm.   Fettuccine porcini and paccheri with mussels and squid are simple but impeccable Casa Felicia is helmed by chef Francesco Sarvonio, formerly of Manteca and currently of Elephant. The menu switches up daily, but always promises southern Italian ‘soul food’. A pleasing heap of puntarelle salad embellished with pear and hazelnuts, and a faultless seabass crudo speckled with crispy red pepper starts us off. We’re then presented with the most intriguing take on parmigiana I’ve ever seen. It doesn’t come in the traditional form of layered aubergine coins, but as the whole vegetable roasted, skinned and fried in a tempura batter, then cocooned in cheese fondue with a pool of marinara on the side. It’s fantastic – the batter lightly encases the vegetable like a chiffon blanket and the aubergine manages to be both firm and completely melt-in-the-mouth.   Don’t get carried away with the antipasti, as the bowls of pasta (handmade with just semolina and water, no egg) are truly generou
Adoh!

Adoh!

4 out of 5 stars
Adoh! (Sri-Lankan for ‘oi!’) is loud.  Sat on Maiden Lane in frenetic, tourist-packed Covent Garden, this Sri Lankan spot from Kolamba duo Eroshan and Aushi Meewella fits right in. While Kolamba and its sister restaurant on Liverpool Street are sleek, sophisticated haunts, this is a maximalist whirlwind. Chopped roti gets more heavenly with each chewy bite Adoh’s goal is to emulate the rapid, chaotic energy of Colombo and its street food culture. The decor is raucous – the tables a striking shade of red and the walls busy with storybook murals depicting hand-painted trucks of South Asia. As for service, it’s full speed ahead. You can very easily be in and out within an hour, and fully satisfied. In the throbbing heart of the theatreland that’s no bad thing.  The menu features a blend of authentic bits (isoo vadai, mutton rolls or roti and curry) and some milder hybrid dishes (fried chicken and curry leaf waffles are best suited to less adventurous members of your party). Shiny squares of prawn toast dolloped with tamarind sauce start us off, swiftly followed by a supple dosa spread with smoky masala, alongside a rather dry coconut roti with eye-wateringly hot lunu miris chilli paste.  The must-order main (which at £17 is the priciest item on the menu) is crab kothu, a late-night classic in Sri Lanka. The bronze mountain of chopped roti, egg and stir fried crab meat (mutton, chicken or jackfruit kothu are available too) isn’t particularly pretty, but drenched in curry sauce (p
Click! 100 Years of the Photobooth

Click! 100 Years of the Photobooth

One hundred years ago, a strange curtained box appeared on Broadway in New York City. If you went inside and slotted in 25 cents, you’d emerge with eight sepia tinged photos of yourself in a matter of minutes. It was the Photomaton – the world’s first fully automated photobooth. Fast forward to the 21st century and photobooths are in bars, train stations, cinemas, record shops and on streets all over the world. The Photographer’s Gallery is marking a century of the machines with Click!, an archival exhibition exploring their imperfections, their quirks and their most famous fans. Naturally, there’ll be a working photobooth for visitors to take their own snap.
Boris Mikhailov: Ukrainian Diary

Boris Mikhailov: Ukrainian Diary

The UK’s first major retrospective of acclaimed Ukrainian artist Boris Mikhailov is coming to the Photographers’ Gallery. A ‘kind of proto-punk’, Mikhailov has been capturing and commenting on life in Ukraine since the 1960s – from the everyday consequences of the collapse of the Soviet Union to the realities of people living on the edges of society – through photography, conceptual work, painting and performance art. Ukrainian Diary brings much of that work together to illustrate the tumultuous social and political changes that have shaken Eastern Europe over the past fifty years.
Zofia Rydet: Sociological Record

Zofia Rydet: Sociological Record

In 1978, Zofia Rydet decided that was going to photograph the inside of every Polish household. Aged 67, she began knocking on doors and asking occupants if they’d be willing to partake in her project. She continued to knock on doors for the next three decades, collecting everyday stories and creating ‘one of the most important achievements in 20th century Polish photography’. More than 100 of Rydet’s prints will be on display at the Photographers’ Gallery alongside books and personal letters offering extra insight into her sociological mission.
Good Hotel

Good Hotel

4 out of 5 stars
When a place rates itself as assuredly (in huge bold letters, no less) as Good Hotel does, it’s natural to feel a little sus. But it’s true: Good Hotel really does make you feel good. Service is cheery and laid-back without being overly casual, the food leaves nothing to complain about and – maybe it’s the luxurious silence of the area or perhaps the proximity to gently lapping water – I visited in 2024, and I don’t know if I’ve ever had a better night’s sleep in the city. Aside from all that, guests can walk out of Good Hotel feeling extra gratified by virtue of its ‘do good’ DNA. Why stay at Good Hotel? As you walk along Royal Victoria Docks, this huge black shipping container is impossible to miss. Originally built as a Danish prison, this floating hotel docked in London in 2016 after sailing across from Amsterdam. Its founder, Marten Dresden, had come up with the Good Hotel concept four years prior while travelling in Guatemala. Now, each night you spend there pays for a week of school for a child in South America, with profits also going towards hospitality training for long-term unemployed locals (lots of whom become Good Hotel employees).  The hotel also hosts regular community workshops and events that guests can attend. There are comedy nights, yoga classes, salsa classes, kids art clubs and, if you’re in the mood to be extra good, litter-picking around the local area. What are the rooms like at Good Hotel? Throughout the hotel, the interiors are slick, earthy-toned
Good Fortune Club

Good Fortune Club

One of the more recent additions to Wimbledon Village, Good Fortune Club is bright and buzzy with a sprawling menu of Cantonese dishes, the best known of which is its handmade dim sum. Stop by with a large, hungry posse to pack your table with bamboo steamers and sample har gau (shrimp-filled dumplings,) xiao long bao (pork soup dumplings), cuttlefish cake and more.

News (2314)

This new east London museum has been crowned one of the best places to visit in the world in 2026 by TIME magazine

This new east London museum has been crowned one of the best places to visit in the world in 2026 by TIME magazine

London has long been a powerhouse of cultural innovation. This is a place where megastars hone their craft, where playwrights debut their productions, where artists train and where writers find inspiration. So, it’s little surprise that a new venue here in the capital has featured on TIME magazine’s latest edition of World’s Greatest Places.  Each year, TIME’s international network of correspondents and contributors nominate places around the world that they believe are offering new and exciting experiences for travellers. The result is a list of 100 game-changing hotels, cruises, restaurants, attractions, museums and parks, from Philadelphia’s Netflix House to Sydney’s Fish Market.   There were just two places in the UK that made the cut this year, one of which was London’s V&A East Storehouse. TIME spotlighted the venue, which opened in Stratford’s Queen Elizabeth Park in May last year, for its ‘radically different approach’ and the way that it ‘reimagines the museum-going experience as a two-way conversation, not a top-down monologue’.  If you’re unfamiliar with the Storehouse, the concept is fairly simple. Stacked with more than 250,000 objects and 350,000 books from the V&A’s archives, it offers a peek behind the scenes to show how a working museum goes about cataloguing and caring for artefacts. It’s the first public venue of its kind.  Unlike a regular museum, there are no permanent displays and archivists can move the objects around at any time. There are no lengthy g
When do the clocks go forward in 2026? Here’s when British Summer Time officially starts next week

When do the clocks go forward in 2026? Here’s when British Summer Time officially starts next week

Longer, brighter days are finally in sight! In a little over a week, the UK will be swapping Greenwich Mean Time for British Summer Time (AKA daylight saving time) and putting all our clocks forward by an hour. The sun will set later in the evening and the season of beer gardens, festivals and al fresco dinners will finally be upon us. No more leaving the office in the pitch black, no more vitamin D deficiency and no more being in pyjamas by 6pm. Before we know it, Easter and its delicious four-day bank holiday weekend will be upon us, too. From the exact date clocks go forward to why we have it in the first place, here’s everything you should know about British Summer Time this year. RECOMMENDED: When is Easter 2026? UK bank holiday dates in April. What date do the clocks go forward in 2026? The clocks will go forward by an hour to mark the start of British Summer Time on Sunday March 29. That’s a little over a week after spring officially begins which is this Friday March 20.  What time do the clocks go forward? The clocks will spring forward one hour at 1am. So, it’ll become 2am.  What is British Summer Time? Also known as daylight saving time, British Summer Time is is simply the name for the practice of turning clocks forward in the summer so that darkness falls at a later time. Why do the clocks go forward? Winding the clocks forward in spring started in the UK in 1916 as a way of making better use daylight hours and getting maximum sun. Back then, it meant people c
A huge new £1.5 billion public transport network has been announced for northern England

A huge new £1.5 billion public transport network has been announced for northern England

Power to the people! This week, South Yorkshire’s mayor revealed plans to create a brand new integrated transport network for the region, with buses set to come under public control for the first time since 1986.  Buses, bike hires and trams in Barnsley, Doncaster, Rotherham and Sheffield will all come under the new network, known as the People’s Network (a nod to Sheffield’s 1980s nickname, The People’s Republic of South Yorkshire). They’ll be rebranded in a bold orange and black colour scheme.  First, the branding will be rolled out across bus stops and bus shelters in the regions. Then, in 2027, residents will start seeing it on the buses themselves, on driver uniforms, on trams and tram stops and across the Sheffield city centre bike hire scheme. And within five years, the People’s Network brand will be splashed across 25 new trams and on wayfinding signage throughout South Yorkshire.  Image: South Yorkshire People Network The huge overhaul is part of a £1.5 billion investment in the region’s transport, which will see the tram network upgraded and the buses brought under public control over the next three years (the Sheffield Supertram was already returned to public hands in 2024 after nearly three decades of private ownership under Stagecoach). Buses in Doncaster and Sheffield will be franchised in September 2027 and the rest across South Yorkshire will be franchised by 2029.  The move follows in the footsteps of Greater Manchester which, under Andy Burnham, was the f
It’s official: the world’s 6th most beautiful place is in the UK

It’s official: the world’s 6th most beautiful place is in the UK

It can be easy for us Brits to take for granted, but here’s your reminder – there are endless stunning sights to see across the UK. We’ve got towering mountains and pristine beaches, otherworldly forests and surreal fairy pools, charming villages and dramatic indigo lochs.  There are some parts of this country that are so spectacular that we’ve named them among the 51 most gorgeous places on the planet.   Our list includes the immense Victoria Falls in southern Africa, the storied Red Rocks Amphitheatre in the USA, the mirrored salt flats of Bolivia and the striped mountains of the Zhangye National Geopark in China. But ranking above all of those was one place far closer to home. In at number six on Time Out’s guide to the most beautiful places in the world is Ullswater. Curving seven and a half miles, Ullswater is the second largest lake in the Lake District and, plunging 250m deep, is the third deepest in England. Wherever you stand on its shores, there’ll be majestic mountain vistas to see, including Hellvellyn to the west and Arthur’s Pike to the east.  Photograph: Shutterstock The lake is far quieter than its larger, often overcrowded counterpart, Windermere. Soak the views in from atop paddle board, aboard the Ullswater Steamer or from the trails and majestic peaks  that wrap around it. If you stay at Another Place hotel, which sits right on the shores of the lake, you can borrow a wetsuit for free or hire a kayak or paddle board and be taken down the lake by a local
A stunning new £3 million coastal spa break destination has opened in Scotland

A stunning new £3 million coastal spa break destination has opened in Scotland

With its glassy waters, unspoiled coastline, rolling mountains and fresh Atlantic air, Scotland is already a prime place for rest and relaxation. Add in a spa and you’re guaranteed to emerge feeling more rejuvenated than ever.  Of course, Caledonia is already home to a vast collection of peaceful retreats. But, come one – can you really have too many? Last month, a brand new spa was added to its roster.  The new Si! Spa in West Kilbride is tipped as ‘one of the most exciting leisure and tourism developments in Scotland for 2026’.  The wellness venue has six treatment rooms, a four-person Rasul (mud therapy) experience and an indoor thermal area with a steam room, showers and relaxation areas. Outside, looking over the Firth of Clyde and across to Ailsa Craig, there’s a large hydro pool, a sauna, a cold drench bucket, a fire pit and direct access to the beach. So, if you so wish, you can work up a sweat in the sauna then run down the sand to cool down in the water, and repeat.  Photograph: The Waterside Hotel & Spa It’s part of the £3 million expansion at the Waterside Hotel at West Kilbride, which is less than an hour from Glasgow. The enormous makeover also included the addition of 17 new guest rooms and a luxury suite with its own balcony and hot tub.  The brand new spa restaurant also offers a menu of healthy dishes like poke bowls or porridge alongside some more indulgent bites such as fries loaded with haggis, peppercorn cream and crispy fried onions or pulled pork, ho
20,000 new homes are being built in a new riverside east London neighbourhood

20,000 new homes are being built in a new riverside east London neighbourhood

Barking Riverside has been in the making for eight years now. To date, the new east London neighbourhood has welcomed 7,000 residents but it has ambitions to become home to many, many thousands more. Now, it’s been given the green light to make those ambitions a reality.  Barking Riverside Limited (BRL) has now been granted planning permission by the local council to build up to 20,000 more new homes for up to 50,000 more people. The approved proposals also includes two new public parks, an additional health facility, up to three more schools, two new community centres, enhanced riverfront access and environmental protection and improved walking and cycling infrastructure. So far, more than 3,000 homes have been completed in the neighbourhood and hundreds more are currently under construction. Once everything’s been built, there will be a total of 4,000 affordable homes available.   Outline plans for Barking Riverside were approved back in 2018, but more detailed plans have had to be approved in phases. The detailed proposals for the 20,000 homes were submitted back in 2024, in what was the UK’s largest application for a single site.  There are already five schools, two community hubs, cycling and walking routes and several green spaces in Barking Riverside. The project also delivered a new Overground station along the Suffragette line and an Uber Boat by Thames Clippers pier in 2022. Photograph: Chris Lawrence Images / Shutterstock.com Creating new environmental habitats h
£30 tickets are now on sale for a new affordable train service connecting London and Scotland – here’s the full list of stops

£30 tickets are now on sale for a new affordable train service connecting London and Scotland – here’s the full list of stops

At Time Out, we’ve long been very much looking forward to launch of Lumo’s London to Stirling train service. In fact, it was part of the reason why we named Stirling the UK’s best place to visit in 2026. Right now if you want to get between the two cities by train, you have to make at least two changes and pay around £49 minimum for a single journey. But this summer, thanks to low-cost rail operator Lumo, that trip will be far more accessible and affordable.  Last week, Lumo released the very first tickets for the service. At the moment, you can buy tickets for journeys from July 10 until the end of summer but it’s hoped that the route will be launched before the end of July and more tickets for those earlier services will be released in the coming weeks. No specific date has been announced for its launch, yet.   If you book early enough in advance of your trip, you can get a one-way ticket from London to Stirling for £29.90. A ticket between London and Preston starts at £23.90 and journeys between Preston and Stirling are available from £14.90. You can get them even cheaper if you’ve got a railcard. The plan is for the service to run four times a day between the two cities (three times on Sundays), with an extra Preston to London return service.  The trains themselves, if you’re interested, are refurbished Class 222 trains. Inside, they’re ‘sleek grey and silver’ and new seating. If you’re hoping the route will feature a more affordable first class option, I'm afraid you’ll
When is Easter 2026? UK bank holiday dates in April

When is Easter 2026? UK bank holiday dates in April

After nearly three months straight without a national day off, Brits are long overdue a bank holiday. Luckily, there are several right around the corner.  Easter eggs began lining supermarket shelves before some of us had even begun taking our Christmas trees down. We can all agree that January is far to early to start filling your cupboards with Easter bits – but now that there’s less than a month until the big weekend, it’s finally socially acceptable to fill your basket with Mini Eggs, chocolate rabbits and hot cross buns.  This year, Easter weekend will roll around a whole two weeks earlier than it did in 2025. And most of us will get not one but two bank holidays to celebrate. Here’s all the crucial info.  RECOMMENDED: When do the clocks go forward in 2026? Here’s when British Summer Time officially starts. When is Easter this year?  For 2026, Good Friday falls on April 3, Easter Sunday is April 5 and Easter Monday in April 6. People in England and Wales will be treated to a bank holiday on both the Friday and Monday.  Why does Easter’s date always change? The date of Easter each year is determined by the spring equinox (when spring starts in the astronomical calendar) and full moon cycle. It takes place on the first Sunday after the full moon following the spring equinox. This year, the equinox is on March 20 and the first full moon (known as the Pink Moon) is April 2.  How to spend Easter 2026 in the UK Most importantly, find somewhere for a really good roast. Time O
The world’s longest coastal path is nearly open: why this 2,700-mile trek in England is 2026’s must-see UK attraction

The world’s longest coastal path is nearly open: why this 2,700-mile trek in England is 2026’s must-see UK attraction

Very soon, after 16 years of work, the entirety of England’s gorgeous coastline will be open to the public.  From this summer, thanks to the King Charles II Coastal Path, you’ll be able to walk all 2,700 miles of the English coastline. That’s from Berwick-upon-Tweed all the way down to Land’s End. Work on the path began way back in 2009 and, though not yet 100 percent complete, it is finally being inaugurated this week. Once fully open, it’ll be the longest managed coastal path in the entire world. That’s a pretty big deal, and one of the reasons why we featured the trek on our lists of the greatest new things to do in the UK this year and the planet’s top new attractions in 2026.  Large parts of the route are already very well established, but around 1,000 miles of new path has been created to make the King Charles III path a reality. That has included new stretches between Tilbury and Southend-on-Sea, from Southend up to Wallasea Island, from Calshot to Gosport and from Gosport to Portsmouth.  Photograph: LNDbolger Photography / Shutterstock.com Existing paths have been improved with bridges, boardwalks and resurfaced path. In Cornwall, for example, the trail from Marsland Mouth to Newquay had a facelift that involved making repairs, improving drainage and moving some inland sections of the path closer to the sea.  Without the path, walkers who wanted to walk the English coastline in its entirety have had to cut inland, walk along roads or trespass over private land. Now,
One of south London’s busiest train stations will finally reopen next week after being closed for 10 months

One of south London’s busiest train stations will finally reopen next week after being closed for 10 months

Finally, Cutty Sark DLR stations has escalators that work! Anyone who regularly travels to and from Greenwich will know how big a deal that is, and can look forward to the station reopening after a 10-month closure next week.  All four of Cutty Sark station’s old escalators had been regularly breaking down for years. In December 2024, every single one was out of action at the same time, and for five months, commuters had to use the lift or take the 121 steps to and from the platform.  TfL fully shut the station May last year to finally allow for the escalators to be replaced. Since then, travellers have had to use Greenwich station – which is about a 10-minute walk or a short bus ride away. But those shiny new state-of-the-art escalators are now complete, and Cutty Sark DLR station will reopen on Monday March 23, a week earlier than planned.  The station is one of the main access routes into Greenwich town and normally one of the busiest stations in south London (with more than 7.6 million entries and exits a year). It’s a key stop for both commuters and for tourists visiting attractions like the National Maritime Museum, Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich Market and, obviously, Cutty Sark itself.  Each new escalator took 17 weeks to build. Rob Rusz, programme manager for the DLR, said: ‘This has been incredibly difficult. This station was built as a “cut and cover” station, which meant originally the escalators were put in with a crane, and the station was built on top of th
The surprise UK city that just beat Berlin and Amsterdam in Time Out’s 2026 ranking of the best cities in the world

The surprise UK city that just beat Berlin and Amsterdam in Time Out’s 2026 ranking of the best cities in the world

Time Out’s Best Cities with Intrepid Travel 2026 has been unveiled. For our 10th annual ranking of the world’s greatest cities, more than 24,000 urban dwellers from across the globe told us about life in their city – from how easy it is to make friends in Buenos Aires to how good the public transport is in Singapore to the quality of cultural offerings in Kraków. After we crunched the numbers and tapped up our network of local writers, three UK cities made the cut. Edinburgh was the highest rated in third place, followed by London in fourth. The only other British city on the list this year was Bath. It ranked 26th on our list, sitting higher than the likes of Berlin, Amsterdam, Dublin and Lisbon.  The little Somerset city got lots of attention last year as it was central to the 250th birthday celebrations of one of Britain’s greatest authors, Jane Austen. Both Conde Nast Traveller and the New York Times named it one of the best cities to visit for that reason. But even after those celebrations have died down, Bath remains an enchanting place to go.  Photograph: Barbara Ash / Shutterstock.com In 2026 the city’s sprawling Thermae Bath Spa, which features Britain's only natural thermal hot springs, turns 20 years old. So, definitely factor in time to stop by for a rooftop dip and a sauna session. Or, head to the spa at The Francis Hotel, which is launching brand-new facilities this month. Time Out contributor and Bath local Rosemary Waugh said: ‘Like Bridgerton, which is fil
This new rail station on one of the UK’s busiest train lines is being built next to an old nuclear bunker

This new rail station on one of the UK’s busiest train lines is being built next to an old nuclear bunker

Alconbury Weald welcomed its very first residents in 2020. The Cambridgeshire neighbourhood, which sits south of Peterborough and northwest of Cambridge, was built on the site of RAF Alconbury, which houses one of the largest military bunkers in the UK. There are 6,500 homes there right now, but new plans have been revealed for even more, alongside a much-needed railway station.  The owner of the site, Urban&Civic, wants to expand the town with more 1,000 more houses and a brand new railway station. That idea has been backed by the mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. It also wants to add shops, a secondary school, ‘pockets of parkland’ and a health centre in what will be the fourth phase of the project.  If it gets the green light, Alconbury Weald Station would be built on the East Coast Main Line. An outline of that plan says that Urban&Civic would provide the land but Network Rail and other transport partners would be in charge of the delivery of the railway station and its associated infrastructure. Developers envision it including a concourse with shops and offices at ground level and apartments above. Image: Urban and CivicPlanned site for Alconbury Weald Rail Station RAF Alconbury was an active airbase between 1938 and 1995. Its secret, nuclear bomb-proof bunker, which the only part of the airbase still standing, was built in 1988 for the purpose of analysing highly confidential data collected by spy planes during the Cold War. Also known as ‘magic mountain’, i