Should you buy a London Pass?
Sierra Travel Sierra Travel
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 Published On Jun 21, 2020

This was recorded in December of 2019.

As of June 2020, most attractions featured are closed due to the virus but should reopen as London reopens. We suggest you use this video this help plan your trip to London once it reopens.

Every trip to London usually includes the question, "should we get the London Pass?". It's an age old question that conjures up strong feelings on both sides. Because prior to the trip, the cost of the London Pass weighs heavy. But once in London, the cost of buying individual tickets to the different attractions and the long lines make the London Pass look much more appealing.

So to help you, we bought the three (3) day London Pass on our last trip and attempted to maximize how many things we could see.

Now it ended up being more complex than we first thought because, once we knew what we wanted to see, we had to plan factoring when the attraction was open and travel time between attractions. And of course we did this during the 3 days up to New Years Eve, so that complicated things as well.

On a side note, we were not paid by London Pass for his nor are we advertising for them. This was done on our own and we neither advocate or are against the London Pass. We only wanted to show what you can see with it and how many things you need to visit to make it worth the cost.

Itinerary

DAY 1

1) Hop on Hop Off Boat Tour
2) Greenwich Roya Observatory
3) London Transport Museum

DAY 2

4) Tower Bridge
5) Tower of London
6) St Paul's CathedralS
7) Shakespeare's Globe Theater
8) Golden Hinde

DAY 3

9) Westminster Abbey
10) Big Bus Hop on Hop Off
11) Charles Dickens Museum
12) View from the Shard

In the end, the three day London Pass cost £127. If we bought tickets to each attraction at the door, the total cost would have been £238.10. So using the London Pass allowed us to see 12 different attractions and saved us £111.10

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