Specific days out to start with in London

Days out

Science Museum

South Kensington 路 Primary age and curious older children 路 Free entry, book/check extras

Hands-on galleries, space, engineering and family exhibitions make it a reliable indoor day out, especially when combined with nearby museums.

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Days out

Natural History Museum

South Kensington 路 Dinosaurs, animals and rainy days 路 Free entry, book/check extras

A big-ticket London day out with dinosaurs, mammals, earth science and family trails. Best planned with timed entry and a shorter route for younger children.

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Days out

Young V&A

Bethnal Green 路 Creative children and design activities 路 Free entry, book/check events

Child-focused museum of art, design and performance with hands-on spaces and family programming. Useful for East London families and wet-weather days.

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Days out

London Transport Museum

Covent Garden 路 Transport fans and younger children 路 Paid entry, check family tickets

Buses, trains, driver cabs and London history in a compact central location. Good when you want a structured indoor outing near the West End.

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What to look for in London

Days Out vary by age, timetable and provider style. Parents usually get the best results by checking practical details first: location, session length, costs, age range, booking terms and how the provider handles safety and communication.

Good for planning

Shortlist options that fit your normal school run, weekend routine or holiday dates before comparing extras.

Questions to ask

Ask about trial sessions, what is included, staff checks, cancellation terms and what your child needs to bring.

Parent tip

Keep one backup option nearby in case a class is full, a camp sells out or weather changes your plans.

Reliable family day-out ideas

Museums and galleries

Many offer free entry, family trails, hands-on exhibits, lockers, cafes and school holiday activities.

Animals and nature

Zoos, farms, aquariums, nature reserves, beaches and forest trails are strong all-weather or seasonal options.

Active days

Castles, theme parks, climbing centres, swimming pools and adventure playgrounds work well when children need to burn energy.

Choose by age and energy level

  • Toddlers and preschoolers: Keep travel short, check buggy access and plan around naps, snacks and toilets.
  • Primary-age children: Pick places with a clear activity loop: trail, play area, animals, workshops or collectable tasks.
  • Tweens and teens: Look for independence, challenge or novelty such as climbing, escape rooms, science museums, skating or big walks with a food stop.

Before you go

  • Check booking requirements, parking, public transport, toilets, food options and age suitability.
  • Look for family tickets, off-peak discounts, Blue Peter badge offers, free return offers and local resident deals.
  • Check whether pushchairs, scooters, dogs, packed lunches or re-entry are allowed.
  • Keep a shorter backup plan in case weather, queues or tiredness changes the day.

Match the day to your family

A good day out is not always the biggest attraction. Parents usually get a better result by matching the outing to travel time, weather, food needs and how much energy everyone has left at the end of the week.

Low-energy day

Choose a local museum, library event, short trail, garden centre, cinema, cafe-plus-playground or a familiar park with one new thing added.

High-energy day

Look for outdoor space, climbing, swimming, bikes, beaches, country parks or attractions with several activity zones and places to pause.

Mixed ages

Prioritise venues with buggy access, baby-change facilities, safe toddler areas and enough challenge for older siblings.

Cost and booking questions

  • Is the headline price per child, per adult, per car or per family?
  • Are booking fees, parking, lockers, rides, workshops, animal feed or special exhibitions extra?
  • Can you leave and re-enter, bring a packed lunch or move tickets if a child is ill?
  • Does the venue offer annual passes, free return visits, off-peak rates or discounts through rail, council, employer or membership schemes?

What to check for accessibility and comfort

Before travelling, check step-free access, quiet spaces, Changing Places toilets, sensory guides, wheelchair hire, buggy storage and whether carers enter free. If your child finds busy places difficult, search for relaxed sessions, early openings or quieter weekday slots.

Build a realistic day plan

  • Morning: Check live opening updates, weather, parking and whether tickets need a timed slot.
  • Arrival: Find toilets first, agree a meeting point with older children and decide where lunch will happen.
  • Middle of the day: Do the must-see activity before everyone is tired, then leave space for play or a slower wander.
  • Exit plan: Have a clear leaving cue, especially if there is a gift shop, playground or long walk back to the car.

Seasonal ideas

Rainy days

Libraries, museums, soft play, swimming, indoor climbing and covered markets can rescue a wet weekend.

Summer

Water play, beaches, lidos, farms, forest trails and evening picnics make the most of longer days.

Winter

Light trails, pantomimes, city museums, short walks and hot-chocolate stops can be easier than full outdoor days.

When a paid day out is worth it

A paid attraction can be good value when it fills most of the day, suits the whole age range and avoids extra costs once inside. If the visit is mainly for one short activity, compare a free museum, park trail or local activity session before booking.

Useful next read: planning family days out. For lower-cost options, see free things to do with kids or browse activity-led ideas in children's activities.

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