REVIEW · LONDON
Bridgerton Tour in London
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Tours Teatralizados RV Londres ltd · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Carriages, chandeliers, and real Mayfair streets. On this 2-hour walking tour, you get Bridgerton-flavored London stories as you move through classic streets and squares with a guide in small groups. It’s built for people who like their history with a plot twist.
I love the way the tour turns big-name locations into street-level details, especially at Mercato Mayfair, a former 1825 church that’s now a food market with sweet and savory stops. I also like the pause at Annabel’s in Berkeley Square, followed by a culture break at Burlington House with the Royal Academy of Arts and five scientific societies.
The main thing to plan around is the walking pace. You’ll be on foot for the full two hours, and the best payoff comes as you reach the filming location near Piccadilly Circus.
In This Review
- Key highlights you should care about
- Where the tour starts: Marble Arch and a very specific meeting spot
- Mayfair through Bridgerton eyes at Mercato Mayfair (the 1825 church stop)
- Grosvenor Square: the Regency-era feel you can actually walk through
- Berkeley Square and Annabel’s: refinement, exclusivity, and a Regency power vibe
- Burlington House: Royal Academy culture plus the science-society side of London
- Ending near Piccadilly Circus with a Season 2 filming location
- Duration and walking reality: what 2 hours actually feels like
- Languages and your best option if you want English explanations
- Price and value: is $18.86 per person a good deal?
- Who should book this Bridgerton tour?
- Tips to get the most out of the walk
- The guide matters: what you can look for in the experience
- Should you book this Bridgerton Tour in London?
- FAQ
- How long is the Bridgerton Tour in London?
- How much does the Bridgerton Tour in London cost?
- How big is the group?
- Where do I meet the guide?
- What languages are the tours offered in?
- What is included in the tour price?
- Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
- Where does the tour end?
Key highlights you should care about

- Small group size (up to 10) keeps questions and story time from getting lost
- Mercato Mayfair church entrance included, so you’re not just looking from the sidewalk
- Berkeley Square stops with the kind of Regency-era power vibe the show fans look for
- Burlington House culture stop at the Royal Academy of Arts and nearby scientific societies
- Season 2 filming location near Piccadilly Circus, plus a memorable surprise finale
Where the tour starts: Marble Arch and a very specific meeting spot

The easiest way to avoid stress is to go straight to the Marble Arch subway exit area on Park Lane. Your guide will be holding a dark blue umbrella waiting at 140 Park Ln, by the Marriott Hotel.
From the start, this tour has the right tone: you’re not just sightseeing. You’re getting set up for a Regency-style walk where streets and architecture become story clues, and where you can actually hear what’s being pointed out instead of guessing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London.
Mayfair through Bridgerton eyes at Mercato Mayfair (the 1825 church stop)

Your walk hits Mayfair early, and one of the strongest stops is Mercato Mayfair. This is a church building from 1825 that’s been transformed into a market, and it’s where the tour smartly blends atmosphere with something you can experience right away.
Since the tour includes entrance to a church, this stop matters more than a simple photo stop. It also helps you slow down. You get a moment to look at the setting, understand what it once was, and then appreciate how it’s used today—an easy way to connect the Regency mood with modern London.
Why I like this part for you: it’s a natural break in the middle of a walking tour. Even if you don’t buy anything, you still get to step into a real interior space and let the guide connect the dots between past and present.
Grosvenor Square: the Regency-era feel you can actually walk through

After Mayfair, the tour moves into Grosvenor Square, and this is where the “streets and squares” promise becomes real. You’re guided through an area that instantly reads as upper-crust London—wide streets, formal layouts, and a sense of place that fits the show’s social world.
This stop is less about a single landmark and more about how the neighborhood works. In a guided setting, you start noticing things like how squares function as social stages, and why certain streets became fashionable addresses.
One practical note: this is the part where you’ll want to keep your eyes up as much as your phone. The guide’s points make more sense when you’re seeing façades and street geometry, not just watching from one angle.
Berkeley Square and Annabel’s: refinement, exclusivity, and a Regency power vibe
Next comes Berkeley Square, and the tour brings in a name many people associate with glamorous nights: Annabel’s, the private club located there. The idea isn’t that you’re going inside—this is about the feel of the address and how neighborhoods build reputation over time.
You’ll also get the show-related connections that make this tour fun. Even if you only know Bridgerton from the big story beats, the guide’s route helps you understand why certain locations are believable as social battlegrounds.
For you, this stop hits two goals at once:
- It scratches the Bridgerton itch with recognizable vibes
- It gives you real geography, so later you can map the show onto the city
Burlington House: Royal Academy culture plus the science-society side of London

The tour then shifts from pure social swagger into something more grounded: a culture stop at Burlington House. This is where you learn how the arts and serious institutions share space in London, including the Royal Academy of Arts and five scientific societies.
I like this segment because it widens the lens. Regency London in stories can feel like it’s all balls and matchmaking. Burlington House adds the counterpoint: the period’s world included scholarship, institutions, and public-facing learning.
If you care about the texture of London beyond the show, this is a strong payoff. It turns your walk into more than fan service; you start seeing why Mayfair and nearby areas attracted influence from multiple corners of society.
Ending near Piccadilly Circus with a Season 2 filming location
The final stretch brings you close to Piccadilly Circus, and the tour includes a filming location from season 2 very near there. This is where the route stops being abstract.
You can see the contrast between the show’s scenes and the real streets around you. And if you’re a fan, this is the moment that makes your internal map click: you stop wondering where a scene could plausibly be and start recognizing the street geometry.
One more thing I’m glad you should know: there’s a surprise at the end, which shows up as a memorable highlight in at least one of the tour experiences I saw firsthand. The tour holds back a bit, so don’t rush to finish your photos early.
Duration and walking reality: what 2 hours actually feels like

This is a 2-hour walking tour, and that time is the deal. You’ll move at a pace that assumes you’re here for a guided stroll, not for lingering in every doorway.
If you prefer slow travel—long pauses, museums, and lots of sit-down time—this tour may feel a little tight. But if you want a compact hit of Mayfair atmosphere plus show connections, two hours is a sweet spot.
Also, the tour runs with small groups up to 10 people. That group size matters. It makes it easier for the guide to keep track of the room, and it keeps the tour from turning into a line you can’t hear.
Languages and your best option if you want English explanations

The live guide works in Spanish and English. If you book a Spanish-language tour, you might still find that the guide emphasizes the most important points in English depending on how your group connects with the explanation style—one experience I saw noted exactly that.
My practical advice: if you want maximum confidence in the details, book the language you’re most comfortable with. You’ll enjoy the story beats more when you’re not juggling translation while walking.
Price and value: is $18.86 per person a good deal?

At $18.86 per person, this tour is priced for what it really gives you: a guided walk through multiple key Mayfair-style areas plus entrance to a church. London tours can get pricey fast, so the value here is the mix of route, guidance, and at least one real interior element.
Two things push the value higher:
- Small group limit (10 people), which makes the experience feel more personal than a big hop-on crowd
- Guided stops at multiple locations, so you’re not just paying for one photo moment
If you like booking with flexibility, the tour also offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance and a reserve now & pay later option. That helps if you’re juggling other London plans.
Who should book this Bridgerton tour?
This tour is a good match if you:
- Want to see Mayfair through a Bridgerton lens, without going full cosplay
- Like guided storytelling that ties neighborhoods to the Regency social world
- Prefer small groups where you can hear the guide and stay oriented
- Enjoy a short walking format that doesn’t eat your whole day
It’s probably not the best fit if you want:
- A long, museum-style itinerary
- Lots of indoor time beyond the included church entrance
- A tour that focuses on architecture only, with minimal show references
Tips to get the most out of the walk
- Wear comfortable walking shoes. Two hours in central London adds up faster than you expect.
- Bring a fully charged phone for photos, but listen first. The route only pays off when you catch the guide’s street-level explanations.
- If you’re a Bridgerton fan, do a quick refresher before you go. You’ll catch more of the location connections because you’ll recognize the type of scene being referenced.
- If you’re not sure which language you’ll understand best, choose the tour language that matches your comfort. The difference between getting the vibe and getting every nuance is real when you’re moving.
The guide matters: what you can look for in the experience
One highlight that came through strongly is the guide experience. I saw that Ruben in particular stood out for combining kind delivery with smart, organized explanations, and for sharing historical anecdotes that felt new even if you already know Mayfair basics.
That’s what makes this tour worth doing. You’re paying not only for locations, but for the way the guide links them into a coherent walk you can remember after you leave.
Should you book this Bridgerton Tour in London?
If your goal is a focused, friendly, small-group stroll through show-connected Mayfair locations, I’d book it. The price is reasonable for London, the walk is short enough to fit into almost any schedule, and the included church entrance gives you a real interior moment, not just street views.
Book it especially if you’re traveling with someone who likes the show but also wants the city experience to feel authentic. The route’s mix of Mayfair squares, Annabel’s area atmosphere, Burlington House culture, and a Season 2 filming location near Piccadilly Circus makes it feel like a single story from start to finish.
Skip it only if walking time is your enemy, or if you need a deep museum itinerary with lots of seated time.
FAQ
How long is the Bridgerton Tour in London?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
How much does the Bridgerton Tour in London cost?
The price is $18.86 per person.
How big is the group?
It is a small group limited to a maximum of 10 participants, with a minimum of 2 participants.
Where do I meet the guide?
You meet at the Marble Arch subway exit area at 140 Park Ln, with the guide waiting with a dark blue umbrella.
What languages are the tours offered in?
The live tour guide offers Spanish and English.
What is included in the tour price?
The tour includes the guided 2-hour walking experience and entrance to a church.
Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the tour is wheelchair accessible.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Where does the tour end?
The tour ends near Piccadilly Circus, and the description also says it finishes back at the meeting point area.

























