REVIEW · LONDON
London: James Bond Filming Locations Bus Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Brit Movie Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Bond fans will spot London’s spy details.
This 3-hour James Bond filming locations bus tour turns screen moments into real street corners, from Ian Fleming connections to places that doubled for Bond’s London. You’ll ride by mini coach and hit 12+ film stops, plus you’ll get trivia that makes the movies click in a new way.
I particularly like the way the tour focuses on specific scenes you can picture instantly, like standing where the traffic wardens were splashed in The World Is Not Enough. I also like the actor trivia angle, plus the real espionage flavor of visiting high-stakes-looking places like MI6 HQ.
One consideration: it’s a short, coach-paced loop, so you won’t get long, slow sightseeing breaks at each location. If you want lots of time to walk around and linger, this may feel a bit fast.
In This Review
- Key highlights to watch for
- Starting at Blackfriars: your spy walk begins on Queen Victoria Street
- The 3-hour format: how this London Bond tour actually feels
- The MI6 moment: spotting spy vibes at headquarters-style exteriors
- Whitehall doubles for Bond: the office look you’ll recognize
- The World Is Not Enough traffic-warden spot: where movie action meets real streets
- Goldeneye in St Petersburg Square: a film-famous setting in real London
- Bond 25 and No Time to Die: modern Bond locations in today’s city
- Ian Fleming connections: why the tour talks more than just scenes
- Guide and comfort: what the best experiences tend to include
- Price and value: is $48.49 for 3 hours worth it?
- Who this tour is best for
- Should you book the London James Bond Filming Locations Bus Tour?
- FAQ
- How much is the London James Bond Filming Locations bus tour?
- How long is the tour?
- Where does the tour start?
- Where does the tour end?
- What’s included in the price?
- What language is the tour guide?
- How many James Bond filming locations do you visit?
- What are the cancellation and payment options?
Key highlights to watch for

- Stand at a known scene spot tied to The World Is Not Enough, where the traffic wardens were splashed
- Try to spot MI6 HQ from the outside as part of the spy-geared storytelling
- See Whitehall buildings used for Bond’s London HQ office look
- Visit the St Petersburg Square location from Goldeneye
- Pick out Bond 25 material, including locations connected to No Time to Die
- Learn filmmaking context and actor trivia so you watch differently after
Starting at Blackfriars: your spy walk begins on Queen Victoria Street

The tour meets at Blackfriars Tube station, right outside the station exit on Queen Victoria Street. That location is handy because it’s already central and easy to reach by rail or Tube. It also sets the tone: you start in the working-city flow of London, not some staged tourist bubble.
From there, you’ll board a mini coach and head out as a group. The coach format matters because many Bond locations are scattered across central London and nearby areas. You’ll spend more time looking at places than navigating traffic yourself, and the ride keeps the pace moving for a 3-hour experience.
If you like planning, arrive a few minutes early. The tour ends back at the same meeting point, so you’re not guessing where you’ll pop out later.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London.
The 3-hour format: how this London Bond tour actually feels

This is a 3-hour live-guided tour, with the guide speaking English. The big goal is to pack in a lot of recognizable film sites—over 12 locations—while still making each stop feel like more than a photo-op.
In practice, that means:
- You’ll see locations from the film and get the context of what they were used for
- You’ll likely get quick photo moments, then move on
- You won’t have hours at any one place, even if it’s a movie favorite
That trade-off can be exactly right if you want variety and you’re a Bond fan who wants to connect dots quickly. It can feel tight if you’re traveling with someone who needs long walking breaks. The smart move is to bring a camera mindset: snap first, listen second, and keep moving.
The tour runs on starting times shown when you check availability, so your best bet is to pick a time that fits your day without rushing lunch or squeezing it right after another timed ticket.
The MI6 moment: spotting spy vibes at headquarters-style exteriors

One of the tour’s standout promises is: try to spot a real spy at MI6 HQ. Even if you’re not hunting gadgets, you’ll recognize why this stop works. MI6 HQ carries that Bond energy before you even get into film details.
What makes this stop fun isn’t just the name—it’s the way the guide ties the real-world setting to Bond’s fiction. You get to see how filmmakers borrow authority and atmosphere from actual institutions. That turns your view from star-powered fantasy into something more grounded and, honestly, more interesting.
Practical tip: keep your phone camera handy, but don’t force every shot from the curb. If the tour guide points out viewing angles, take them. You’ll come away with photos that match what you were told to look for.
Whitehall doubles for Bond: the office look you’ll recognize

Another highlight is seeing the Whitehall buildings that have stood in for the London HQ offices. Whitehall is one of those areas where London’s government-and-institutions vibe is instantly visible, even to people who don’t know the geography.
This stop helps you understand how film worlds get built. Bond’s London looks slick and controlled, but the streets and buildings are real London—chosen because they look right, feel official, and photograph well. When you stand there with the context, it’s easier to see why certain facades become stand-ins for secret-sounding operations.
The value here is simple: you’ll walk away knowing what the show used, not just what it looked like. And that’s true for the other stops too, including the action-heavy scenes.
The World Is Not Enough traffic-warden spot: where movie action meets real streets

The tour specifically calls out a scene spot tied to The World Is Not Enough: the place where the traffic wardens were splashed. This is the kind of detail that makes a Bond tour feel like a guided trivia game—but with real-world stakes and real city geography.
Why I think this matters: splash moments are memorable because they’re visual and specific. When someone can point you to the exact type of location where it was filmed, your brain stops treating the movie as a blur. You start noticing how the scene’s framing likely worked—angles, street width, and where the action could land.
One small drawback to note: you may not be able to reproduce the scene in photos, obviously. Still, you’ll get the satisfaction of seeing the spot and then mentally rewinding the movie moment.
Goldeneye in St Petersburg Square: a film-famous setting in real London

The tour also includes the St Petersburg Square location from Goldeneye. This is a great stop for a simple reason: square locations tend to feel cinematic. They give you clear lines of sight and recognizable “set-like” shapes.
The guide’s job here is to connect what you saw on screen with what you’re seeing in the city. That’s what makes squares like this work on film, and it’s also what helps you appreciate London’s built environment as a filming resource.
If you’re the kind of person who pauses to look at architecture (even when you’re not trying), you’ll enjoy this stop. If you’re purely chasing action scenes, you’ll still get value because the guide can explain why this setting reads as important on screen.
Bond 25 and No Time to Die: modern Bond locations in today’s city

The tour doesn’t stop at the classics. It includes film locations from Bond 25, including No Time to Die. That matters if you’ve seen the newer films and want to know where the city doubled for the latest storyline.
Newer Bond locations often feel more polished and intentionally designed. Seeing them through a guide’s lens helps you spot the “why” behind the camera choices, even if you never studied filmmaking.
This part of the tour is also a reminder that the Bond brand isn’t stuck in the past. London keeps offering fresh angles, facades, and streets that look like spy territory without changing much around you.
Ian Fleming connections: why the tour talks more than just scenes

Another promise here is a look at places linked with Ian Fleming and the Bond character world. Even if you’re not a Fleming scholar, that connection gives the tour extra meaning. Bond isn’t only a movie franchise; it’s also a character built out of a certain era’s imagination about espionage.
The tour blends that with filmmaking insight and actor trivia. That’s a good combo because it prevents the experience from becoming only geography-based. You learn why locations were used and how stories were shaped, not just where they were filmed.
If you like trivia, the actor part is a strong hook. You’ll hear details that help you remember roles and scenes more clearly, and it makes the stops feel personal to anyone who grew up with Bond.
Guide and comfort: what the best experiences tend to include

This tour is led by a professional guide. One guide named Chris gets called out for explaining a lot of behind-the-scenes details in a way that clicked for people on the tour. That lines up with what you want from this kind of outing: more than a list of addresses, less than a lecture.
Comfort also comes up in the feedback, including that the bus was very comfortable. Since this is a short tour with multiple stops, comfort isn’t a luxury. It’s part of making the experience actually enjoyable.
How to get the best results from the coach time:
- Bring a light layer. London weather can swing fast
- Charge your phone, but don’t rely on it for all audio navigation
- Wear shoes that are okay for quick curbside viewing
Price and value: is $48.49 for 3 hours worth it?
At $48.49 per person for about 3 hours, this is priced like an actively guided sightseeing product, not a casual pass-through. The big value drivers you should weigh are:
- You get a professional guide focused on Bond locations and trivia
- You get transport by mini coach included
- You visit over 12 shooting locations in one go
- You get context that you’d miss if you just rode around on your own
If you’re a Bond fan, that “context” piece is the difference. Driving yourself, taking random Tube rides, or using a map can still work, but it’s hard to replicate the storytelling and the specific scene ties. The cost starts to make more sense because the guide’s explanations do heavy lifting.
If you’re only mildly interested in Bond, you might feel the time pressure more than the movie-magic. In that case, consider whether you’d rather spend the day visiting a single neighborhood slowly.
Who this tour is best for
This works especially well if you:
- Know Bond scenes by memory and want to connect them to real London
- Like actor trivia and behind-the-scenes explanations
- Prefer coach-paced sightseeing when locations are spread out
It may not be the right fit if you:
- Want hours of walking and wandering
- Need lots of unstructured time at each stop
For most Bond fans, though, it’s an efficient way to turn “I’ve seen that” into “I know exactly where that was.”
Should you book the London James Bond Filming Locations Bus Tour?
Yes, if you want a fast, guided way to see classic and modern Bond filming locations in London without building a DIY route. The coach format, the live English guide, and the promise of 12+ location stops make it a practical choice for a 3-hour window.
I’d book it especially if you care about the “how it was filmed” side—traffic scenes, office stand-ins, and that MI6-area spy atmosphere. If you’re a pure architecture lover, you’ll get some payoff in Whitehall and the square setting. If you’re mostly chasing action, the Goldeneye, The World Is Not Enough, and No Time to Die stops give you plenty to point at and rewatch in your head.
If you’re the cautious type, pick a tour time that doesn’t stack too many other timed plans afterward. This is a focused circuit, and the best experience comes when you give it room to land.
FAQ
How much is the London James Bond Filming Locations bus tour?
It costs $48.49 per person.
How long is the tour?
The tour lasts 3 hours.
Where does the tour start?
The meeting point is Blackfriars Tube station, outside the station exit on Queen Victoria Street.
Where does the tour end?
The tour ends back at the same meeting point.
What’s included in the price?
You get a professional guide and transport by mini coach.
What language is the tour guide?
The live tour guide speaks English.
How many James Bond filming locations do you visit?
The tour visits over 12 James Bond shooting locations.
What are the cancellation and payment options?
You can reserve now and pay later. You also get free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























