Baltimore Sun Sunday

Pointers for visiting London on the cheap

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Tribune Content Agency

London is one of Europe’s most expensive cities. But with fine public transit, many free museums, affordable plays and fun food markets and pubs, the city becomes more affordable. Here are some of my tips for savings.

London’s black cabs are iconic, but for the cost of one ride, you can buy an Oyster card transit pass, covering a week’s worth of rides on buses and the London Undergroun­d (aka the Tube).

London is one of the few places I’d consider staying in a chain hotel. Target an appealing neighborho­od and browse reviews at a hotel-booking website such as Booking.com. Check auction-type sites such as Priceline and Hotwire, which match travelers with empty hotel rooms, often at prices well below normal rates. Or book through Airbnb or a similar company instead: I’d rather rent a palatial room or apartment a 20minute Tube ride from downtown than pay the same for a grubby budget hotel a five-minute ride away.

My favorite museum in London — the British Museum — is free, as are these impressive sights: the British Library, National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery, Tate Britain, Tate Modern, Wallace Collection, Imperial War Museum, Victoria and Albert Museum, Natural History Museum, Science

Museum, National Army Museum, Sir John Soane’s Museum, and the Museum of London. About half of these museums request a donation of about $6.50, but whether you contribute is up to you.

Smaller churches let worshipper­s (and tourists) in free, although they may ask for a donation. The big sightseein­g churches — Westminste­r Abbey and St. Paul’s — charge higher admission fees but offer free evensong services nearly daily (though you can’t stick around afterward to sightsee). Westminste­r Abbey also offers free organ recitals most Sundays.

London has plenty of free performanc­es, such as lunch concerts at St. Martin-in-theFields and summertime movies at The Scoop amphitheat­er near City Hall.

There’s no charge to enjoy the pageantry of the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace, rants at Speakers’ Corner in

Hyde Park (on Sunday afternoon), opulent displays at Harrods department store, the peoplewatc­hing scene at Covent Garden, and the colorful streets of the East End. It’s free to view the legal action at the Old Bailey and the legislatur­e at work in the Houses of Parliament. You can get into a bit of the Tower of London and Windsor Castle by attending Sunday services in each place’s chapel (though you’ll have chapel access only). And, Greenwich is an inexpensiv­e outing: Many of its sights are free, and the journey by rail is cheap.

The London Walks tours with profession­al guides are one of the best deals going (about $16). Note that the guides for the “free” walking tours are unpaid by their companies, and they expect tips — I’d pay up front for an expertly guided tour instead. You’ll also find reasonably priced tours by bus, boat and bike.

Tickets for many of London’s most popular and expensive sights, such as the London Eye Ferris wheel, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Westminste­r Abbey and the Tower of London, can be purchased online in advance, which will not only save you from standing in ticket-buying lines, but also will usually save you a few pounds per ticket.

Skip the London Dungeon. It’s gimmicky, overpriced and a terrible value, despite what the long line at the door might suggest. And the cost of the ride to the top of The

Shard, western Europe’s

Qtallest skyscraper, is unfortunat­ely even more breathtaki­ng than its view.

Compared with Broadway’s prices, London’s theater can be a bargain. Seek out the freestandi­ng TKTS booth at Leicester Square to get discounts from 25% to 50% on good seats (and fullprice tickets to the hottest shows with no service charges). Buying directly at the theater box office can score you a great deal on same-day tickets. A $6.50 “groundling” ticket for a play at Shakespear­e’s Globe is the best theater deal in town. Tickets to the Open Air Theatre at north London’s Regent’s Park start at about $30.

Pub grub is the most atmospheri­c budget eating option — reasonably priced hearty classics such as meat pies and fish-and-chips served under ancient timbers. London thrives with street markets, many featuring the latest and trendiest food stalls — the perfect antidote to the city’s high prices and interchang­eable chain restaurant­s. For picnics, you’ll find an array of carryout options, from Pret à Manger and Eat — selling fresh salads and sandwiches — to Marks & Spencer department stores (with a good deli) and their offshoot M&S Simply Food.

If you do your homework and take advantage of London’s many freebies and bargains, you’ll leave with happy memories of your trip instead of a regretfull­y empty wallet.

Rick Steves (www.rick steves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@rick steves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.

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