England, United Kingdom

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
England — the largest and most densely populated constituent country of the United Kingdom — condenses an almost absurd weight of global influence into a territory smaller than Alabama: the language spoken by 1.5 billion people, the parliamentary democracy that became the world's template, a literary tradition from Shakespeare through Dickens to the Brontës, the Industrial Revolution that remade human civilization, and a cultural export machine that produced the Beatles, the Premier League, the BBC, Harry Potter, and the pub. From London's world-class museums and theater to the limestone villages of the Cotswolds, the brooding moors of Yorkshire and the Lake District's mountain poetry, the university spires of Oxford and Cambridge, and the Jurassic Coast's 185-million-year-old cliffs, England rewards travelers who look beyond the iconic to discover a landscape shaped by every century since the Romans built Hadrian's Wall.

Discover England

London is not one city but a confederacy of villages — each neighborhood with its own character, and the whole so vast (population 9 million, area 1,572 square kilometers) that lifelong residents discover new corners regularly. The British Museum, free since 1759, holds 8 million objects spanning human history from 2-million-year-old stone tools through the Rosetta Stone to contemporary prints. The National Gallery's collection — Van Eyck, Raphael, Rembrandt, Turner, Van Gogh, Monet — occupies a building overlooking Trafalgar Square that could consume an entire day in a single wing. The West End stages 40+ shows nightly, from mega-musicals to experimental theater, and day-of tickets at the TKTS booth in Leicester Square make spontaneous attendance affordable. The Tower of London (completed 1066, still guarded by Beefeaters who actually live there, still housing the Crown Jewels) and Westminster Abbey (where every English monarch since 1066 has been crowned, and where Darwin, Newton, and Dickens are buried) provide historical density that few cities can match. Borough Market, operating since at least 1276, now concentrates artisanal food producers and street-food vendors in a Victorian iron-and-glass structure beneath railway arches. Tate Modern, housed in the converted Bankside Power Station, provides free entry to one of the world's great contemporary art collections. The South Bank's riverside walk from Westminster Bridge to Tower Bridge passes the Globe Theatre, the National Theatre, and the brutalist Hayward Gallery. Transport is efficient if expensive — the Tube (operating since 1863, the world's oldest underground railway) supplemented by buses (the Oyster card or contactless payment covers everything) makes car ownership unnecessary and car use inadvisable.

Travel Types

London & World-Class Museums

Explore the British Museum's 8 million objects spanning human history (free), see Van Gogh's Sunflowers at the National Gallery (free), catch a West End show for under £30 at the TKTS booth, visit the Tower of London's Crown Jewels, walk the South Bank from Westminster to Tower Bridge past Shakespeare's Globe and Tate Modern, and eat your way from Borough Market through to Chinatown. London's density of culture, history, dining, and entertainment is matched only by New York and Tokyo.

Countryside Walking & National Trails

Climb Scafell Pike and traverse Helvellyn's Striding Edge in the Lake District, walk the Cotswold Way through honey-stone villages, hike sections of the 1,014-kilometer South West Coast Path along Cornwall's dramatic cliffs, trek the Yorkshire Three Peaks, and explore the North York Moors' heather-covered heights. England's 16 National Trails and thousands of public rights of way provide walking access through landscapes shaped by centuries of farming, literature, and artistic tradition.

Cathedral Cities & Medieval Heritage

Visit Canterbury where Becket was murdered and Chaucer's pilgrims traveled, see Durham's Norman cathedral rising above the river bend, view the Magna Carta at Salisbury beneath England's tallest spire, explore York Minster's medieval glass windows and walk the complete city walls, touch Stonehenge's 5,000-year-old mystery, and tour Windsor Castle where kings have lived since 1070. England's medieval heritage spans functioning cathedrals, inhabited castles, and market towns where 12th-century structures remain part of daily life.

University Cities & Literary England

Punt through Cambridge past King's College Chapel and the Bridge of Sighs, explore Oxford's Bodleian Library and Christ Church (Hogwarts inspiration), visit the Brontë Parsonage on Yorkshire's moors, walk Wordsworth's Lake District, see the Stratford-upon-Avon stage where Shakespeare's plays are still performed by the RSC, drink in the Eagle and Child pub where Tolkien and C.S. Lewis discussed Middle-earth, and browse Hay-on-Wye's legendary secondhand bookshops. England's literary heritage is embedded in its landscapes.

Coastal Exploration & Fossil Hunting

Surf Cornwall's Atlantic breaks at Fistral and Watergate Bay, collect Jurassic ammonites from Lyme Regis cliffs where Mary Anning pioneered paleontology, photograph Durdle Door's limestone arch on the Dorset coast, walk Whitby's atmospheric harbor beneath Dracula's abbey, swim from Devon's secluded coves, and explore Norfolk's vast tidal flats where seals haul out at Blakeney Point. England's 3,000 kilometers of coastline span surf beaches, fossil cliffs, fishing villages, and wildlife reserves.

Pubs, Ales & Gastronomic England

Pull up to a hand-pumped cask ale at a proper village local, eat a Sunday roast with Yorkshire pudding in a thatched Cotswolds pub, try Whitstable oysters straight from the boat, experience afternoon tea at Betty's in Harrogate or Claridge's in London, explore Borough Market's artisanal food stalls, and discover Michelin-starred restaurants in converted farmhouses. England's food revolution has transformed the country from culinary joke to one of Europe's most dynamic food scenes without abandoning the pub as its cultural anchor.

Essential England Travel Tips
  • London is expensive — expect hotel rooms from £150/night minimum in central areas, meals from £15-25, and attraction admission around £25-35 for paid sites. However, England's greatest museums (British Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, V&A, Natural History Museum, Science Museum) are all free, as are many churches and parks.
  • The weather is genuinely unpredictable — 'four seasons in one day' is not hyperbole. Pack layers and waterproofs regardless of season or forecast. English rain is typically light but persistent rather than heavy; a good waterproof jacket matters more than an umbrella on exposed walks.
  • Driving is on the left — this matters most at roundabouts (give way to traffic from the right, go clockwise) and when crossing roads as a pedestrian (look right first, not left). Rental cars are manual transmission by default; specify automatic if needed. Motorways are toll-free except the M6 Toll and some bridges/tunnels.
  • Train travel is excellent but confusing — book in advance on Trainline or National Rail websites for the cheapest fares (Advance tickets can be 70% cheaper than walk-up). Peak-hour trains into London are expensive and crowded. The Oyster card and contactless payment cover all London transport but do not work on national rail services beyond London.
  • Pub etiquette: order and pay at the bar (table service is increasing but not universal), buy rounds if drinking in a group (you are expected to buy back), last orders are called at 10:45 PM (most pubs close at 11 PM, though many now have later licenses), and tipping at the bar is unusual — but a 10% service charge at restaurants is standard.
  • England's national parks and countryside are traversed by a dense network of public rights of way — footpaths and bridleways that cross private land by legal right. The Countryside and Rights of Way Act (CRoW) provides additional open access to mapped areas. Ordnance Survey (OS) maps are the essential companion for countryside walking; the OS Maps app works offline.
  • The Cotswolds and Lake District are extremely popular — summer weekends and school holidays bring traffic congestion, full car parks, and booked-out accommodation. Visit midweek or in shoulder seasons (April-May, September-October) for better experiences. The Lake District's lake kayaking and wild swimming are best in early morning before day crowds arrive.
  • Tipping: 10-12.5% at restaurants where service is not included (check the bill — many add a 'discretionary service charge'). Nothing at pubs when ordering at the bar. Round up taxi fares. Hotel porters appreciate £1-2 per bag. No tipping at cafés or for takeaway.
  • Stonehenge requires advance timed-entry tickets — walk-up admission is not guaranteed, especially in summer. English Heritage members enter free. The stone circle is roped off during normal hours; for closer access, book the 'Stone Circle Access' experience (early morning or late evening, limited availability, books out months ahead).
  • Bank holidays (8 per year) see transport disruptions, road congestion, and attraction crowding. Christmas Day and Boxing Day (December 25-26) shut down virtually all public transport and most businesses. Planning travel around bank holidays requires checking specific schedules.
  • English breakfast (the 'Full English') is a serious meal: bacon, eggs, sausages, baked beans, toast, tomato, mushrooms, black pudding (optional), and tea. It is served at virtually every hotel, B&B, and many cafés until 11 AM-noon. It is not a light meal — plan activity accordingly or opt for the lighter 'Continental breakfast' alternative.
  • Wi-Fi is widely available but mobile signal drops in rural areas — the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales, and Cornish coast have significant coverage gaps. Download offline maps (OS Maps app, Google Maps) before countryside visits. Emergency coverage (999) works on any available network regardless of your provider.
Cities in England

1 city with detailed travel information