Big Ben and the Palace of Westminster with pedestrians and cyclists in the foreground.

Our Final Day in London: Royal Dawn, Parliament Secrets, West End Magic, and the Feeling of Not Wanting to Leave

London has a way of getting under your skin. On our final full day in the city, I woke up with a strange mix of excitement and reluctance excited for everything we still had planned, reluctant because I wasn’t ready to leave. London felt familiar yet foreign, like walking into a house you’ve never lived in but instantly feels right. You could spend a lifetime here and still never see it all.

Samuel Johnson captured it perfectly in the 18th century:

“When a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in London all that life can afford.”

I felt that line deeply.


A Costa Coffee Tradition and One Last Tube Ride

Right next door to our hotel sat a Costa Coffee that had quietly become our morning ritual. A toasty, a cappuccino, friendly staff who were somehow always open no matter how early we wandered in, it was the perfect, unpretentious start to each day.

We walked through Russell Square and hopped on the Tube for one last ride to Green Park Station. I feel like I’ve mentioned Green Park twenty‑five times writing these articles, but in reality we only went there twice both times early in the morning to see Buckingham Palace before the crowds.

And honestly, that early‑morning window is magic. You can stand at the gates with barely anyone around, take a proper selfie without elbows in your ribs, and enjoy the palace in a way that feels almost private. A few hours later, when we walked past again, it was absolutely pumping with people gathering for the Changing of the Guard. Early morning is the sweet spot.


A Posh Breakfast and the Walk to Parliament

We wandered toward Westminster and stopped at a café that looked a bit posh. We ordered a full English breakfast and to be honest, I’ve cooked better at home. Next time, I’m tracking down one of those old‑school greasy spoon joints with mismatched mugs and laminated menus. That’s where the real full English lives.

From there, we crossed the road toward the entrance of the Palace of Westminster directly opposite Westminster Abbey, as if the two institutions have been staring each other down for centuries.


High Security, Cromwell’s Shadow, and Westminster Hall

Unlike most tours in London, this one is high security. It’s a working Parliament, after all. You line up, shuffle forward, and wait your turn to go through the checkpoint.

Victoria Tower at Westminster Palace flying the Union Jack flag.
The Union Jack waves over Westminster — tradition alive in stone and sky.
Palace of Westminster façade with equestrian statue under cloudy sky.
The Palace of Westminster — where history and architecture meet.

While you wait, you’re watched over by Oliver Cromwell, the man who overthrew Charles I, ruled as Lord Protector, and whose Commonwealth ended only after his death when Charles II was invited back. And yet here he stands, proudly displayed, almost glaring toward Westminster Abbey where kings and queens are crowned. London loves its contradictions.

Statue of Oliver Cromwell with a lion sculpture outside Westminster Palace.
Cromwell’s statue faces Westminster Abbey — a reminder of Britain’s complex royal history.

Once through security, you step into Westminster Hall, built in 1097. The hall has hosted coronation banquets, royal trials, and historic speeches. The air feels thick with centuries. This is where you pick up your audio guide and it’s absolutely worth it. The commentary is rich, detailed, and brings the building to life.

Stained glass windows and murals depicting historical scenes inside Westminster Hall.
Westminster Hall’s walls tell Britain’s story through color and craftsmanship.
Interior of Westminster Hall showing its vast timber‑vaulted ceiling, stone walls, and visitors exploring the historic space.
The breathtaking timber ceiling of Westminster Hall — standing beneath it feels like stepping into a thousand years of history.

You climb the stone steps and are greeted by a massive stained‑glass window that ties the whole space together like a statement lamp in a living room. Turning left, you enter a long hallway where you can easily imagine Members of Parliament whispering, negotiating, plotting, and making the kinds of handshake deals that never make the news.

You’re also greeted by a large sign: NO PHOTOGRAPHY.

At first, I thought, “Eh, I’ll sneak one.”

But then you notice the police officers stationed throughout the building. Friendly, helpful, but absolutely not the type to tolerate larking about. I decided to follow the rules.

Visitors walking through Westminster Hall with chandeliers, statues, and murals.
A walk through Westminster Hall — where every step echoes history.
Long Gothic corridor with stained glass windows, murals, and statues inside Westminster Palace.
Walking through centuries of history inside the Palace of Westminster.

Inside the House of Lords and House of Commons

The tour winds through room after room, each one decorated with carved wood, stonework, and craftsmanship that feels almost impossible today. The building has a distinct smell, part library, part dusty old garage the scent of age and history.

The highlights are the chambers themselves:

The House of Lords

Grand, ornate, dripping in gold. The monarch’s throne sits at the far end, a reminder that ceremony still matters here.

The House of Commons

Plain, green, modest, intentionally so. A visual symbol of public service over pageantry.

Because we took the first tour of the day, we had both chambers entirely to ourselves. No crowds, no noise, just us standing in the rooms where decisions that shaped the world were made. In the Commons, we even got to stand where the Prime Minister stands during speeches. A police officer watched over the room, but didn’t mind us playing PM for a moment.

It was surreal one of those rare travel moments that feels almost too special to be real.


A Long Walk Through St James’s Park to Harrods

After finishing the tour, we still had time before our West End show, so we wandered back through St James’s Park, walked up Constitution Hill, passed the Wellington Arch, and followed the main road toward Harrods.

By the time we arrived, we were starving. We figured we’d grab lunch inside. After all, it’s a shopping centre. How hard could it be?

Turns out… very.

Harrods is a maze. A beautifully decorated maze, but a maze nonetheless. We wandered through random rooms, admired products we didn’t need, and somehow kept ending up at different exits. We never found the food court. Eventually we gave up, laughed it off, and decided Harrods had defeated us. Probably not the best place to visit with kids either.

Wellington Arch in London with people walking beneath a blue sky.
The Wellington Arch — a symbol of victory and heritage in Hyde Park Corner.
Exterior of Harrods department store in Knightsbridge under a bright blue sky.
Harrods — where London’s elegance meets retail legend.

Covent Garden, Mrs Doubtfire, and a Perfect West End Night

We hopped on the Tube at Knightsbridge Station and rocketed over to Covent Garden, where we finally found food and slowly made our way to the Shaftesbury Theatre.

Even though Mrs Doubtfire is no longer showing there, seeing it on stage was a highlight. It was one of our favourite movies growing up in the 90s, and the stage version captured that same heart and humour. The acting was brilliant, the sets were clever, and even from the second level we had a perfect view.

It was pure joy, the kind of show that leaves you buzzing as you walk back into the night.

Exterior of Shaftesbury Theatre with posters for Mrs Doubtfire musical.
“Helloooo, London!” — the West End welcomes Mrs Doubtfire.
Interior of Shaftesbury Theatre with chandelier and stage showing “Mrs Doubtfire.”
Waiting for laughter — Mrs Doubtfire lights up the West End.

One Last Walk Through London

We walked back to Bloomsbury for one final nighttime wander through London. We found Honest Burger for dinner. Simple, delicious, exactly what we needed and then stopped at Sainsbury’s for some final London snacks before heading back to the hotel to pack.

And that’s when the feeling hit me.

We still had three weeks left in Europe, but part of me didn’t want to leave London. It felt like its own complete holiday. Five days that were so full, so rich, so alive, that they could have stood alone as a trip.

London felt like leaving home and leaving adventure at the same time.


Closing: London Leaves a Mark

Our final day in London wasn’t just a checklist of sights, it was a journey through royalty, politics, theatre, and the quiet streets that tie it all together. It was a day that captured the city’s contrasts and its charm, its history and its humour, its grandeur and its everyday life.

London didn’t just impress me.

It stayed with me.

And the next morning, as we boarded the Eurostar to Paris, it felt less like leaving a city and more like turning the page on a chapter I wasn’t quite finished with.


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