Embark on a spine-chilling London Ghost Tour, exploring the city’s paranormal tales and historical horrors. Discover secret histories, haunted pubs, and eerie corners of the capital at night.
Embark on a spine-chilling London Ghost Tour, exploring the city’s paranormal tales and historical horrors. Discover secret histories, haunted pubs, and eerie corners of the capital at night.
- St. Magnus The Martyr - A mysterious shadowy figure is said to haunt St Magnus. Many have witnessed this ghost, yet few understand its identity or why it points to a specific grave. In 1951, a spiritual medium visited the church and uncovered the identity of this figure and its fixation on this particular spot. Discover why this ghost remains…
- St. Magnus The Martyr - A mysterious shadowy figure is said to haunt St Magnus. Many have witnessed this ghost, yet few understand its identity or why it points to a specific grave. In 1951, a spiritual medium visited the church and uncovered the identity of this figure and its fixation on this particular spot. Discover why this ghost remains restless and why its demands remain unmet.
- 54-55 Cornhill - Gaze upwards at this location, and instead of angels, you’ll find devils staring back! Uncover why the devils are in the details and why crossing a London architect, even if you’re the local vicar, is ill-advised!
- St Peter-upon-Cornhill Church - Visit the churchyard where Ebenezer Scrooge is shocked to see his own grave in Charles Dickens’ classic ‘A Christmas Carol’. Here, you’ll learn how London’s ghosts, ghouls, and gore have inspired fictional works written in the city over the centuries.
- St. Michael’s Cornhill - Discover the events of the day the devil visited London during a storm.
- St. Margaret Lothbury Church - More than just money is buried within the Bank of England. A towering ghost haunts the bank, seeking revenge for the disturbance of his bones and the realization of his greatest fears. It’s said that this ghost would rattle the guards’ guns, stomp up the stairs, and frighten the tellers. Learn why this gangly ghost will forever haunt the bank.
- St. Mary Woolnoth Church - This church is home to one of London’s most renowned ghost stories. Known as the Black or Bank Ghost, this phantom haunts Bank Station, The Bank of England, and the surrounding area. If a woman in black asks, ‘Have you seen my brother?’ then you’ve encountered a ghost!
While here, you’ll also uncover the dreadful secret of the Bank Station Booking Hall!
- St. Michael Paternoster Royal Church - At this historic church, you’ll learn about the most famous Lord Mayor of London and his feline companion. This extraordinary ratter is said to still roam between this location and the next. Follow in his feline footsteps with your knowledgeable local guide.
- St James Garlickhythe - In 1835, workers found a mummified body near the church’s altar. Displayed publicly until about twenty years ago, young children from the church would play with the remains, affectionately known as ‘Jimmy the Mummy’. It’s said that Jimmy still haunts this church, pointing to the spot where he was buried.
- Williamson’s Tavern - This pub is among the most haunted in London. Located at the heart of the City of London, its history includes Lord Mayors, poltergeists, and phantoms that terrify any police dogs attempting to enter.
Doors frequently slam, footsteps echo, and with only one exit, entering is a daring venture!
- St. Mary-le-Bow - If born within the sound of this church’s bells, you are a Cockney or a ‘true’ Londoner.
Rather than being haunted, this church is considered the most cursed in London. Having burned, collapsed, and been accident-prone, as well as the site of murders and numerous deaths, discover why this church is so unfortunate.
- Noble Street - One of London’s oldest areas, this street was where the original Roman garrison was stationed during their occupation of England and the founding of the City of London. The site of parts of the Roman and Medieval Walls, Noble Street has been associated with death since its inception. Known for orb photos, strange happenings, and unusual occurrences, this is a must-visit for those seeking ghosts or supernatural experiences.
- St Anne & St Agnes Garden - Beneath St Anne and St Agnes lies one of London’s many plague pits. Here, learn about the plague’s impact on London and how orbs are still regularly seen and captured in photographs. Be sure to take a picture and see if you can spot one of these mysterious objects.
- Christchurch Greyfriars Church Garden - Once home to London’s second-largest church, the ruins are haunted by numerous ghosts. These spectres include Queen Isabella, who led a rebellion with her lover against England’s Gay King, a constantly arguing married couple, a religious prophetess, a monk, and a greyhound. These ghosts make this location one of London’s most haunted and a prime spot for paranormal encounters.
- Temple Bar London - Designed by the renowned British architect Sir Christopher Wren, this entryway once served as the main western entrance to the City of London. It was here that traitors, crooks, and criminals, who met a grisly end at the hands of English justice, had their severed heads displayed. Known for showcasing the heads of these doomed individuals, this gruesome gateway is said to be haunted by the souls of the condemned.
- Amen Court - From Amen Court, named after The Lord’s Prayer, you can view some of the remaining walls of Newgate Prison. This ancient prison was infamous as Britain’s most notorious jail. Today, children sing, run, and play over the bones of those condemned to death. But why do children play here? And why are the residents of Amen Court unaware that their homes’ foundations are built on bones?
- The Viaduct Tavern - The Viaduct Tavern is London’s most haunted pub. Haunted by a playful ghost named Fred, who enjoys harmless yet amusing antics like flushing the ladies’ toilets while in use, learn how a medium questioned this mischievous ghost’s identity.
- Old Bailey - The Central Criminal Court, often called The Old Bailey, is built on the site of the old Newgate Prison. This building, where public hangings occurred until 1868, is home to one of London’s most famous ghosts, ‘The Black Dog of Newgate’. Here, you’ll learn about the building’s grim history and why, if you see a large black dog in this area, you should update your will!
- Holy Sepulchre Church - This church houses an execution bell that tolled just before executions at nearby Newgate Prison and Old Bailey. One of the clerks who rang this bell is the subject of one of London’s most infamous ghost stories, which began in the churchyard and will be detailed at your next location.
While at Holy Sepulchre Church, your guide will explain the custom of ringing the bell. Who knows, you might see a condemned person climbing the gallows as they do!
- Cock Lane - Cock Lane is where the story of the Church Clerk of Holy Sepulchre Church reaches its dramatic conclusion. Involving London’s greatest minds working to save a man’s life, the main witness in the murder investigation is a young girl channeling the spirit of a dead woman who insists she was murdered!
- Golden Boy of Pye Corner - This statue marks the westernmost point of the Great Fire of London. This charming, chubby statue once adorned the wall of a notorious pub on the same spot. It was here that stolen bodies were displayed for doctors at nearby St Barts Hospital to purchase and dissect.
At this location, you’ll learn about the gruesome practice of grave robbing, the resurrection men who plundered graves, why fresh corpses were highly prized at the world’s oldest hospital, and how this demand for fresh flesh led to a series of murders!
- West Smithfield - One of London’s most famous execution sites, this is where notable rebels like William Wallace and Wat Tyler were hung, drawn, and quartered. This horrific death wasn’t the only dreadful fate met here; many were burned at the stake, and some were even boiled alive! It’s said that the smell of meat, blood, and bone from the adjacent butcher’s market only added to the horror of these events.
Even the nearby Hospital St. Bart’s isn’t safe from ghosts! It’s said that the world’s oldest hospital is filled with poltergeists as well as patients, has a haunted lift, and students working late in the labs, rooms, and study areas report strange happenings and otherworldly presences even when alone!
- St Bartholomew the Great - The oldest surviving church is haunted by its founder, Rahere, who can be seen hobbling around the building. Discover why he limps (after 700 years of walking normally) and who is to blame on this thrilling ghost tour!
- Rising Sun - The Rising Sun was also a resurrectionist pub. This pub is one of London’s most haunted and is home to one of the city’s most disturbing and disturbed ghosts. Nicknamed ‘the sex pest ghost’, ladies on the tour might want to stay alert as you learn why it’s challenging to find female staff willing to live on-site.
- The Charterhouse - The Charterhouse is our final stop and is a short walk from the Elizabeth Line entrance to Farringdon Station. Home to one of London’s largest plague pits, it’s estimated that 50,000 people are buried beneath these buildings…. That’s a lot of spirits and ghosts!
Originally home to several monks executed during the Reformation, the most frequently seen ghost is a phantom monk usually seen praying. Also spotted wandering around Charterhouse is a Duke who literally lost his head! Before you leave, your guide will also explain how modern medical science might account for these strange occurrences, as one of the UK’s most prestigious schools of psychiatry also occupies Charterhouse Square.

- Guiding fees included
- All costs covered for the tour
- Guiding fees included
- All costs covered for the tour
- Gratuities
- Gratuities
We are enthusiast over the gruesome history of London full of spectral tales and peculiar happenings in the city. We delight in narratives surrounding the unexplained, blood-tainted past, and supernatural occurrences which will both scare and charm you as you navigate through the deeply atmospheric city of London at night. This tour, led by an ardent…
We are enthusiast over the gruesome history of London full of spectral tales and peculiar happenings in the city. We delight in narratives surrounding the unexplained, blood-tainted past, and supernatural occurrences which will both scare and charm you as you navigate through the deeply atmospheric city of London at night. This tour, led by an ardent guide, blends London’s strangest and most terrifying stories with tangible historical events drowned in blood, in locations unbeknown to even some of the permanent residents of London.
Exploring each spot on foot and under the shroud of darkness, this ghostly walking tour of London seeks to evoke a maximum sense of eeriness. There are sanctuaries with hidden past, haunted pubs filled with horror, and some extremely shadowy, dismal and demonic corners of London.
During your journey, you’ll be offered opportunities to: capture photographs (you may even snap a shot of a mysterious orb), inquire your guide, and if fortune favours you, you might even observe one of the renowned phantoms of London.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.