
Stonehenge, York & the Best Day Trips
Stonehenge is about 2 hours from London by car or organized tour (or train to Salisbury plus a connecting bus), and is genuinely worth seeing despite the roped-off distance from the stones themselves โ inner-circle access tours exist for an extra fee and must be booked well ahead. York, about 2 hours by direct train from London King's Cross, packs York Minster, the medieval Shambles street, and the National Railway Museum into one easily walkable day trip or overnight.
These are the two day trips that come up in almost every 'what to add to a London trip' conversation, and for good reason โ one is 5,000 years old, the other is a beautifully preserved medieval city, and both are genuinely doable without owning a car.
Stonehenge

Stonehenge is one of the world's most recognizable ancient monuments, and one of the most-debated in terms of 'is it actually worth it.' The honest answer: yes, if you manage expectations โ general admission keeps visitors at a respectful distance from the stones themselves via a walking path, not right up against them. If you want to walk inside the circle, book a separate, limited 'Stone Circle Experience' access slot months ahead; it's only offered at specific early-morning or evening times outside normal visiting hours.
| Option | Distance/time from London | Approx. cost |
|---|---|---|
| Guided day tour (coach) | Full day, round trip | $95โ140 (ยฃ75โ110), often bundled with Bath or Windsor |
| Train to Salisbury + connecting bus | About 1h30m train + 30min bus | $45โ60 (ยฃ36โ48) round trip |
| Self-drive | About 2 hours each way | Rental car + parking fee |
| Stone Circle Experience (inner access) | Book 3+ months ahead | $55โ70 (ยฃ44โ56) on top of general admission |
General public access to walk directly among the stones (without the special inner-circle booking) happens only twice a year, at the summer and winter solstices โ free, but extremely crowded and requires arriving overnight or very early.
York

York packs an enormous amount of history into a compact, walkable city: York Minster (one of the largest Gothic cathedrals in Northern Europe), the Shambles (a genuinely medieval street of leaning, timber-framed buildings, said to have partly inspired Diagon Alley), the intact medieval City Walls you can walk along for free, and the National Railway Museum (free entry) for train enthusiasts or anyone traveling with kids. About 2 hours by direct train from London King's Cross โ easily a long day trip, better as an overnight.
The British Museum โ worth its own trip planning
Not a day trip (it's in central London), but worth a dedicated half-day rather than a rushed hour between other sights. Free general admission, genuinely world-class collections spanning multiple continents and millennia, and open until 8:30pm on Fridays with noticeably thinner crowds than a weekend afternoon. Book a free timed-entry slot online ahead of a summer visit.
Comparing the day trips
| Stonehenge | York | |
|---|---|---|
| Time from London | About 2 hours each way | About 2 hours each way (direct train) |
| Best for | Ancient history, a half-day stop | Medieval architecture, a full day or overnight |
| Can you do it without a car? | Yes โ train + bus, or a guided coach tour | Yes โ direct train from King's Cross |
| Combine with | Bath or Salisbury Cathedral on the way | The Lake District (further north) if extending the trip |












































