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Where to Eat in London 2026: The Honest Food Guide

London is Europe's best eating city and the easiest to waste money in. The markets, the restaurants that earn the hype, the traps to skip. An honest 2026 guide.

By Jordan
4 min readStandard
Research-led · London

TL;DR

  • London's food strength is breadth — no single cuisine, but the best version of nearly every cuisine on earth.
  • Eat by area: Soho and Shoreditch for restaurants, Borough and Brick Lane for markets, Tooting and Southall for the best-value world food.
  • The food markets are a highlight — Borough is the famous one; Maltby Street and Broadway Market are the locals' picks.
  • Two London rituals worth planning around: a proper Sunday roast and a curry done right.
  • Skip Leicester Square and the chain-clogged tourist circuits — London's good eating is never on the postcard streets.

London is, by a clear margin, the best eating city in Europe — and the easiest to spend money badly in. The strength isn't a signature cuisine; it's range. London does the best Indian food outside India, world-class Chinese, exceptional Middle Eastern, serious modern British, and a café-and-bakery scene that's transformed in a decade. The weakness is that the same city will happily sell a tourist a £22 fish and chips on Leicester Square that a Londoner wouldn't touch.

Eating well here is about knowing the areas and the rituals. Get those right and London is unbeatable.

Eat by area

London food is geographic. The good eating clusters, and the clusters have characters:

  • Soho — the densest restaurant district in the city. Everything from counter-seat ramen to long tasting menus.
  • Shoreditch & east — modern restaurants, the design-led end, strong for dinner.
  • Borough & Bermondsey — markets and the railway-arch restaurant scene.
  • Peckham & south — the younger, cheaper, more exciting edge.
  • Tooting, Southall, Green Lanes — the best-value world food in the city: South Indian in Tooting, Punjabi in Southall, Turkish along Green Lanes. Worth the Tube ride.

The food markets

London's markets are a genuine highlight — graze rather than book.

Borough Market — the famous one, by London Bridge. Touristy now, but still a real produce market with excellent stalls. Go mid-morning on a weekday to beat the crush.

Maltby Street Market — the locals' answer to Borough: a tighter run of railway-arch traders in Bermondsey, weekends only. Better atmosphere, fewer crowds.

Broadway Market — Hackney, Saturdays, the east-London market locals actually shop. Food stalls plus a great street to drink along after.

Brick Lane — the Sunday market sprawl, and a street that is half curry-house institution, half bagel shop. The 24-hour beigel bakeries at the north end are a London rite of passage.

The London rituals

The Sunday roast

A proper roast — meat, roast potatoes, Yorkshire pudding, gravy — is a London Sunday institution. Good gastropubs run them from noon; the best book out. It's the one meal where a pub, not a restaurant, is the right call.

The curry

London's Indian and Bangladeshi food is world-class. Brick Lane is the famous-but-faded option; for the real thing, the city's serious modern Indian restaurants and the South Indian places in Tooting deliver far better. Don't leave London without one good curry.

Book the hyped ones, walk into the rest

London's it-restaurants take bookings weeks out (and some run queues instead of reservations — Padella's pasta queue is its own institution). But the city's depth means you never need a hyped table — a walk-in dinner in Soho or a market lunch in Bermondsey will eat just as well. Book one special meal; stay flexible for the rest.

The restaurants worth knowing

London's scene moves fast, but a few reference points:

  • St. JOHN — Fergus Henderson's nose-to-tail restaurant near Smithfield. Modern British cooking's reference point. The bakery alone is worth the trip.
  • Dishoom — the Bombay-café group; a genuine London institution despite the queues. The breakfast naan roll is the move.
  • Padella — handmade pasta, tiny, no bookings, a permanent queue that moves. Borough and Shoreditch branches.
  • Brat — wood-fired, Basque-influenced, Shoreditch. One of the city's best.
  • Kiln & Bao — Soho counter restaurants, Thai and Taiwanese respectively, that defined the modern London counter-dining wave.

These are reference points, not a checklist — London's strength is that the next street has somewhere just as good.

!Skip the tourist circuits

Leicester Square, the immediate strip around Piccadilly Circus, and the chain-clogged stretches near the big sights serve London's worst food at its highest tourist markup. The good eating is never on the postcard street — it's in Soho proper, in the markets, in the neighbourhoods. Walk five minutes off the circuit.

How to plan your eating

  • One market graze → Maltby Street or Broadway on a weekend; Borough mid-week morning.
  • One Sunday roast → a good gastropub, booked ahead.
  • One curry → a serious one, not a Brick Lane tout's.
  • One booked dinner → Soho or Shoreditch, the one meal you plan around.
  • One world-food trip → Tooting or Green Lanes, for how well London eats when you leave the centre.

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