
EXCLUSIVE London's most dangerous tourist attractions: Interactive map reveals areas around capital's landmarks where visitors are most likely to get mugged or attacked
The area outside the National Portrait Gallery off Trafalgar Square came top of the list after seeing 3,060 crimes over the past year including 1,200 thefts from people.
The Royal Academy of Arts about half a mile away on Piccadilly was in second place after 1,652 crimes were reported in a year including more than 550 thefts.
The Royal Ballet and Opera and the London Transport Museum, both in the Covent Garden area, were third with 1,548 crimes and fourth with 1,227 respectively.
The British Museum near Holborn - the UK's most-visited attraction - was fifth with 1,173 crimes, while the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square came sixth with 1,004.
Also in the top ten were The Monument (828 crimes), British Library (824), Southbank Centre (773), Cutty Sark (753), Big Ben (667) and Westminster Abbey (577).
Other areas outside attractions with high crime rates included outside the Young V&A (555), Wellcome Collection (527), St Paul's Cathedral (514) and the trio of the London Dungeon, Sea Life London Aquarium and Shrek's Adventure (all 426).
Also seeing a significant number in the year were Banqueting House (394), Courtauld Gallery (323), Natural History Museum (288) and Buckingham Palace (249).
Safer areas were found to be outside Central London - including the London Wetland Centre in Barnes (six), National Maritime Museum (17) and Old Royal Naval College (18) which are both in Greenwich, Kensington Palace (19) and Eltham Palace (23).
zone straddling Oxford Street and parts of Soho which does not feature any of the attractions is London's worst area for thefts.
HOW DANGEROUS ARE THE AREAS OUTSIDE LONDON TOURIST ATTRACTIONS?
Rank Closest tourist attraction Total crimes
1 National Portrait Gallery 3,060
2 Royal Academy of Arts 1,652
3 Royal Ballet and Opera 1,548
4 London Transport Museum 1,227
5 The British Museum 1,173
6 The National Gallery 1,004
7 The Monument 828
8 British Library 824
9 Southbank Centre 773
10 Cutty Sark 753
11 Big Ben 667
12 Westminster Abbey 577
13 Young V&A 555
14 Wellcome Collection 527
15 St Paul's Cathedral 514
16 London Dungeon 426
17 Banqueting House 394
18 The Courtauld Gallery 323
19 Natural History Museum 288
20 Buckingham Palace 249
21 London Eye 220
22 Guildhall Art Gallery 217
23 Tate Modern 212
24 Somerset House 199
25 Royal Albert Hall 180
26 London Museum Docklands 175
27 Tower of London 171
28 Madame Tussauds 162
29 The Barbican Centre 160
30 The National Theatre 150
31 Shakespeare's Globe 126
32 Churchill War Rooms 124
33 Science Museum 122
34 V&A South Kensington 115
35 Tate Britain 104
36 IWM London 97
37 Design Museum 90
38 HMS Belfast 79
39 Horniman Museum and Gardens 52
39 London Zoo 52
39 National Army Museum 52
42 Kew Gardens 36
43 Eltham Palace 23
44 Kensington Palace 19
45 Old Royal Naval College 18
46 National Maritime Museum 17
47 London Wetland Centre 6
MailOnline analysis, data.police.uk • Reported crimes recorded 250m of tourist attractions(or the closest if near several); police anonymisation of crime locations may lead to some margin of error
MailOnline began its latest research by compiling popular attractions in London which are members of the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions - plus Merlin Entertainments attractions which are not, such as the London Eye and Dungeon.
Crime data was collated within 250m (800ft) of the centre of each venue using Metropolitan Police and City of London Police figures for the 12 months between May 2024 to April 2025.
If more than two attractions were within 250m of a crime, that crime was added to the total of the closest attraction - to ensure no crimes were duplicated.
This provided a quantitative view of safety outside the attractions – with recorded crime types including anti-social behaviour, bicycle theft, robbery and theft from the person.
Others were vehicle crime, violence and sexual offences, burglary, criminal damage and arson, drugs, public order, shoplifting and then 'other theft' or 'other crime'.
The area around the Royal Academy coming second is notable, given it is just across the road on Piccadilly where veteran broadcaster Selina Scott was viciously attacked and robbed in broad daylight last month.
The 74-year-old stalwart of British TV was leaving a Waterstones shop on June 17 when she was struck on the back of her right knee, leaving her feeling as if she had been 'stabbed'.
She was set upon by a gang who attempted to grab her backpack. Fighting back, she kept hold of the bag – but one of the thieves unzipped it and took her purse before running off. Ms Scott lost her bank cards, driving licence and cash in the robbery.
This week, more than 30 locations across London were identified as the worst for anti-social behaviour, theft and street crime as police patrols are stepped up.
The Metropolitan Police is desperately trying to fight back against a crime epidemic gripping the capital from pickpocketing to violence and fare evasion to robbery.
Some 20 town centre and high street areas now account for 10 per of knife crime, 24 per cent of theft person offences and 6 per cent of anti-social behaviour calls.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan's office has now confirmed there will be increased police patrols and intelligence-led plain-clothed operations in these crime hotspots.
Officials added that detectives will be targeting wanted and prolific offenders who commit multiple offences, particularly shoplifting and anti-social behaviour.
But Susan Hall AM, leader of the City Hall Conservative Group, told MailOnline: 'Crime in London continues to get worse under Labour as Londoners are marauded by criminals across the capital.
'Despite this, Khan is happy to oversee huge police cuts, denying our officers the resources they need and the public the security required to keep them safe. It's a disgrace - he needs to get a grip on this.'
The Mayor's office said the aim of its new drive was to 'put visible neighbourhood policing at the heart of fighting crime and rebuilding community confidence'.
Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner Matt Jukes said: 'Our intelligence and data-led approach to tackle the crimes that matter most to Londoners – such as shoplifting, robbery and anti-social behaviour – is already working.
'We're arresting 1,000 more criminals each month, neighbourhood crime is down 19 per cent and we've solved 163 per cent more shoplifting cases this year.
'In 32 of the hardest hit areas, we're working with the community, councils, businesses and partners, to focus our resources and bear down on prolific offenders and gangs who blight too many neighbourhoods across the capital.'
Last month, London was revealed as the 15th most dangerous city for crime in Europe – and the 100th worst out of 385 locations around the world, according to Numbeo's Crime Index .
And Matt Goodwin, senior visiting professor of politics at the University of Buckingham, wrote in the Daily Mail last month: 'London is over. It's so over.'
He cited data showing that there were 90,000 shoplifting offences in the capital last year, up 54 per cent.
Professor Goodwin added that there is now an alleged rape every hour in London – and reported sexual offences against women and girls has risen 14 per cent in five years, while homelessness and rough sleeping increased 26 per cent in one year.
Meanwhile a policing expert told MailOnline that the incident involving Ms Scott showed London had become a 'crime-ridden cesspit'.
Ex-New Scotland Yard detective Peter Bleksley said the force was now so stretched in the West End that private security companies were being deployed to help.
He condemned the 'epidemic of crime' in London from pickpocketing to violence and fare evasion to robbery, adding that it was 'driving people away' from the capital.
Separate research by MailOnline in March uncovered London's most crime-infested neighbourhoods – with Leicester Square, Covent Garden and the surrounding tourist-laden area now the capital's hotspot for violent and sex crime.
The analysis, consisting of nearly 5,000 districts across London's 32 boroughs, also found a small zone straddling Oxford Street and parts of Soho was top for thefts.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
9 minutes ago
- BBC News
Mum Veronique John searched jail terms on the day she killed children
A mother searched online for information on overdoses and prison sentences for murder on the day she killed her children, an inquest has John carried out the searches on the morning of 11 June 2023, hours before she called police to report she had killed daughter Elizabeth, seven, and son Ethan, 11, at the family home in inquest previously heard she had just been released from custody after attacking her husband. Consultant psychiatrist Dr Gillian Bennett told Wednesday's hearing Mrs John had not met the threshold of insanity at the John was detained indefinitely at a secure hospital last year. Dr Bennett said after Mrs John attacked her husband she admitted to police what she had done which indicated she did understand the nature of the acts and they were John was stabbed 21 times while his sister was also knifed and left with a fatal brain injury. Mr John reported on 9 June he had been attacked. Police saw him with injuries on 10 June and took Mrs John into custody, releasing her early on 11 hearing at Stoke's Civic Centre also heard a domestic violence protection notice would have prevented Mrs John returning to the family's Flax Street home for 48 hours, but a community resolution notice was issued. An assessment in custody concluded she did not have signs of acute or enduring mental health conditions, but in later months, she was diagnosed with complex post-traumatic stress disorder and a personality disorder and deemed not fit to plead in records showed Mrs John had previously been prescribed antidepressants, and from 2012 had experienced a miscarriage, stillbirth, her mother's death and domestic abuse from a former partner in the was referred to a psychiatrist seven years before the children's deaths and previously tried to end her 11 June, Mr John informed her he would not be returning to live with her, the inquest the murders, she could not recall what had happened. She said she had not slept for four days beforehand. Insp Bruce Wilkinson said he decided to issue a community resolution notice, which meant she was able to return to the family had been unaware at the time of allegations Mrs John had previously harassed her husband, or evidence could have been found on his phone, he had been aware of Mr John's injuries on 10 to police guidance, a community resolution notice should not have been issued in a domestic violence case involving people who had been in an intimate Wilkinson said he later realised he applied that in said: "I certainly did not think there was physical risk to the children".The inquest continues. This news was gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service, which covers councils and other public service organisations. Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.


The Guardian
9 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Dog walker finds skull believed to be missing head of South Australia alleged murder victim
A human skull found in scrubland by a person pursuing a wandering dog is believed to be the missing head of alleged murder victim Julian Story. Authorities had been searching for the head of Story, 39, since his dismembered body was discovered in the South Australian town of Port Lincoln on 19 June. On Thursday, a resident told police they had found a skull in scrub, Det Supt Darren Fielke said. 'Preliminary investigations and phone calls to the forensic science centre have provided information that the remains are most likely human and I believe they are the remains of Julian Story,' the major crime officer-in-charge said. Former Beauty and the Geek reality TV contestant Tamika Sueann Rose Chesser, 34, has been charged with Story's murder. She was arrested on 19 June after Story's body was found at the couple's home at Port Lincoln, on the Eyre Peninsula. On 27 June, Fielke issued a plea for public help 'because tragically, we have not recovered the head of Julian Story'. He said major crime officers had been redeployed to Port Lincoln following the discovery of the skull on Thursday. 'My understanding is that the person who contacted us today was walking their dog in that area,' he said. 'The dog ran off into the scrub. The dog didn't come back when called. 'The person has gone in to see what's going on and that's how those remains were discovered.' Story's family had been told of the discovery and 'hopefully we can give them some comfort that we have found all the remains of Julian', Fielke said. 'They are still planning for a funeral, which I believe will be towards the end of next week,' he said. The skull would be sent to Adelaide for forensic and scientific testing. 'If it's not Julian Story, then clearly we've got some other work to do, but I believe that it is,' Fielke said. The alleged murder scene was 'suburbs away' from where the skull was found, in an area known as 'slipway scrub'. Fielke thanked the community for their help and said they had been through 'quite a process' with the focus on their town. A police guard had been placed on the site with more searches planned. Chesser appeared in Port Lincoln magistrates court on Thursday via video link from James Nash House, a psychiatric facility in Adelaide. She is also accused of assaulting a police officer the day after her arrest and faces unrelated charges of assault and disorderly behaviour. The matters were adjourned and Chesser will reappear in court on 18 December. In June, police released still images and video of a woman they allege was Chesser walking on Port Lincoln streets that were recorded after the killing, which investigators allege occurred about midnight on 17 June. The images show a woman wearing a black headscarf and black full-body coverings, carrying a bag.


The Guardian
29 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Virginia council member attacked and set on fire
A councilman in Danville, Virginia, was attacked and set on fire on Wednesday over what police are describing as a 'personal matter' not related to his position or politics. According to a statement released by the Danville police department, the councilman, Lee Vogler, 38, was attacked at the offices of a local magazine, where he is also employed. The police said officers were dispatched at about 11.30am after receiving a report that a man had been set on fire. Witnesses told police that the suspect 'entered into the victim's place of employment, confronted him and doused him with a flammable liquid'. Then, witnesses said Vogler and the suspect 'exited the building, where the suspect then set the victim on fire'. The suspect then reportedly fled the scene, and witnesses provided a description of the suspect and his vehicle to the responding officers. Police said officers located and stopped the vehicle several blocks from the incident, and the driver was taken into custody. The driver, identified by the police as Shotsie Michael Buck Hayes, 29, of Danville, was identified as the suspect in the attack. In the statement, the police said: 'Based on the investigation at the time of this release, the victim and the suspect are known to each other and the attack stems from a personal matter not related to the victim's position on Danville city council or any other political affiliation.' The full extent of Vogler's injuries were not known, the police said on Wednesday afternoon. The Danville fire department and the Danville Life Saving Crew also responded to the scene to render aid, police said. Vogler was airlifted to a regional medical facility for treatment. The police department added that 'due to the ongoing investigation, the Danville police department will not provide any further details about the incident itself. However, charge information will be forthcoming.' The news was first reported by Andrew Brooks, the publisher and owner of Showcase magazine, the publication where Vogler works, who posted a video on Facebook stating that Vogler had been attacked in the magazine's offices. 'An individual forced his way into to our office, carrying a five-gallon bucket of gasoline, and poured the gasoline on Lee,' Brooks said. 'Lee attempted to flee and ran in front of the building. The individual followed him and set him on fire.' Brooks said Vogler was awake and talking and that he was en route to the burn center in Lynchburg. 'Our hearts and prayers are with him,' Brooks said, adding that he and his colleagues were cooperating with the local police. 'This type of senseless act of violence has to stop,' Brooks said. 'You do not have the right as a human being to get upset with someone enough to lash out and attempt to harm them in any way, much less this way.'