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Kensington Palace

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Kensington Palace brings royal history down to a more intimate scale on the west side of Kensington Gardens: Queen Victoria was born here in 1819, the State Apartments are rich in court detail, and the Sunken Garden gives the visit a softer, photogenic finish.

For a first visit, start with a standard timed-entry ticket so you can see the palace rooms at your own pace before deciding whether to add a guided royal walk or afternoon tea.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Timed entry tickets

Choose a straight Kensington Palace ticket if you want the State Apartments, Victoria Revealed, and the gardens at your own pace, without turning the stop into a longer royal half-day.
Kensington Palace Tickets
4.5(1665)
 
headout.com
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London: Kensington Palace Sightseeing Entrance Tickets
4.3(5849)
 
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London: Kensington Palace Afternoon Tea & Guided Walk
4.6(342)
 
getyourguide.com
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London: VIP Kensington Palace Gardens Tour & Royal High Tea
4.6(60)
 
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See all Timed entry tickets

Guided tours and royal walks

These products usually add royal-quarter context, guided walking, or afternoon tea, and they work best when you want a more structured half-day around Kensington Gardens.
Kensington Palace Tickets
4.5(1665)
 
headout.com
Go to offer
London: Kensington Palace Sightseeing Entrance Tickets
4.3(5849)
 
Go to offer
London: Kensington Palace Afternoon Tea & Guided Walk
4.6(342)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
London: VIP Kensington Palace Gardens Tour & Royal High Tea
4.6(60)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer
See all Guided tours and royal walks

6 tips for visiting the Kensington Palace

1
Use the quiet midday window
If you want lower crowd pressure, aim for Kensington Palace between 1 pm and 3 pm. That span is currently listed as the quietest time, which is surprisingly good for photos and a calmer pace. It sounds counterintuitive, but here the middle of the day can be the smart move.
2
Treat the slot as a window
Your ticket gives you a 30-minute arrival window, not one exact minute. You can enter any time within it, which helps if the walk through Kensington Gardens takes longer than expected. If you are late, staff may move you to the next available slot, but that is not guaranteed.
3
Travel light
Bags over 45 x 36 x 20 cm (17.7 x 14.2 x 7.9 in) are not allowed, and there is no luggage storage at Kensington Palace. If you are moving through London with suitcases, store them elsewhere before you enter. This avoids a very annoying reset at the door.
4
Plan accessibility before you leave
If mobility matters, do not rely blindly on the nearest Tube stations: Queensway and High Street Kensington are close, but neither is step-free from platform to street. Pre-book Blue Badge parking if you need it, or use a direct taxi drop-off. That keeps the day workable from the start.
5
Use the free garden fallback
If palace tickets are sold out or you only have a short window, the palace gardens and the Sunken Garden are free to enter via the Sunken Garden Gate. It is a surprisingly good fallback on a sunny afternoon. You still get a royal setting without forcing a rushed interior visit.
6
Add one Kensington pairing
For a fuller half-day, pair the palace with just one nearby stop: Royal Albert Hall if you want a landmark venue, Victoria and Albert Museum for art and design, or Natural History Museum for a museum-heavy route. One add-on is usually enough around Kensington Gardens. That way the day feels curated, not overpacked.

How to plan a Kensington Palace visit

The palace is not physically huge, but the day can sprawl if you mix timed entry, gardens, tea, and museum pairings without deciding your priority first. Set the format early, and the rest of the visit gets much easier.

Start with simple entry on a first visit

For most first-time visitors, a standard timed-entry ticket is the clearest move. You see the palace rooms, keep your own pace, and can still add the free garden afterward without turning the stop into a project. If the day already includes other London anchors, this is usually the strongest value. Book now.

Use the 1 pm to 3 pm quiet window

The unusually useful micro-hack here is that Kensington Palace currently lists 1 pm to 3 pm as its quietest period. If you care more about calmer rooms than early light, that is the slot to target, especially outside holiday peaks. One good timing choice makes the palace feel far more intimate.

Choose guided walks or tea for a royal half-day

Guided products around Kensington Palace often combine palace entry with royal-quarter walking, Kensington Gardens context, or afternoon tea. They suit couples, repeat visitors, and travelers who want the day to feel like an occasion rather than a checklist stop. If that is your mood, take the guided route. Book now.

Build one Kensington Gardens pairing

After the palace, choose just one nearby continuation: Royal Albert Hall for performance history, Victoria and Albert Museum for art and design depth, or Natural History Museum for a museum-heavier family route. One second stop keeps the day elegant instead of exhausting. Lock the next ticket only after you know your palace slot. Book now.

Adjust the route for families and mobility needs

Families usually do best with the indoor palace core first and the free Sunken Garden as a decompression stop afterward. If mobility matters more than speed, sort out accessible parking or a direct drop-off before you think about Tube stations. That way the visit starts calmly, and the palace feels manageable rather than tiring.

Why Kensington Palace feels different from London's bigger royal sites

Unlike Buckingham Palace or the Tower of London, Kensington Palace feels personal rather than monumental. Its power comes from layered domestic court history inside Kensington Gardens, not from military spectacle or giant ceremonial scale.

From Nottingham House to a royal palace in 1689

In 1689, William III and Mary II bought Nottingham House and had it expanded into the royal residence visitors recognize today. That country-house beginning still matters, because it explains why the palace feels more intimate than fortress-like. You are moving through a court home, not just a monument.

What Queen Anne added still shapes the visit

Queen Anne added the Orangery in 1704, and the early-18th-century court kept refining the ceremonial rooms after that. The result is one of the palace's strongest contrasts: formal interiors on one side, garden elegance on the other. That balance is what makes the stop feel distinctly Kensington.

Why Queen Victoria still dominates the story

Queen Victoria was born here in 1819 and spent her childhood at Kensington Palace, which gives the site a more personal emotional anchor than many royal rooms can offer. She later opened the King's State Apartments to the public in 1898. That is why Victoria Revealed feels central rather than optional.

The Sunken Garden is not just a photo stop

The Sunken Garden dates from 1908 and was redesigned in 2017 to honor Diana, Princess of Wales. That makes it more than a pretty exit route. It is one of the clearest places where the palace's historical layers and modern royal memory meet.

Why the palace still feels lived-in

Part of Kensington Palace still functions as a private royal residence, so the public route is only one layer of the building. That difference matters. The palace feels less like a sealed museum piece and more like a place where public history and private royal life continue to sit side by side.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for Kensington Palace?

For the palace itself, plan about 90 minutes. If you also want the free garden, photos in the Sunken Garden, or a stop for tea, 2 to 3 hours feels much more relaxed.
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When is the quietest time to visit?

The quietest daily window is usually 1 pm to 3 pm. Across the year, Kensington Palace is generally quieter from November to February, while weekends, half-term, Christmas, and the March-to-October season are busier.
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Do I need a timed ticket?

Yes. Paid entry uses a 30-minute arrival slot, and you can enter any time within that window.
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What happens if I arrive late?

Staff may move you into the next available slot, but that depends on capacity and is not guaranteed. If your timing already looks tight, treat your booked window as the point you should be at the door, not still on the Tube.
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Are the palace gardens free to enter?

Yes. The palace gardens and the Sunken Garden are free to enter via the Sunken Garden Gate. They currently run daily from 10 am to 6 pm, with last entry at 5:45 pm.
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Should I book a guided tour or just entry?

If this is your first visit and you mainly want the rooms, a standard entry ticket is usually enough. Guided formats make more sense when you want royal-quarter context, a walk through Kensington Gardens, or afternoon tea folded into a longer half-day.
Read more.

Is Kensington Palace wheelchair-accessible?

Mostly yes. Most public areas are accessible, wheelchairs are available first come, first served, and accessible parking can be pre-booked. The main limitation is getting there, because Queensway and High Street Kensington are not step-free from platform to street.
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Can I bring a suitcase or a large backpack?

No large luggage. The current maximum bag size is 45 x 36 x 20 cm (17.7 x 14.2 x 7.9 in), and there is no storage on site. If you are between hotels or coming from the airport, sort luggage before your visit.
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Can I take photos inside?

Usually yes, as long as you do not use flash. Temporary exhibitions and a few signposted rooms can have stricter rules, so look up when you enter each space.
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What pairs well with Kensington Palace nearby?

Royal Albert Hall works well for a landmark-heavy route, Victoria and Albert Museum for art and design, and Natural History Museum for a museum-heavy afternoon. Choose one, not all three, so Kensington Palace still feels like the center of the day.
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General information

opening hours

At the moment, Kensington Palace is closed on Mondays and Tuesdays and open Wednesday to Sunday from 10 am to 6 pm, with last entry at 5 pm. The free palace gardens and the Sunken Garden currently run daily from 10 am to 6 pm, with last entry at 5:45 pm. Check the calendar before your date, because seasonal changes and partial closures can happen.

tickets

Standard admission until March 25, 2026:
- Adult: from £24.70 online / £29.70 on the day
- Child (5 to 15): from £12.30 / £14.80
- Concession: from £19.80 / £23.80

Palace and exhibition from March 26, 2026:
- Adult: from £25.40 online / £30.50 on the day
- Child (5 to 15): from £12.70 / £15.30
- Concession: from £20.30 / £24.40

Under-5s and members enter free. All paid entry uses a 30-minute timed slot.

address

Kensington Palace
Kensington Gardens
London W8 4PX
United Kingdom

how to get there

The easiest public-transport approach is via Queensway or High Street Kensington, both about 8 to 10 minutes on foot through Kensington Gardens. Buses 9, 10, 27, 28, 49, 52, 70, and 452 stop nearby. Street parking around the palace is limited, so driving works best only if you already know where you will leave the car.

accessibility

Most public areas of Kensington Palace are accessible, wheelchairs are available first come, first served, and hearing loops are installed at admissions, the shop, and in the Queen's State Apartments. Blue Badge parking can be pre-booked up to 7 days ahead. The important catch is arrival: the two nearest Tube stations are not step-free from platform to street.

luggage

Bags larger than 45 x 36 x 20 cm (17.7 x 14.2 x 7.9 in) are not allowed inside, and there is no on-site luggage storage. If you are arriving from the airport or changing hotels, store suitcases elsewhere before your slot. Traveling light makes entry much smoother.

photography and filming

Photography is generally allowed without flash, but some temporary exhibitions and a few signposted spaces are exceptions. If a room asks you not to shoot, staff expect you to follow that immediately. For most visitors, phone photos in the permanent rooms are fine.
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