Classic London street scene with red double-decker bus and phone booth

How To Get Madame Tussauds Tickets in London

The Madame Tussauds website wants you to believe that paying full price at the door is a perfectly reasonable thing to do. It’s not. Gate prices run around 33-44 GBP depending on the day, and online advance tickets start closer to 29 GBP. That’s a free lunch you’re throwing away for no reason.

I’ll be honest: Madame Tussauds is one of those places I’d dismissed as pure tourist trap for years. Wax figures? Really? But then a friend dragged me through the Star Wars section, and I spent 20 minutes posing with Yoda like a complete child. The Marvel zone is even worse — I have photos with every Avenger. It’s ridiculous, and I loved every second of it.

Classic London street scene with red double-decker bus and phone booth
The kind of London scene you’ll walk through on your way to Marylebone — red buses, phone boxes, and far too many people crossing against the light.

So here’s everything you need to know about getting tickets without overpaying, what’s actually inside, and whether the combo passes are worth it.

London high street with iconic red phone booth and bus
Marylebone Road is one of the busier stretches in central London — you’ll spot the green dome of Madame Tussauds from a couple of blocks away.
Red double-decker bus driving down a London street
Grab a bus along Marylebone Road if you’re coming from Oxford Circus — it drops you practically on the doorstep.
Short on time? Here are my top picks:

Best overall: Madame Tussauds London Admission Ticket$37. Standard entry with all zones including Marvel and Star Wars. The one most people should book.

Best value combo: London 5 Attractions Pass$79. Bundles Madame Tussauds with the London Eye, SEA LIFE, The Dungeons, and Shrek’s Adventure. Valid for 90 days so no rush.

Best for London Eye fans: London Eye + Madame Tussauds Combo$81. Pairs the two most popular Merlin attractions at a decent discount.

How the Ticket System Works

Westminster Palace and Big Ben along the River Thames
Westminster is only a few Tube stops from Baker Street — easy to combine Madame Tussauds with a walk along the Thames.

Madame Tussauds London sells tickets through their own website, and through a constellation of third-party resellers. The official site prices fluctuate by date (weekends and school holidays cost more), but here’s the general picture:

Standard Admission runs 33-44 GBP at the door. Online advance booking drops that to around 29-35 GBP, depending on demand. You pick a specific time slot when you book online, which also means you skip the general admission queue.

Premium tickets include options like the Fast Track and Champagne Experience (around 55 GBP), which gets you priority entry plus a glass of champagne. Nice if you’re celebrating something, unnecessary if you just want to see wax figures.

Children under 3 get in free. Kids aged 3-15 get a reduced rate (usually about 5 GBP less than adults). There’s no separate student or senior discount on the standard ticket, which is annoying.

The most important thing to understand: booking online in advance is always cheaper than buying at the door. Always. There’s literally no scenario where the gate price wins. The advance booking discount ranges from 15% to 40% off depending on how far ahead you book and what day you’re visiting.

Big Ben clock tower partially hidden by London fog
London weather doesn’t care about your plans — Madame Tussauds is entirely indoors, which makes it a solid rainy day option.

Official Tickets vs Third-Party Tours

You’ve got two basic paths here. Buy direct from Madame Tussauds, or go through a tour platform like Viator or GetYourGuide. Both have pros and cons.

Buying direct gives you the most flexibility on time slots and lets you add extras (VIP experience, champagne, gift packs). You’re dealing with Merlin Entertainment’s own booking system, which is straightforward enough. The downside: their cancellation policy is fairly rigid — most advance tickets are non-refundable, though you can sometimes change the date.

Third-party platforms often bundle Madame Tussauds with other London attractions at a combined discount. This is where the real savings live if you’re planning to hit multiple sights. A combo with the London Eye saves about 15-20% versus buying each separately. The five-attraction pass is even better value if you’re planning to fill a full day.

The catch with third-party combo tickets: you need to plan your day a bit more carefully. Some require you to visit all attractions within 24 hours, while others give you up to 90 days. Read the fine print.

My honest take: if you only want Madame Tussauds and nothing else, buy direct from the official site. If you’re doing two or more Merlin attractions (London Eye, SEA LIFE, London Dungeon, Shrek’s Adventure), a combo pass almost always saves money.

Modern London skyline along the River Thames under blue sky
A sunny day along the Thames — rare, appreciated, and a reminder that London isn’t always grey.

The Best Madame Tussauds Tours to Book

I’ve gone through the main options on the market. Here are the three that actually make sense, depending on what kind of London day you’re putting together.

1. Madame Tussauds London Admission Ticket — $37

Madame Tussauds London standard admission ticket
The standard ticket gets you into every zone — including the Marvel and Star Wars experiences that used to cost extra.

This is the straightforward option and the one I’d recommend for first-timers. At $37 per person, it includes access to every zone in the museum: the A-list Party area, the Royal gallery, the Marvel Super Heroes 4D Experience, the Star Wars exhibit, and the Spirit of London ride.

That last one — the Spirit of London — is a black-cab ride through London’s history that’s been there since the 1990s. It’s cheesy in the best way. The Marvel 4D movie is included at no extra cost, which is a nice touch since it used to be a paid add-on.

You’ll spend about 2-3 hours inside. The time slot system means you won’t be stuck in a massive queue outside, but the popular zones (Marvel, Star Wars) still get crowded inside. Go early in the morning for smaller crowds, particularly on weekdays.

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2. London 5 Top Attractions Pass with Madame Tussauds — $79

London 5 attractions pass including Madame Tussauds
Five attractions for the price of about two — the maths on this one works out surprisingly well if you’re spending a few days in London.

If you’re hitting London hard and want to pack in the tourist highlights, this is the best deal going. $79 per person gets you into Madame Tussauds, the London Eye, SEA LIFE London Aquarium, The London Dungeon, and Shrek’s Adventure. All five. That’s less than the combined cost of just Madame Tussauds and the London Eye bought separately.

The pass is valid for 90 days, which is the real selling point. You don’t have to cram everything into one chaotic day. Spread it across a long weekend or even save some for a return trip. Book your time slots as you go — each attraction lets you pick a date and time within that 90-day window.

The only downside is that the London Dungeon and Shrek’s Adventure aren’t for everyone. If you’ve got kids under 8, the Dungeon might be too intense (it’s a live-actor scare experience, not a museum). But Shrek’s Adventure and SEA LIFE are solidly family-friendly.

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3. Combo Ticket: London Eye and Madame Tussauds — $81

London Eye and Madame Tussauds combo ticket
The London Eye and Madame Tussauds are about 20 minutes apart by Tube — Baker Street to Waterloo, straight shot on the Bakerloo line.

This pairs the two most popular tourist attractions in London at a combined price. At $81 per person, it’s cheaper than buying a standard ticket to each separately (which would run you about $70-75 combined at full price, so the saving is modest — maybe 10-15%).

The combo makes logistical sense too. Do Madame Tussauds in the morning (when it’s less packed), then take the Bakerloo line from Baker Street to Waterloo and walk five minutes to the London Eye. Time your Eye rotation for late afternoon and you’ll catch the city lighting up as the sun goes down.

Worth knowing: this ticket gives you about 3 hours at Madame Tussauds and a 30-minute rotation on the Eye, so budget a half-day for both. It’s a satisfying chunk of London without being exhausting.

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London Eye silhouetted against sunset sky over the Thames
The London Eye at sunset — if you time the combo ticket right, this is what you’ll see from your pod.

When to Visit

Big Ben and Houses of Parliament at sunset with Thames reflections
Late afternoon light along the Thames — visit Madame Tussauds in the morning, then walk south for golden-hour views like this.

Madame Tussauds London is open every day of the year, though hours shift by season. During peak periods (summer, school holidays, Christmas), it’s typically open 9am to 6pm with last entry at 4pm. In quieter months, hours might shrink to 10am-4pm.

Best times to go:

Weekday mornings, as early as possible. The first time slot of the day (usually 9am or 10am) has the smallest crowds. By noon, the place fills up considerably. Saturdays are the worst — school holidays even more so.

Worst times:

Saturday afternoons in July and August. Half-term weeks. Christmas holidays between December 27 and January 2. If you absolutely must go during these periods, book the earliest morning slot and don’t dawdle.

The experience takes most people 2-3 hours. Speed-walkers who skip the photo ops can do it in 90 minutes. If you want a photo with every wax figure (and honestly, why wouldn’t you?), budget the full 3 hours.

How to Get There

Baker Street Underground station platform sign
Baker Street station — you’ll walk past a giant Sherlock Holmes silhouette on the platform tiles, which is charming even the tenth time.

Madame Tussauds sits on Marylebone Road, right next to Baker Street Tube station. It’s one of the easiest major attractions to reach in London.

By Tube: Baker Street station is served by five lines — the Hammersmith & City, Circle, Metropolitan, Jubilee, and Bakerloo. Take exit 3 (Marylebone Road / Madame Tussauds), turn left, and you’ll see it in about 2 minutes. You literally cannot miss the green dome.

By bus: Routes 13, 18, 27, 30, 74, 82, 113, 274, and 453 all stop near Baker Street. The 74 from Oxford Circus is the most convenient if you’re coming from the West End shopping area.

On foot: It’s about a 15-minute walk from Oxford Street’s north end, or 20 minutes from Regent’s Park if you cut through from the south entrance. Pleasant walk in good weather, though Marylebone Road itself isn’t exactly scenic — lots of traffic.

Close-up of the London Underground roundel sign at a station entrance
The Tube roundel — London’s most recognisable logo, and your best friend for getting around the city.

Parking: Don’t bother. Street parking in Marylebone is expensive and time-limited. The nearest NCP car park is on Chiltern Street (about 5 minutes’ walk), but you’ll pay upwards of 8 GBP per hour. Take the Tube.

Tips That Will Save You Time

London Underground train pulling into station platform
Trains on the Jubilee line run every couple of minutes during peak hours — you won’t wait long.

Book online at least a day in advance. This isn’t just about the discount (though that’s reason enough). Advance tickets come with timed entry, which means you bypass the general admission queue entirely. On busy days, the walk-up queue can stretch around the block.

Go first thing in the morning. The first 30-45 minutes after opening are when crowds are thinnest. The Star Wars and Marvel zones are at the end of the route, so most people hit them at the same time — if you move through the earlier rooms quickly, you’ll have those sections almost to yourself.

Charge your phone. You will take more photos than you think. There’s no judgement here. Every single person in the building is taking selfies with wax figures, including the ones who said they wouldn’t.

Skip the gift shop queue. The route funnels you through the gift shop at the end. If you don’t want anything, just walk straight through. There’s no obligation to browse, despite what the layout suggests.

Combine with Regent’s Park. Baker Street station is right next to the south entrance of Regent’s Park. After a couple of hours indoors, a walk through the park is a good palate cleanser. The rose garden is particularly nice in summer.

Don’t buy the photo packages inside. Staff photographers snap your photo at several points along the route and try to sell you prints at the end. They’re overpriced. Just use your phone — the lighting in most zones is specifically designed to make your photos look good anyway.

London sidewalk with classic red phone booth and people walking past
Take a breather on Marylebone Road afterwards — plenty of cafes within a minute’s walk of the exit.

What You’ll Actually See Inside

Historic Marylebone station architecture in London
Marylebone station’s old brickwork — this whole neighbourhood has a particular character that makes the walk to Madame Tussauds feel like part of the experience.

The museum follows a one-way route through themed zones. You can’t really skip sections or double back (the layout makes sure of that), so plan to see everything.

The A-List Party is the opening zone — pop stars, actors, athletes. The wax figures here are genuinely impressive. The skin textures are unsettlingly realistic, and the eyes follow you in a way that your brain doesn’t quite process. Some of the newer figures (added within the last year or two) are noticeably better quality than older ones.

The Royal Gallery has the British royals. William, Kate, Charles, and the rest. The Queen Elizabeth II figure is still one of the most popular photo spots in the entire museum, even now.

The Culture Zone covers historical and cultural figures — Einstein, Shakespeare, Picasso. Smaller crowds here because most people rush through to get to Marvel. Their loss. The Shakespeare figure is weirdly lifelike.

Marvel Super Heroes 4D is a ride-film combo. You sit in a moving seat, put on 3D glasses, and get thrown around while the Avengers fight bad guys on screen. It’s loud, silly, and great. Kids go absolutely wild for it. Adults pretend they’re too cool and then scream at the jump scares anyway.

Star Wars is a walk-through experience with incredibly detailed sets. The cantina scene from the original film is recreated at full scale, and the lighting and sound design make it properly atmospheric. Even if you’re not a massive Star Wars fan, the production quality is impressive.

The Spirit of London ride at the end puts you in a replica black cab that moves through dioramas of London’s history. It’s old-school theme park stuff — not cutting edge, but oddly charming. The Shakespearean London and Swinging Sixties sections are the highlights.

Red London bus passing the London Eye at twilight
London at twilight — if you finish Madame Tussauds by mid-afternoon, you’ve got time for the South Bank before dark.

Kong: Skull Island is the newest addition. An animatronic King Kong confronts you in what’s essentially a jump-scare room with impressive special effects. Kids either love it or get scared. No middle ground.

Tower Bridge spanning the Thames River in London
Tower Bridge — one of those sights that’s even better in person than in photos, and well worth adding to a Madame Tussauds day trip.

More London Guides

If you’re putting together a London itinerary, Madame Tussauds pairs naturally with the London Eye — the combo ticket makes that easy, and the Bakerloo line connects the two in about 15 minutes. For something completely different, the Harry Potter Tour with Madame Tussauds bundles the Warner Bros. Studio Tour with museum entry, which is a solid full-day plan if you’ve got a Potter fan in the family. And if you’re spending a few days in London, the five-attraction Merlin pass is genuinely good value — the London Dungeon combo is worth a look too, especially if you like theatrical scare attractions.

London skyline illuminated at night featuring the Shard
London after dark — a completely different city from the one you walked around during the day.

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Planning the Rest of Your London Day

Madame Tussauds is on Marylebone Road, which puts you within easy reach of several other major attractions. The London Eye is about 20 minutes south by Tube, and the combo ticket that bundles both is almost always cheaper than buying separately.

From Baker Street station, you are also just a few stops from the British Museum in Bloomsbury. Entry is free, so you can pop in for an hour or spend half a day there. The Egyptian and Greek collections alone are worth the visit.

If you are spending multiple days in London, spread the indoor attractions across different days and mix in some outdoor experiences. A walking tour through Westminster or the City gives you context for all the buildings you keep seeing, and a Thames river cruise is the most relaxing way to connect the east and west ends of the tourist circuit.

Families with Harry Potter fans should also look at the Warner Bros Studio Tour in Watford. It is a half-day commitment but ranks as one of the best-produced visitor experiences in the UK. For something in central London, a Harry Potter walking tour covers the film locations without leaving Zone 1.