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Public Toilets in London

England, United Kingdom

4,230+ public toilet locations indexed from OpenStreetMap and local government open-data records. Live map, accessibility filters, and a comprehensive local guide below.

4,230+
Mapped locations
6
Neighbourhoods
OpenStreetMap
Data source
Live
Last updated

Live toilet map - London

Tiles © CARTO / OSM

Live OpenStreetMap data · Tap any marker to see details, opening hours, and accessibility information

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Filter public toilets in London

Each filter pre-loads the map with specific OSM tags active. Stack filters on the map page for more precise results.

Public toilets by neighbourhood - London

The estimated distribution of mapped public toilet facilities across London's main neighbourhoods and districts. Figures reflect OpenStreetMap mapping density and are updated as new facilities are added by contributors.

Neighbourhood figures are editorial estimates based on OpenStreetMap mapping density. Live pins load from OSM and council datasets when you open the map.

Complete guide to public toilets in London

London has one of the most extensive public toilet networks in the UK, maintained by local councils. Many central London toilets are free, including those managed by the City of Westminster. Transport for London provides toilet facilities at major stations.

Finding a public toilet in Londonis straightforward if you know where to look. The city's sanitation infrastructure spans council-operated facilities in parks and high streets, transport hub toilets at train stations and bus interchanges, retail premises in shopping centres and department stores, and hospitality venues including pubs, restaurants, and hotels. Each facility type has its own operating model - some free, some paid, some 24-hour, and some attended.

The most reliable free public toilets in London are council-run facilities located in Westminster, City of London, Southwark, and other high-footfall public areas. These are typically managed by the local authority and maintained to minimum sanitation standards. Operating hours vary - many open at 07:00 and close between 19:00 and 22:00, with seasonal variations. Automated 24-hour units supplement provision in some city-centre locations.

Toilet provision by location type in London

Council facilities

Maintained by the local council. Free in most cases. Located in parks, promenades, markets, and civic squares.

Transport hubs

Railway stations, bus interchanges, and - where applicable - airport terminals. Typically high-standard and accessible, sometimes ticketed beyond the barrier.

Shopping centres

Free for customers or general public in most cases. Well-maintained, often including accessible suites and baby-changing rooms. Extended retail hours.

Parks and open spaces

Council-operated and often seasonal. Coverage varies significantly by district. Key parks in London typically have facilities near the main entrance.

Cost: free vs paid toilets in London

What to expect and where to find no-charge facilities

Most council-run public toilets in London are free. Some privately operated facilities and automated units may charge a small fee (typically 20p–50p). Transport hubs and shopping centres are generally free.

To find only free facilities in London, use the Free filter on the map. This filters for OpenStreetMap nodes where fee=no or no fee tag is present. Note that some facilities without a fee tag may still charge - always check on-site signage.

Charges for public toilets can change without notice. Always verify current fees on-site. Our data reflects what is recorded in OpenStreetMap at time of fetching; contributor updates may lag behind real-world changes.

Wheelchair-accessible toilets in London

Full and partial access facilities, RADAR key, and Changing Places

The UK uses the National Key Scheme (RADAR key) for locked accessible toilets - over 9,000 nationally. Changing Places suites with ceiling hoists are now required in new public buildings. Most council facilities meet Part M of the Building Regulations.

On the London map, the wheelchair filter distinguishes between full access (wheelchair=yes - turning space, grab rails, step-free threshold) and limited access (wheelchair=limited - accessible but not fully compliant). Transport hubs, large shopping centres, and major tourist attractions in London generally provide full-access facilities. Older park and street-level facilities are more variable.

Full wheelchair access
wheelchair=yes

Step-free entry, adequate turning radius (1.5m+), grab rails, accessible basin height. The gold standard.

Limited access
wheelchair=limited

Accessible but not fully compliant. May have a small step, narrower doorway, or partial grab-rail provision.

RADAR key required
UK NKS scheme

Over 9,000 locked accessible toilets across the UK. Key available from RADAR / Disability Rights UK for ~£5.

Show accessible toilets in London

Baby-changing facilities in London

Changing tables for parents and carers with infants

Baby-changing tables in London are most reliably found in large shopping centres, department stores, motorway or ring-road service areas, mainline railway stations, and airport terminals. The OpenStreetMap tag changing_table=yes identifies these facilities. Use the Baby Changing filter on the map to see all tagged locations.

The detail card for each facility shows the changing_table:location value where tagged - this indicates whether the table is in the women's room, men's room, or a unisex/family facility. For solo parents or same-sex couples, a unisex option is the most practical. Council parks in London's Westminster have variable provision; always verify before a longer journey.

Find baby-changing facilities in London

Transport hub toilets in London

Railway stations, airports, and transit interchanges

London's railway stations, bus interchanges, and Underground/Metro stations provide toilets on the main concourse. Network Rail stations have moved most toilets to a paid or turnstile model; many have accessible facilities with a RADAR key.

Transport hub toilets may require a valid travel ticket for access beyond ticket barriers. Always check with the station or terminal operator for access policies, particularly for non-travelling visitors.

Practical tips for finding toilets in London

Use the map before you travel

Search London on our map before leaving home. Note the nearest free or accessible facility to your planned destinations - this is especially useful in districts with lower OSM coverage.

Shopping centres are reliable fallbacks

In most parts of London, a large shopping centre or department store within walking distance will have clean, free toilets during retail hours. These are often better maintained than street-level public facilities.

Hospitality venues

Pubs, cafes, and restaurants in London generally allow customers to use facilities. In busy areas, you may need to make a purchase or ask at the bar. This is generally accepted practice and not enforced strictly.

Plan for early or late travel

If travelling outside standard hours, check the 24-hour filter first. Automated public toilet units, 24-hour transport hubs, and late-night service areas are the most reliable overnight options in London.

Download offline maps for poor signal areas

In underground transit or areas with limited mobile signal, the ToiletNearest.com map will continue to display already-loaded markers. For complete offline use, consider saving a PDF of the map before travel.

Report inaccuracies

If a toilet is closed, demolished, or incorrectly described, editing it in OpenStreetMap is the fastest fix. Our map refreshes from OSM within minutes of a change being published.

Frequently asked questions: public toilets in London

Where are the nearest free public toilets in London?

Open the ToiletNearest.com map for London and enable the 'Free' filter. Council-run facilities in Westminster and transport hub toilets at major stations are the most reliable free options. The map fetches live OpenStreetMap data showing all tagged fee=no facilities within the current viewport.

Are there wheelchair-accessible toilets in London?

London has wheelchair-accessible facilities at most major council buildings, transport hubs, and shopping centres. Enable the 'Wheelchair Accessible' filter on the map to see all OSM-tagged wheelchair=yes and wheelchair=limited locations. RADAR key toilets and Changing Places suites are also included in the UK government data layer.

Where can I find baby-changing facilities in London?

Shopping centres, department stores, and large supermarkets in London consistently provide baby-changing tables. Major transport terminals - train stations, bus interchanges, and airports if applicable - also have changing facilities. Use the 'Baby Changing' filter on the map for a full list. Check the detail card to see whether the table is in the men's, women's, or a unisex room.

Are there 24-hour public toilets in London?

24-hour public toilets in London are primarily found at unmanned automated units, 24-hour transport hubs, and some motorway services. Enable the '24-hour' filter on the map to show all facilities tagged opening_hours=24/7. Coverage varies significantly by neighbourhood - city-centre automated units tend to be the most reliable overnight option.

How many public toilets are there in London?

Our map currently indexes 4,230+ public toilet locations in London sourced from OpenStreetMap and available government open-data feeds. This includes facilities in all mapped categories - council, transport, retail, parks, and private/commercial premises. The true total is likely higher as OSM coverage is incomplete in some areas. The count updates as contributors add new mappings.

How do I report a wrong or missing toilet in London?

The quickest way is to edit OpenStreetMap directly. Create a free account at openstreetmap.org, navigate to the location in the editor, and add or correct the amenity=toilets node with accurate tags (opening_hours, fee, wheelchair, changing_table, etc.). Changes sync to our map within minutes. For verified UK government data inaccuracies, report via the Great British Public Toilet Map.

About the London toilet data

All toilet locations shown on this page come from OpenStreetMap contributors, published under the Open Database Licence (ODbL). UK facilities are supplemented by the Great British Public Toilet Map government dataset, which adds verified accessibility, opening-hours, and RADAR-key attributes. Opening hours, fees, and accessibility attributes reflect community mapping at time of retrieval. Always verify on-site for health or safety-critical journeys.

Also browse: free toilets in United Kingdom, wheelchair-accessible facilities, and baby-changing rooms across United Kingdom.

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