Budget holiday? It’s possible! Online travel adviser Hotels.com offers a list of things to do and places to see in London that won’t cost you a cent:
1. Evensong at Westminster Abbey
During the day it can be crowded and expensive, but come Evensong and catch the church at its best - alive with song. And free!
2. Star-gazing and city views at Greenwich Observatory
Stand with one leg in the western hemisphere and one in the east - the Prime Meridian runs through Greenwich Observatory in south-east London. The elegant red-brick building is also home to interactive displays, a huge domed telescope and some of the best views over London.
3. Cutting-edge art on First Thursdays
On the first Thursday of every month a host of East End galleries throw their doors open for free events and exhibitions. Art hotspots like Hackney's Vyner Street turn into impromptu street parties as a mix of students and art-lovers flit from gallery to gallery.
4. Dinosaur Days at the Natural History Museum
An awesome 26-metre skeleton of a Diplodocus gazes down on the armies of families milling round the vaulted entrance hall of the Natural History Museum in Kensington. Deeper inside there's a captivating mix of high-tech interactive exhibits, fearsome animatronic dinosaurs and Victorian curiosities.
5. Archive films at Mediatheque
The long sweep of the South Bank is packed with free things to do - from watching the wild rides of skateboarders to the free exhibitions at the British Film Institute. Don't miss Mediatheque though. The BFI's viewing room has thousands of hours of rare film and TV footage to view on personal video stations.
6. Legal history at the Inns of Court
When location scouts for movies like Harry Potter want a London location they head for the Inns of Court in Holborn. A walk through the headquarters of the British legal system takes in thin-windowed Dickensian chambers, quiet fountain squares and the gaudy splendour of the Knights Templar's London temple.
7. Window-shopping at Sotheby's
It's not just buyers who can browse the lots at one of the world's most famous auction houses. Extraordinary works of art, from Old Masters to Damien Hirst skulls, pass through these hallowed halls, and they are all exhibited for free.
8. An open party invite at Cargo Free Fridays
The Cargo club is an unofficial HQ for east London's hipsters - the first stop on any self-respecting Shoreditch night out. Plug in to the area's mix of up-and-coming bands, hip DJs and summer barbeques with their famous (and free) Friday night sessions.
9. Cockney culture at Columbia Road Flower Market
A nondescript street in busy Hackney comes alive every Sunday as armies of flower-sellers turn the area into a riot of colour, fragrance and boisterous banter. Join the crush as Londoners haggle for floral bargains or just wander the street's urban greenery.
10. A British master at Tate Britain
Many of the world's most famous artworks are on display for free in London's art galleries. Lose yourself in JMW Turner's wild impressionistic canvases and evocative sketches at the Tate Britain's post-modern Clore Gallery, dedicated to that most English of painters.
1. Evensong at Westminster Abbey
During the day it can be crowded and expensive, but come Evensong and catch the church at its best - alive with song. And free!
2. Star-gazing and city views at Greenwich Observatory
Stand with one leg in the western hemisphere and one in the east - the Prime Meridian runs through Greenwich Observatory in south-east London. The elegant red-brick building is also home to interactive displays, a huge domed telescope and some of the best views over London.
3. Cutting-edge art on First Thursdays
On the first Thursday of every month a host of East End galleries throw their doors open for free events and exhibitions. Art hotspots like Hackney's Vyner Street turn into impromptu street parties as a mix of students and art-lovers flit from gallery to gallery.
4. Dinosaur Days at the Natural History Museum
An awesome 26-metre skeleton of a Diplodocus gazes down on the armies of families milling round the vaulted entrance hall of the Natural History Museum in Kensington. Deeper inside there's a captivating mix of high-tech interactive exhibits, fearsome animatronic dinosaurs and Victorian curiosities.
5. Archive films at Mediatheque
The long sweep of the South Bank is packed with free things to do - from watching the wild rides of skateboarders to the free exhibitions at the British Film Institute. Don't miss Mediatheque though. The BFI's viewing room has thousands of hours of rare film and TV footage to view on personal video stations.
6. Legal history at the Inns of Court
When location scouts for movies like Harry Potter want a London location they head for the Inns of Court in Holborn. A walk through the headquarters of the British legal system takes in thin-windowed Dickensian chambers, quiet fountain squares and the gaudy splendour of the Knights Templar's London temple.
7. Window-shopping at Sotheby's
It's not just buyers who can browse the lots at one of the world's most famous auction houses. Extraordinary works of art, from Old Masters to Damien Hirst skulls, pass through these hallowed halls, and they are all exhibited for free.
8. An open party invite at Cargo Free Fridays
The Cargo club is an unofficial HQ for east London's hipsters - the first stop on any self-respecting Shoreditch night out. Plug in to the area's mix of up-and-coming bands, hip DJs and summer barbeques with their famous (and free) Friday night sessions.
9. Cockney culture at Columbia Road Flower Market
A nondescript street in busy Hackney comes alive every Sunday as armies of flower-sellers turn the area into a riot of colour, fragrance and boisterous banter. Join the crush as Londoners haggle for floral bargains or just wander the street's urban greenery.
10. A British master at Tate Britain
Many of the world's most famous artworks are on display for free in London's art galleries. Lose yourself in JMW Turner's wild impressionistic canvases and evocative sketches at the Tate Britain's post-modern Clore Gallery, dedicated to that most English of painters.