Discover London
Your comprehensive guide to living, working, studying, and thriving in one of the world's greatest global cities. Explore visa pathways, iconic boroughs, world-class culture, financial opportunity, and everything you need to call London home.
Live Weather
Real-time weather data for major UK cities via Open-Meteo API.
Country Overview
The United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy and parliamentary democracy comprising England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. London — the capital — is a global powerhouse in finance, culture, education, and diplomacy, consistently ranking among the world's most influential cities.
Essential Information
- CapitalLondon
- Population (UK)~67 million
- Area242,495 km²
- LanguageEnglish
- GovernmentConstitutional Monarchy
- MonarchKing Charles III
Currency & Economy
- CurrencyPound Sterling (£)
- 1 USD~£0.79
- GDP~$3.1 Trillion
- GDP Per Capita~$46,100
- Unemployment~4.2%
- Inflation (2025)~2.8%
Practical Details
- Time ZoneGMT (UTC+0) / BST summer
- Driving SideLeft
- Electricity230V / 50Hz (Type G)
- Calling Code+44
- Emergency999 / 112
- Internet TLD.co.uk / .uk
Climate & Geography
The UK has a temperate oceanic climate — famously mild, overcast, and rainy year-round. London experiences moderate temperatures with more sunshine than northern regions but is no stranger to grey skies and unexpected showers.
London Climate (Year-Round)
- Spring (Mar–May)8–17°C, variable sunshine
- Summer (Jun–Aug)18–26°C, warmest months
- Autumn (Sep–Nov)8–16°C, increasing rain
- Winter (Dec–Feb)2–9°C, frost occasional
- Annual Rainfall~602mm (spread year-round)
- Sunshine Hours/yr~1,460 hours
Regional Climate Highlights
- Scotland (Edinburgh)Colder, windier, more rain
- Wales (Cardiff)Mild, frequent rainfall
- N. Ireland (Belfast)Maritime, mild, rainy
- South EnglandWarmest, sunniest region
- Best SeasonJune – September
- Snow in LondonRare (1–3 days/year avg)
Major Cities
The UK's cities are each distinct in character — from London's global dominance to Edinburgh's cultural prestige and Manchester's northern grit.
The world's most global city — home to the Bank of England, the Stock Exchange, and HQs of hundreds of multinationals. Unrivalled cultural scene, world-class universities, 300+ languages spoken. Expensive, but endlessly rewarding.
The unofficial capital of the North — a buzzing hub for tech, media (BBC, ITV), music (Oasis, The Smiths), and football. Significantly more affordable than London with a thriving job market and vibrant student population.
One of Europe's most beautiful cities — stunning medieval castle, Georgian New Town, world's largest arts festival (Fringe), strong financial sector, elite universities (University of Edinburgh), and a distinct Scottish identity.
UK's second-largest city — highly diverse, home to HSBC's UK HQ (post-Brexit relocation), strong manufacturing and professional services, excellent Balti restaurant scene, affordable living, and improving infrastructure.
Vibrant, creative, and progressive — home to Banksy, a thriving aerospace sector (Airbus, Rolls-Royce engines), strong tech cluster, excellent universities, and a renowned sustainability ethos. Very high quality of life.
Scotland's largest and most affordable city — known for friendliness, dark humour, incredible live music scene, world-class museums (all free), strong university sector, and a rapidly developing tech and fintech ecosystem.
Cost of Living
London is one of the world's most expensive cities, but outside the capital costs drop significantly. Salaries are correspondingly high, especially in finance and technology.
Housing (London)
- Studio (Zone 1–2): £1,800–2,500/mo
- 1BR (Zone 1): £2,200–3,200/mo
- 1BR (Zone 3–4): £1,400–2,000/mo
- 2BR (Zone 2): £2,500–3,500/mo
Food & Dining
- Budget meal: £10–15
- Mid-range (2 persons): £50–80
- Monthly groceries: £250–400
- Coffee (café): £3.50–5.50
Transportation
- Monthly Travelcard (Z1–2): £178/mo
- Single Tube ride: £2.80 (cap)
- Bus (per journey): £1.75
- Taxi (Uber per km): £2.50–4.00
Utilities & Services
- Electricity + gas (85m²): £150–220/mo
- Broadband (100Mbps+): £30–55/mo
- Mobile plan (SIM): £10–25/mo
- Gym: £35–80/mo
| City | Single/Month | Family of 4/Month | Cost Index (London = 100) |
|---|---|---|---|
| London | £3,200 – £5,000 | £5,500 – £8,500 | 100 |
| Edinburgh | £2,000 – £3,000 | £3,800 – £5,500 | 62 |
| Bristol | £2,000 – £2,900 | £3,700 – £5,200 | 60 |
| Manchester | £1,700 – £2,500 | £3,200 – £4,800 | 52 |
| Birmingham | £1,600 – £2,300 | £3,000 – £4,500 | 48 |
| Glasgow | £1,400 – £2,000 | £2,700 – £4,000 | 43 |
Salaries & Employment
UK National Living Wage is £11.44/hour (2025). London salaries are typically 20–40% higher than the UK average. Net pay after tax and National Insurance is roughly 65–75% of gross for mid-level earners.
| Profession | Entry Level (£/year) | Mid-Level (£/year) | Senior Level (£/year) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Software Engineer | £40,000 – £55,000 | £65,000 – £95,000 | £100,000 – £160,000+ |
| Data Scientist / AI | £42,000 – £58,000 | £65,000 – £95,000 | £100,000 – £150,000 |
| Investment Banker | £50,000 – £80,000 | £100,000 – £200,000 | £250,000 – £500,000+ |
| Doctor (NHS) | £32,000 – £40,000 | £52,000 – £80,000 | £88,000 – £120,000+ |
| Nurse (NHS) | £28,000 – £34,000 | £36,000 – £48,000 | £50,000 – £65,000 |
| Lawyer (Solicitor) | £45,000 – £70,000 | £80,000 – £130,000 | £150,000 – £300,000+ |
| Civil / Structural Eng. | £30,000 – £40,000 | £45,000 – £65,000 | £70,000 – £100,000 |
| Marketing Manager | £30,000 – £42,000 | £50,000 – £72,000 | £75,000 – £110,000 |
| Teacher (State School) | £30,000 – £36,000 | £40,000 – £50,000 | £52,000 – £70,000 |
| Product Manager | £40,000 – £55,000 | £65,000 – £95,000 | £100,000 – £150,000 |
Job Market Highlights
- Highest DemandTech, Finance, Healthcare
- Growth SectorsAI, FinTech, Life Sciences
- Shortage ProfessionsNHS Doctors, Nurses, Engineers
- Work Week37.5–40 hours
- Annual Leave28 days minimum (statutory)
- Public Holidays8 days (England & Wales)
Benefits & Social System
- Maternity LeaveUp to 52 weeks (39 paid)
- Paternity Leave2 weeks paid
- NHS HealthcareFree at point of use
- State Pension£221.20/week (full, 2025)
- Sick Pay (SSP)£116.75/week statutory
- National Insurance8–12% employee contribution
Immigration Pathways
Post-Brexit, the UK operates a points-based immigration system. EU, EEA, and non-EU citizens are now treated equally — all requiring a visa for work, study, or long-term residence.
The primary work route post-Brexit. Requires a job offer from a UK-licensed sponsor at a qualifying salary. Points-based system replaced Tier 2.
- Job offer from approved sponsor required
- Salary minimum: £26,200/yr or role's going rate
- Shortage occupations may have lower thresholds
- Duration: Up to 5 years (renewable)
- Path to ILR (settled status) after 5 years
- Family members can join and work
For exceptionally talented or promising individuals. No job offer needed. Flexible work rights — can be employed, self-employed, or set up a company.
- No job offer or sponsor required
- Endorsement from approved body needed (UKRI, Arts Council, etc.)
- "Exceptional talent" or "exceptional promise" route
- Duration: Up to 5 years
- ILR possible after 3 years (talent) or 5 years (promise)
- No minimum salary requirement
Study at world-ranked UK universities. The Graduate Route allows 2 years post-study work (3 for PhDs) without needing a job offer.
- CAS (Confirmation of Acceptance) from licensed institution
- English language requirement (B2 / IELTS 5.5+)
- Work: Up to 20 hrs/week during term
- Graduate Visa: 2 years post-study (3 for PhD)
- Switch to Skilled Worker after finding employer
- Tuition: £15,000–38,000/year
For experienced entrepreneurs who want to set up an innovative business in the UK. Replaced the Innovator and Start-up visas in 2023.
- Endorsement from approved UK body required
- Business must be innovative, viable, and scalable
- No minimum investment requirement (officially)
- Duration: 3 years (renewable)
- ILR after 3 years (if business conditions met)
- Can work for own business only
Join a UK citizen or settled person as a spouse, partner, or dependent child. Leads to ILR after continuous residence.
- Sponsor must earn £29,000/yr (from 2025)
- Genuine relationship required
- English language requirement (A2–B1)
- Duration: 2.5 years initial (extendable)
- ILR after 5 years continuous residence
- Work rights granted immediately
Fast-tracked, reduced-fee visa for doctors, nurses, and care workers. One of the most accessible routes into the UK — NHS trusts are approved sponsors.
- Offer from NHS or approved care employer
- Lower visa fees + no Immigration Health Surcharge
- Salary: From £23,200/yr (care) to £31,000+ (clinical)
- Duration: Up to 5 years
- ILR after 5 years
- Family members included (reduced fees)
Permanent settlement in the UK — equivalent to permanent residency. No restrictions on work, study, or access to public funds.
- Generally 5 years continuous legal residence
- Life in the UK test required
- English B1 level (speaking and listening)
- No absences exceeding 180 days/year
- No serious criminal record
- Valid indefinitely (no renewal needed)
Naturalisation as a British citizen. UK does not generally allow dual nationality in all cases, but many countries permit it — check your home country's rules.
- Hold ILR for 12 months (or married to British citizen)
- Total of 5 years legal residence (6 if via marriage)
- Life in the UK test
- English language requirement
- No serious criminal record
- UK passport: visa-free access to 187 countries
Education & Healthcare
The UK is home to four of the world's top ten universities and an NHS providing free universal healthcare to all residents.
Education System
- State SchoolsFree (ages 5–18)
- Private Schools£15,000–50,000/year
- Undergrad (Home)£9,250/year (England)
- Undergrad (Intl)£15,000–38,000/year
- Top UniversitiesOxford, Cambridge, Imperial, UCL, LSE
- Scotland Uni (EU/UK)Free for Scottish students
NHS Healthcare
- System TypeUniversal (NHS + private)
- Cost to ResidentsFree at point of use
- Immigration Health Surcharge£1,035/yr (visa applicants)
- GP VisitFree (register with local GP)
- Prescription (England)£9.90 per item
- Private Insurance£50–200/month (optional)
Culture & Lifestyle
London is one of the world's most cosmopolitan and culturally rich cities — a place where ancient tradition and cutting-edge modernity coexist on every street corner.
Food & Cuisine
- London ClassicsFish & chips, full English, pie & mash
- World CuisineEvery country represented in London
- Curry CapitalBrick Lane, Southall, Tooting
- Pub Culture55,000+ pubs across the UK
- MarketsBorough, Brixton, Spitalfields
Culture & Arts
- Free MuseumsBritish Museum, V&A, Tate Modern
- TheatreWest End: world's best live theatre
- MusicBirthplace of The Beatles, Rolling Stones
- FestivalsNotting Hill Carnival, Glastonbury
- Royal EventsTrooping the Colour, State occasions
London Boroughs
- The City / Canary WharfFinance, banking HQs
- Shoreditch / HackneyTech, creative, startups
- Notting Hill / ChelseaUpscale, leafy, affluent
- Brixton / PeckhamVibrant, diverse, arts
- Stratford / East LondonAffordable, regenerated
Language & Integration
- LanguageEnglish (many accents!)
- English LevelNo barrier for English speakers
- Expat CommunityVast (3.8M+ foreign-born in London)
- Social CulturePolite, reserved, pub-centric
- LGBTQ+Very welcoming, Soho at heart
Pros & Cons
An honest assessment of living and working in London and the UK.
✦ Advantages
- English language — no language barrier for most immigrants
- World's top universities: Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial, UCL
- NHS free healthcare (after paying Immigration Health Surcharge)
- Global career opportunities — leading hub for finance, tech, law
- Extraordinary cultural diversity — 300+ languages in London
- World-class arts: free museums, West End theatre, live music
- Excellent transport within London (Tube, Overground, Elizabeth line)
- Strong legal protections for workers and residents
- Gateway to Europe via Eurostar and budget airlines
- Vibrant, always-on city — something happening 24/7
✦ Challenges
- Very high cost of living — especially housing in London
- Post-Brexit visa system — complex, expensive, and frequently changing
- Immigration Health Surcharge: £1,035/year per person
- Grey, rainy weather for much of the year
- London housing shortage — extremely competitive rental market
- High income tax (45% above £125,140) and NI contributions
- NHS waiting times can be very long for non-urgent care
- Commuting costs within London are among Europe's highest
Practical Information
Essential steps and resources for newcomers arriving in London and the UK.
First Steps for Newcomers
- BRP CardCollect biometric permit within 10 days
- National Insurance No.Apply online via HMRC immediately
- Register with NHS GPFind local GP and register free
- Bank AccountMonzo/Revolut easiest; then Barclays, HSBC
- Council TaxRegister with local borough
- Oyster Card / contactlessFor TfL travel discounts
Transport & Connectivity
- Main AirportsHeathrow (LHR), Gatwick, Stansted, City
- London UndergroundThe Tube — 11 lines, 270 stations
- Elizabeth LineEast–West rapid transit (opened 2022)
- National RailConnects all UK cities
- CyclingSantander Cycles, growing cycle lanes
- EurostarParis 2h15, Brussels 2h, Amsterdam 4h