In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes

(36 customer reviews )

Embankment underground station, London (Villiers Street exit)

Guided by Corinna or Fiona-Jane or Richard IV

Adult: £20 · Students & Seniors: £15 · Children: £5

Walk Times

Day Walk Type Start Time End Time
Sunday Weekly 2.30 pm 4.30 pm Winter Summer Reserve Online

N.B. this walk will not take place on the following dates:

07-06-2026 19-07-2026 20-09-2026

Follow in the footsteps of Arthur Conan Doyle’s famous sleuth Sherlock Holmes in this London walking tour.

Investigate the places from the Holmes stories as well as the TV and Film adaptations of the famous detective’s adventures in this guided tour.

Sherlock Holmes Walking Tour Practicals

Meeting point: Just outside the Villiers Street exit of Embankment  Tube. N.B. the walk ends just round the corner from Embankment Tube.

Price: £20 per person (full adult); £15 for full-time students, over 65s and Adult Loyalty Card holders; £10 for Concessions Loyalty Card holders (full-time students and over 65s); £5 for kids.

Tour language: English

Itinerary

Grab your deerstalker and magnifying glass – we’re going sleuthing! A classic Holmes walk returns, taking in locations from many of the original stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, including:

  • The Hound of the Baskervilles (Dr Mortimer’s hospital, Sir Henry’s hotel)
  • The Final Problem (Watson’s escape from Moriarty’s men, assisted by Mycroft)
  • The Dying Detective (Holmes’s favourite restaurant)
  • The Sign of Four (a rendezvous with Mary Morstan)
  • The Man with the Twisted Lip (an early morning visit to a Bow Street police cell)

From the gas-lit alleyways around Covent Garden, via the original offices of The Strand Magazine, to the Royal Opera House where the great detective Holmes and his associate Watson celebrated the end of one terrifying case, and the railway station where another of their greatest cases got underway.

Plus theatres which hosted the great stage Holmeses – William Gillette and H A Saintsbury.

Ends at the famous Sherlock Holmes pub with its marvellous recreation of the famous 221b Baker Street sitting-room.

IT ALL COMES DOWN TO THE GUIDING

Don’t just take it from us…

Meet your guide… Here’s an interview with Corinna (surely our most eccentric guide).

And here’s Richard – “specialised in early detective fiction at university, played Dr Watson on stage, contributes to the Sherlock Holmes Journal, is the Audiobooks reader for the Dr John Watson series” – talking about Sherlock Holmes, Dr Watson, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the London they knew.

At the end of the walk, why not follow further in Holmes and Watson’s footsteps by walking through:

  • Trafalgar Square (can you find the location used in 1922 when John Barrymore played Holmes, and the steps used a decade ago, a few months apart, by modern screen Sherlocks Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller?);
  • Pall Mall and Waterloo Place (Mycroft Holmes’s fictional Diogenes Club was nearby, and two of Conan Doyle’s real-life clubs, the Reform and the Athenaeum, are very much still with us);
  • Lower Regent Street (here the first ‘talking picture’ featuring Holmes was screened at the 1920s ‘super cinema’ the Plaza);
  • Piccadilly Circus (a chance encounter between Watson and an old colleague at the Criterion Bar here led to the first meeting with Holmes later that day at Bart’s, and the beginning of the legendary partnership…)

Sherlock Holmes Tour Guided by London Walks.

Sherlock Holmes FAQs

How did Sherlock Holmes start?

The first Sherlock Holmes novel written by Arthur Conan Doyle was A Study In Scarlet which was published in 1887. Doyle also wrote short stories about the detective and his adventures in the early days.

Who is the Illustrious Client in Sherlock Holmes?

It is never revealed who the Illustrious client is in this adventure where Holmes and Watson take on the sadistic Austrian Baron Adelbert Gruner. However, it is heavily implied it is King Edward VII or another member of the royal family.

Will this Sherlock Holmes tour of London include the Museum?

Yes and no. It does go to the Sherlock Holmes Pub which hosts, upstairs, the thrilling recreation of the famous 221 B Baker Street sitting room. It’s the genuine article. Many of the items were donated by the Conan Doyle family, it’s the famous recreation that went to the New York World’s Fair. And the building has authentic Sherlock Holmes connections. It’s the “must see” for Sherlock Holmes aficionados. The tour does not go to the Sherlock Holmes Museum over the way from Baker Street Underground Station. For the record, the “museum” we go to is free. It’s a no-brainer, really. “Elementary, my dear Watsons.”      

LONDON WALKS PRIVATE WALKS

If you can’t make one of the regularly scheduled, just-turn-up, public Sherlock Holmes’ London walks do think about booking one as a private tour. If you go private you can have the Sherlock Holmes’ tour of London Walk – or any other London Walk – on a day and at a time that suits your convenience. We’ll tailor it to your requirements. And – always with private London Walks and tours – we go to great lengths to make sure the guide-walker(s) “fit” is well-nigh perfect. Ring Fiona or Niamh or Peter or Mary on 020 7624 3978 or email us at [email protected] and we’ll set it up and make it happen for you. A private London Walk – they’re good value for an individual or couple and sensational value for a group – makes an ideal group or educational or birthday party or office (team-building) or club outing.

GIVE THE GIFT OF LONDON WALKS

A private London Walk makes a very special, indeed a unique gift – be it a birthday or anniversary or Christmas present or whatever. Merchandise schmerchandise (gift wrapped or not) – but giving someone an experience, now that’s special. Memories make us rich.

Want more walks like this? Check out our other literary tours of London.

“Dogs don’t make mistakes” (Sherlock Holmes speaking to Dr Watson in the story The Adventure of Shoscombe Old Place).

36 reviews for In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes

  1. Bob Clark

    A quirky journey through the life and times of Sherlock Holmes and his contemporaries.

  2. Scott Forsyth

    Corinna was excellent. My daughter and I really enjoyed the walk. We learned a lot of fascinating stories about Sherlock Holmes and also about the surrounding areas in London. Great way to spend a Sunday afternoon.

  3. Scott Forsyth

    Excellent walk. Great stories about Sherlock Holmes and also the surrounding London area. My daughter is a big Sherlock Holmes fan and really appreciated hearing the inside stories. Corinna was a great guide!

  4. Mary Beth Buescher

    Corinna was absolutely delightful. Knowledgeable, funny and a real treat. Highly recommend this walk.

  5. Av M

    I spent a fabulous afternoon on the Sherlock Holmes tour with Fiona-Jane in March (2026) and would thoroughly recommend it. Not only did we learn plenty about Sherlock Holmes and his (and his author’s!) haunts but I also discovered a lot of places – some hidden nooks & crannies, and some not-so-hidden – that I’d never been before, despite living in London, and working in the West End for many years! One early discovery that day was the arch and steps that originally led to a big house, but most interestingly used to be where boats on the Thames would stop to access that house … this is now within a park that, along with a main road, is between it and the now much narrower river! We went down various alleyways and learned about people and road name origins, and about gas lamps, and much more. Fiona-Jane is a mine of information, and great at being friendly and accommodating to all in the group. (For whom it may concern, whilst this is a 90+ minute tour, there is a lot to see in quite a compact area, so it wasn’t particularly onerous in terms of huge amounts of walking.) I’d never even been in the Sherlock Holmes pub before (where the tour ends) – the room created as Sherlock Holmes’ living-room is definitely worth a look … and yes, we enjoyed sitting in the pub for a drink and a natter afterwards 😉

  6. Julie Wilshaw

    Have just experienced the Sherlock Holmes walking tour with Fiona Jane. She is a fabulous tour guide with in depth knowledge of the stories and places that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle used to frequent in London and inspired the plots of his stories. It’s been a delight and memorable experience which I will never forget. I have learnt so much from your research and knowledge that’s been such a huge part of my childhood. Thanks for an amazing tour. I can highly recommend this to anyone who is a Sherlock fan.

  7. Jared

    Many thanks Corinna for a wonderful stroll. We did the Sherlock Holmes walking tour with a group of friends last weekend, and we all learned so much history and reinvigorated our interest in the stories that many of us grew up with and loved. Thanks again!

  8. Evelyn

    We had our walk with Corinna (Sherlock Holmes). Corinna is delightful. Her knowledge of Sherlock Holmes and Conan Doyle is unsurpassed. Her personal touch to the stories gave it a special touch. Thank you for an enjoyable time.

  9. Ursula Smola

    Corinna took us on a very entertaining and interesting Sherlock Holmes and his creator Doyle tour last week. We did also learnt that a lot of people are not aware that the back vent of the coat is meant to be cut open. Corinna is a very knowledgeable guide, incredibly sweet and full of stories.

  10. Willibrord

    Great performance, nice walk

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