Use LondonWebcam’s main live London webcams pagewhen you want fixed camera views of specific London streets, bridges, junctions, shopping areas and landmarks.
Use this page when you want extra live London webcam streams, walking videos, transport views and wider city context.
The extra videos below are third-party YouTube embeds. Some are fixed live views, while others are walking, bus or transport livestreams. They can help with mood, weather, crowds and trip planning, but they should be used alongside LondonWebcam’s own camera pages and official travel updates.
LondonWebcam’s main live camera page is the best starting point if you want current London street views in one place. It includes central London camera locations such as Westminster Bridge, Piccadilly Circus, Harrods, Shaftesbury Avenue, Parliament Square, Oxford Street, Albert Bridge, Kensington High Street and Earls Court Road.
Use the main LondonWebcam cameras when you want a specific view of a street, junction, bridge, shopping area or landmark. Use the extra streams below when you want additional atmosphere, walking context, landmark video or transport-style viewing.
These LondonWebcam pages are better for checking a specific London location. The extra YouTube streams below are better for wider city context, landmark views, walking routes or transport-style viewing.
The following embeds provide extra London views. Stream availability, camera angles, titles and video quality can change because these videos are hosted by third-party YouTube channels.
Last checked:June 2026. External YouTube streams can change, pause, restart or move to a new URL, so use LondonWebcam’s own camera pages as the main reference for fixed London location views.
Abbey Road Crossing is one of London’s most recognisable street views because of its connection with The Beatles. This live stream is useful for checking the current street scene, visitor activity and how busy the crossing feels.
Best for:landmark viewing, tourist activity, street atmosphere and checking whether the crossing looks busy.
Use it with:LondonWebcam’s main live London webcams page if you want to compare Abbey Road with central London views around Westminster, Piccadilly, Oxford Street and Knightsbridge.
London Bridge / River Thames Live Webcam @ The Golden Hinde (4K)
This live view is useful for checking the River Thames around London Bridge. It can help you see the weather, light, riverside movement and general mood of the area before visiting.
Best for:Thames views, sightseeing mood, riverside planning, weather and central London atmosphere.
Use it with:Westminster Bridge - Big Ben, Parliament Square and other LondonWebcam camera views if you want to compare different parts of central London.
London walk: London Street Walk 24/7 live stream | London Walking Tour
This is not a fixed webcam, but it can still be helpful if you want a moving street-level view of London. Walking streams can show pavements, crowds, weather, shopfronts, traffic noise and the general feel of the city on the ground.
Best for:street atmosphere, visitor planning, walkability, crowd feel and general London mood.
Use it with:fixed LondonWebcam camera pages when you want both a stable location view and a broader street-level impression.
A London bus livestream gives a road-level view of the city. It is not the same as a fixed traffic camera, but it can help visitors understand the movement, pace and street layout of London from a passenger-style viewpoint.
Best for: road-level views, London bus atmosphere, route feel, street layout and general transport context.
Use it with:LondonWebcam’s fixed road and junction cameras if you want a more specific view of traffic around places such as Piccadilly, Oxford Street, Kensington or Earls Court Road.
🔴 London Underground First Person Journey 24/7 Livestream! 🚇
This transport livestream gives a different type of London view: the Tube from a first-person perspective. It may be useful for first-time visitors who want to understand the feel of London Underground travel before using it.
Best for:transport context, first-time visitor confidence, Tube atmosphere and London travel planning.
Use it with:LondonWebcam’s London travel guides if you are planning routes, transport choices or first-time visitor days in the city.
A Heathrow Airport live stream can be useful if you want a wider view of London travel conditions, aircraft movement or the general airport environment. This type of stream is not a central London webcam, but it can still be useful for visitors arriving in or leaving London.
Best for:airport views, travel context, arrivals and departures mood, and general aviation viewing.
Use it with:LondonWebcam’s main camera pages if you want to compare airport conditions with central London street views before travelling.
Note: if this stream is temporary, goes offline, changes URL or stops being useful, remove this section or replace it with a working long-term Heathrow live feed.
This page focuses mainly on live London webcams, streams and current city views. If you also enjoy historic London footage, this short Big Ben video is a useful extra because it shows early audio and video connected with one of London’s most famous landmarks.
London, Big Ben - First Audio (1890) and First Video (1896)
This is not a live webcam or current planning tool. It is included only as a historic London extra.
Live London webcams, video streams and street views are most useful before you make a real-world decision. They can help you check:
current weather and light
crowd levels around popular places
traffic and road movement
shopping street activity
event-day atmosphere
riverside visibility
whether an outdoor walk, attraction visit or photo plan still makes sense
A webcam or video stream will not tell you everything. It can show how a place looks or feels, but it cannot replace official transport alerts, attraction notices, safety updates, road closure information or timed-entry rules.
Fixed webcams are best when you want to check one place. They are useful for streets, bridges, junctions, shopping areas and landmarks.
Walking streams are better when you want atmosphere. They can show how London feels across several streets, but they may not help if you need one exact location.
Bus and Underground streams are useful for transport context. They can help first-time visitors understand the look and pace of travelling around London, but they are not the same as live service information.
For practical planning, use both: a fixed LondonWebcam camera for the location, then an extra stream for wider atmosphere.
Live camera feeds can freeze, move, go offline, change angle or disappear. Some third-party YouTube streams may also end, restart with a new URL or show recorded/live-style content rather than a fixed current camera.
LondonWebcam’s own camera pages are designed to help with visual context. They are not a replacement for official travel, safety, booking or closure information.
No. They serve different purposes. Fixed LondonWebcam camera pages are better when you want to check one specific location, such as a street, bridge, junction, shopping area or landmark. Third-party YouTube streams are better for wider views, walking context, transport-style viewing and general city mood.
Check whether the video has a live label, current chat activity, matching weather, daylight and recent movement. Some YouTube streams may freeze, restart, change URL or show recorded live-style footage. If timing matters, use LondonWebcam’s own camera pages and official travel updates as your main reference.
No. Transport livestreams can help you understand the look and feel of London transport, but they are not live service-status tools. For delays, closures or disruption, check official TfL status updates before travelling.
Use LondonWebcam camera pages when you want a specific location. Use extra video streams when you want a broader sense of London streets, transport, landmarks or visitor conditions. Together, they give a better picture than either one alone.
Yes. Webcams and streams are useful for visual context, but official sources are still important for transport disruption, attraction closures, road changes, safety notices and booking rules.
For more help planning London, browse the LondonWebcam Blogfor London travel guides, London life articles, cost advice, transport help and public-interest stories connected to the city.