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London to Bath: Roman Baths & English Countryside Charm in 3 Days – A Vagabond Life

London to Bath: Roman Baths & English Countryside Charm in 3 Days

Three days from London into the heart of the English countryside — the perfect short escape for culture lovers. This itinerary takes you from the British capital to the honey-stone elegance of Bath, with a stop at mysterious Stonehenge and the picture-perfect Cotswold villages. You’ll walk Roman streets, visit the Roman Baths, explore the Royal Crescent, and hike through the Saxon-valley landscapes that inspired Jane Austen. Budget: £350–550 per person.

3-Day Itinerary Overview

Route: London (1) → Stonehenge → Bath (2) → Cotswolds → London departure

Best for: First-time UK visitors, couples, history lovers wanting countryside without long drives

Budget: £350–550 per person (excluding international flights)

Direction: London to Bath direct train (1h 20m). Day trips to Stonehenge and Cotswolds from Bath.

Getting There & Around

Arriving

Fly into any London airport (Heathrow, Gatwick, or Stansted). The direct train from London Paddington to Bath Spa takes 80 minutes and costs £25-50 if booked in advance on Great Western Railway.

Getting Around

Stonehenge: Tour bus from Bath (2 hours, £35-50). Cotswolds: Day tour from Bath (£40-60) or bus 599 from Bath to Cirencester (£6.50). Bath: Entirely walkable — no public transport needed.

Day-by-Day Itinerary

Day 1: London — Museums, Markets & Thames

☀️ Morning

Start at the British Museum (free, opens 10 AM) for the Rosetta Stone and Egyptian mummies. Walk through Covent Garden to the National Gallery (free, Trafalgar Square).

🌆 Afternoon

Walk the South Bank from Westminster Bridge to Tower Bridge — passing the London Eye, Shakespeare’s Globe, Borough Market (lunch stop, open Thu-Sat), and the Golden Hinde. Cross Tower Bridge (free to walk across) and see the Tower of London from outside.

🌙 Evening

Dinner in the Borough Market area or a classic pub in the City of London.

Where to eat: Borough Market for lunch (street food £5-10). Dinner at The George Inn (London’s last surviving galleried coaching inn, pie £14-18).

Accommodation: London (hostel £20-35, hotel £60-150/night).

Day 2: Stonehenge & Bath — Roman Baths & Royal Crescent

☀️ Morning

Take the 07:30 train from London Paddington to Salisbury (1h 20m). From Salisbury, take the bus to Stonehenge (30 min, £15 return with entry included). Spend 1.5 hours walking the stone circle and visiting the excellent visitor centre. Continue by bus or taxi to Bath (1 hour, £12-20). Arrive by midday.

🌆 Afternoon

Check into your Bath accommodation, then explore: Roman Baths (£19, 1.5 hours, book ahead), Bath Abbey (free, donation suggested), the Royal Crescent lawn (free), and Pulteney Bridge (free). Climb the Bath Abbey tower (212 steps, £8) for panoramic city views.

Where to eat: Lunch at Sally Lunn’s — the oldest house in Bath, famous for its buns since 1680 (£8-12). Dinner at The Raven for excellent pub food and Bath Gin (£14-20).

Accommodation: Bath (hostel £18-30, B&B £65-150/night).

Pro Tip: Book Stonehenge entry tickets online at least 3 days ahead — same-day tickets sell out. The Stonehenge-to-Bath bus route via Salisbury is cheaper than a tour and just as easy.

Day 3: Cotswolds Villages & Departure

☀️ Morning

Take the bus (X72 from Bath Bus Station, 45 min, £6.50) to Castle Combe — England’s prettiest village, a perfect collection of honey-stone cottages around a market cross. Walk down to the Bybrook river and the 14th-century church. Then continue by taxi or tour to Bibury (Arlington Row — the iconic row of weaver’s cottages, free to view).

🌆 Afternoon

Lunch in Bourton-on-the-Water (“Venice of the Cotswolds”, stone bridges over the River Windrush, excellent pubs). Take the bus back to Bath, then the direct train to London Paddington (1h 20m) for your outbound connection or airport. For an early departure, take the train directly from Bath Spa to Heathrow (via Reading, 2 hours).

Where to eat: Lunch at The Mousetrap Inn in Bourton-on-the-Water (pub classics, £12-16). Grab a Cotswold pork pie from the Bourton butcher for the train (£3).
Pro Tip: A Cotswolds day tour from Bath (£40-55) covers 4+ villages in a day — better value than individual buses if you don’t have a car. The train from Bath to Heathrow takes 2 hours via Reading and costs £35-50.

Practical Information

Visas

UK visa or visa waiver (for EU, US, CAN, AUS, NZ, JP, KR — 6 months tourist stay). Not Schengen — separate visa required.

SIM

EE, Vodafone, or O2 at airport (from £10). 10GB enough. Co-op and Boots sell cheap PAYG SIMs.

Currency

British Pound (£). Cards accepted everywhere. Contactless for transport. Keep £50-100 cash for market stalls.

Trains

Book London-Bath trains in advance on GWR or Trainline (£25-50). Same-day fares £80+. Advance tickets release 12 weeks ahead.

Best Time

April-October. May and September have best weather-to-crowds ratio. Cotswolds villages get busy on summer weekends — visit on weekdays if possible.

Health

No vaccinations needed. Tap water safe. No altitude issues. Travel insurance recommended.

Budget Summary: 3-Day UK Itinerary

Estimated Total: £350–550 per person

  • Accommodation (2 nights): £80–200
  • Train London to Bath return: £50–100
  • Stonehenge (entry + transport): £40–60
  • Roman Baths: £19
  • Cotswolds village transport/tour: £40–60
  • Meals: £60–120

Money-Saving Tip: A BritRail pass (£105 for 3 days) covers all trains including London-Bath and Heathrow Express at 25% off. It pays for itself with one return trip + a day of local trains.

Disclaimer: Prices vary by season. Advance train booking essential for best fares. Stonehenge tickets should be booked at least 3 days ahead. Verify visa requirements — the UK is not in Schengen.