Best Cafes & Restaurants for Kids in London (2026)

Food · February 2026 · 8 min read

Eating out with young children in London is an exercise in managing expectations. Yours, theirs, and the expectations of every other diner in the room who is silently hoping your toddler does not throw a breadstick at their head. The restaurant you choose determines whether the experience is a lovely family lunch or a forty-five-minute hostage negotiation over a plate of chips.

The truth is that most London restaurants will technically let you bring a child. But there is a world of difference between a place that tolerates children and a place that genuinely welcomes them. The restaurants in this guide are the latter — places where the highchairs are not covered in dust, the staff smile when they see a buggy, and nobody flinches when a spoon hits the floor for the sixth time.

Here are the best cafes and restaurants in London for families with babies, toddlers, and young kids — from dedicated family spots to proper restaurants that happen to be brilliant with children.

The Dedicated Family Spots

These are the places that were built with families in mind. You will not need to apologise for anything here. The noise level is already high, the kids’ menu is not an afterthought, and the changing facilities actually exist.

1. Giraffe

Multiple locations across London · Map · Website

Giraffe has been doing the family restaurant thing longer than most, and they have got it down to a science. The menu spans everything from burgers and wraps to stir-fries and halloumi, so fussy eaters and adventurous eaters can both find something. Kids get their own menu with smaller portions at reasonable prices, and it goes well beyond the standard nuggets-and-chips offering. The atmosphere is lively and colourful, which means nobody notices when your child is being loud — because everyone else’s child is also being loud. Highchairs are available at every location and the staff are consistently warm with kids.

Parent tip: Highchairs at every branch. Colouring sheets and crayons are standard. The South Bank and Southgate locations have particularly good space for buggies. Weekend brunch gets busy — go at 11am to beat the rush.

2. The Breakfast Club

Multiple locations across London · Map · Website

The Breakfast Club is one of those places where the general chaos of the environment works entirely in your favour as a parent. It is always busy, always noisy, and always slightly chaotic — which means your toddler having a small crisis over a pancake does not register on anyone’s radar. The food is excellent — proper American-style brunch with pancake stacks, eggs every way, burgers, and shakes. Kids love it because the food is fun and familiar. Parents love it because the portions are generous and the coffee is strong. Most branches have highchairs and the staff are unfazed by small children.

Parent tip: Go for a late breakfast or early lunch — the peak brunch window (10am-12pm on weekends) means long queues at popular branches. The pancakes are a guaranteed hit with any child. Battersea Rise and Angel branches tend to have more space.

3. Frizzante at Hackney City Farm

1a Goldsmiths Row, Hackney E2 · Map · Website

Frizzante is the dream combination: genuinely good Italian food in the courtyard of a city farm. Your children can watch donkeys and chickens from the table while you eat proper wood-fired pizza and handmade pasta. It should not work this well, but it does. The food is far better than it needs to be for a cafe inside a farm — this is real Italian cooking, not a concession stand. The outdoor seating in summer is wonderful, and the whole experience feels relaxed and joyful. It is the kind of place where nobody minds if your toddler wanders over to look at a goat between courses.

Parent tip: Book ahead for weekend lunch — it is popular for good reason. Combine with a visit to the farm itself, which is free. The pizza is the safest bet for fussy eaters. Outdoor tables are best in warmer months.

4. Macaroni Penguin

Battersea Power Station, SW11 · Map · Website

Macaroni Penguin was designed specifically as a family restaurant, and it shows. Located inside the Battersea Power Station development, it combines a proper restaurant with a play area — which is the holy grail for parents who want to eat a meal while it is still warm. The menu is Italian-leaning with pasta, pizza, and salads that appeal to both adults and children. The play space means kids can burn off energy between courses, and the whole atmosphere is geared towards families. No apologetic glances at other tables required.

Parent tip: The play area is the real draw — it buys you time to actually eat. Highchairs and changing facilities on-site. The Battersea Power Station complex has a riverside walk and playground too, so you can make an afternoon of it.

The Proper Restaurants (That Welcome Kids)

These are restaurants where the food is the main event — places you would choose even without children. The difference is that they genuinely welcome families rather than merely enduring them. You can have a proper meal here and not feel like you are ruining everyone else’s evening.

5. Wahaca

Multiple locations across London · Map · Website

Wahaca is one of the best family restaurants in London that nobody thinks of as a family restaurant. The Mexican street food format is brilliant for kids — tacos, quesadillas, and burritos are all easy to eat with small hands, and the sharing style means you can order a few things and let everyone pick. The atmosphere is vibrant and lively, which absorbs the noise of children effortlessly. The kids’ menu is thoughtful, with smaller tacos and rice-and-bean combinations. Most importantly, the food is genuinely good — fresh, flavourful, and interesting enough that parents do not feel like they are eating at a children’s party.

Parent tip: Quesadillas are the failsafe order for cautious eaters — melted cheese in a tortilla is hard to refuse. The Southbank and Covent Garden branches have the most space. Highchairs available. Go at 5.30pm for an early dinner before it fills up.

6. Cafe Murano

33 St James’s Street, SW1 · Map · Website

Cafe Murano is the proof that you do not have to sacrifice quality to eat out with children. Angela Hartnett’s Italian restaurant serves beautiful handmade pasta and seasonal dishes in a setting that feels grown-up and elegant — but is surprisingly accommodating to families, particularly at weekend lunch. The pasta is the thing to order, and small children tend to be very happy with a bowl of simple, perfectly made pasta with butter or ragu. The staff are professional and kind, the kind of people who bring colouring pencils without being asked and do not panic when a glass of water gets knocked over.

Parent tip: Weekend lunch is the best time to visit with kids — the atmosphere is more relaxed. Ask for a booth if available. The truffle pasta is extraordinary (that one is for you, not the children). Highchairs available on request.

7. Heddon Street Kitchen

3-9 Heddon Street, W1 · Map · Website

Gordon Ramsay’s restaurants are not the first places you might think of for a family lunch, but Heddon Street Kitchen is genuinely welcoming to children. The menu is modern European brasserie — burgers, steaks, pasta, fish — with a kids’ menu that takes the food seriously rather than offering reheated frozen nuggets. The space is open and airy with enough background buzz to mask the sound of a child who has decided they no longer want to sit down. Heddon Street itself is a pedestrianised lane off Regent Street, which gives you that rare London luxury: outdoor seating where you do not need to worry about traffic.

Parent tip: The kids’ menu is proper food, not token gestures. Weekend brunch is the most family-friendly window. The outdoor terrace on Heddon Street is lovely in warmer weather and safe from traffic. Highchairs and changing facilities available.

8. Nando’s

Multiple locations across London · Map · Website

I know, I know — Nando’s is not exactly a hidden gem. But there is a reason every parent in London has a soft spot for the place. It is fast, it is reliable, the kids’ menu is good value, and the noise level means your family blends right in. Children can have plain chicken with chips and corn on the cob, which covers approximately 90% of all toddler food preferences. The self-service drinks and ordering system means you are not waiting around when patience is running thin. And honestly, a butterfly chicken with spicy rice while your kids are happily eating is one of the small pleasures of parenthood.

Parent tip: Order at the counter and food arrives quickly — crucial when small people are hungry. Kids eat free with an adult meal at certain times (check the app). Every branch has highchairs. The Fino side is a safe bet for children who do not like spice.

The Hidden Gems

These are the places that do not necessarily market themselves as family restaurants, but offer something genuinely special for parents and kids. The kind of places you tell other parents about in the playground.

9. Toconoco Japanese Cafe

Bermondsey, SE1 · Map · Website

Toconoco is a small Japanese cafe in Bermondsey that is quietly one of the best places to take children in London. The food is simple, authentic Japanese home cooking — rice bowls, udon noodles, onigiri, and miso soup — and it is the kind of food that young children tend to love once they try it. There is something about a bowl of warm udon noodles that transcends age and cultural boundaries. The cafe is small and calm, the staff are lovely, and the whole experience feels like a gentle introduction to Japanese food for small palates. If your child currently exists on a diet of beige food, this is where to start expanding their horizons.

Parent tip: The udon noodles are the gateway dish for children — warm, mild, and fun to eat (messily). Small space so buggy storage can be tight. Bermondsey Street has plenty to explore afterwards. Go at lunch for the calmest atmosphere.

10. Jamie Oliver Cookery School — Kids Classes

19 Grafton Street, W1 · Map · Website

This is not a restaurant in the traditional sense, but it deserves a place on the list because it combines food and kids in a way that nothing else in London does. The Jamie Oliver Cookery School runs dedicated kids’ classes where children learn to make real food — pizza, pasta, baking — in a proper kitchen environment. It is hands-on, messy, and genuinely educational. Children come away having actually cooked something, and the pride on their face when they eat what they made is worth every penny. It is also a brilliant birthday party option or a special treat for a food-curious child.

Parent tip: Book well in advance — kids’ classes sell out quickly. Best for ages 5 and up, though family classes can work for younger children with a parent. They eat what they cook at the end, which is the best part. Check the website for seasonal class themes.

The Best Museum Cafes

A note on museum cafes, because some of the best family-friendly eating in London happens inside museums. The Science Museum cafe is reliably good and sits right next to the garden — perfect for letting kids run around after lunch. The V&A Museum of Childhood in Bethnal Green has a cafe that understands its audience better than almost anywhere in London, with a kids’ menu, highchairs, and the patience of saints. And the Horniman Museum cafe in Forest Hill has a terrace overlooking the gardens with views across London — proper food, lovely setting, and children can go straight from lunch to the aquarium or the nature trail. Museum cafes tend to be noisy, tolerant, and set up for families by default, which makes them some of the most stress-free places to eat with kids in the city.

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