10 Best Playgrounds in London for Toddlers and Young Kids (2026)

Outdoors · February 2026 · 7 min read

Not all playgrounds are created equal. Some are a couple of sad swings and a wobbly see-saw bolted to concrete. Others are multi-level adventure kingdoms that your children will talk about for weeks. London, thankfully, has a lot more of the latter than the former — but you have to know where to look.

The difference between a mediocre playground and a great one is enormous when you have a toddler or young child. A great playground buys you two hours of fresh air, genuine physical challenge, and the kind of exhaustion that leads to an actual nap. A bad one buys you ten minutes and a meltdown when you try to leave the one working swing.

I have dragged my kids to playgrounds across the city, and these are the ten that are genuinely worth the journey. Some are famous, some are local secrets, and all of them will tire your children out properly.

The Destination Playgrounds

These are the playgrounds worth crossing London for. Pack a bag, bring snacks, and plan to stay for a while. They are the kind of places where the playground itself is the day out.

1. Diana Memorial Playground

Kensington Gardens, W2 · Ages 0-12 (under 12s only) · Free · Map · Website

If you only visit one playground in London, make it this one. The centrepiece is a giant wooden pirate ship surrounded by sand, and it is as spectacular as everyone says. There are also tepees, a sensory trail, musical instruments, and a separate area for toddlers with smaller structures and sand play. It gets busy — genuinely packed on sunny weekends — but the space is large enough that it still works. The pirate ship captures the imagination of every child who sees it, and the whole playground has a sense of magic that most cannot match.

Parent tip: Adults are only admitted with a child, so it feels safe. Arrive before 10am on weekends or you will queue. There are toilets and a cafe kiosk by the entrance. The toddler area is to the left as you enter — head there first if your child is under 3.

2. Tumbling Bay Playground (Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park)

Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, Stratford E20 · All ages · Free · Map · Website

Tumbling Bay is arguably the best-designed playground in London. It feels like a natural adventure rather than a standard play area — climbing boulders, sand pits, a tree-house style structure, water channels that kids can dam and redirect, and a rock pool splash area that is irresistible in warm weather. The design uses natural materials — wood, stone, sand, water — and the result is a playground that encourages creative, open-ended play rather than just going up a ladder and down a slide. It is brilliant for toddlers and older kids alike.

Parent tip: Bring a full change of clothes and a towel. The water play is not optional — your child will get soaked. There is a cafe in the park and toilets nearby. Combine it with the wider Olympic Park which is excellent for scooting and cycling.

3. Battersea Park Adventure Playground

Battersea Park, SW11 · Ages 5-16 (Go Wild area for under 5s) · Free · Map · Website

Battersea Park has one of the best playground setups in London. The main adventure playground has a zip wire, climbing wall, bridges, and large-scale structures. For younger kids, the Go Wild play area nearby is excellent — it has sand, water play, and smaller climbing structures designed for toddlers and pre-schoolers. The park itself is gorgeous, with a boating lake, a small zoo, and wide paths perfect for scooters and balance bikes. You can easily spend an entire day here.

Parent tip: The adventure playground is for ages 5-16, but the Go Wild area nearby is designed for under 5s. Both are free. There is a good cafe next to the playground, and the park has public toilets near the lake.

4. Crystal Palace Park

Crystal Palace, SE19 · All ages · Free · Map · Website

The playground itself is solid — good variety of equipment, a sandpit, water play in summer — but what makes Crystal Palace Park a destination is everything around it. The famous Victorian dinosaur sculptures are genuinely impressive and kids are fascinated by them. There is also a small maze, a boating lake, and plenty of green space for running around. The combination of playground, dinosaurs, and parkland makes it a full day out that you would struggle to replicate anywhere else in London.

Parent tip: See the dinosaurs first, then hit the playground when the kids need to burn off energy. The dinosaurs are a 10-minute walk from the playground so plan your route. There is a cafe near the playground area. Parking is available but fills up on sunny weekends.

5. Hampstead Heath Adventure Playground

Hampstead Heath, NW3 · Ages 5-15 (under 5s area also available) · Free · Map · Website

This is the wild one. Hampstead Heath Adventure Playground feels closer to a forest playground than anything you would find in a city — rope swings, climbing structures built from natural timber, mud, and a genuine sense of adventure. It is not manicured and sanitised like some playgrounds, and that is exactly the point. Kids get to climb higher, take more risks, and get properly dirty. For younger children, there is a separate area with smaller equipment, but even the toddler section has more character than most playgrounds manage.

Parent tip: The adventure playground is staffed and supervised during opening hours. Check the website for current times as they vary seasonally. Your kids will get muddy — dress them accordingly. The cafe at Parliament Hill is a short walk away.

The Local Heroes

You do not always need a grand day out. These neighbourhood playgrounds are excellent in their own right — the kind of places that make you grateful to live nearby, or worth a detour if you are in the area.

6. Coram's Fields

93 Guilford Street, Bloomsbury WC1N · All ages · Free · Map · Website

Coram's Fields has the best rule of any playground in London: adults are only allowed in if accompanied by a child. It is a seven-acre park in the middle of Bloomsbury with a large playground, a paddling pool (summer only), a city farm with goats, sheep, and chickens, and sports pitches. The playground equipment caters to a wide age range, with a decent toddler section and larger climbing structures for older kids. The city farm alone makes it worth a visit, and the atmosphere is always friendly and community-oriented.

Parent tip: The city farm is free and open daily. The paddling pool opens in summer and is shallow enough for toddlers. There is a small drop-in nursery and an under-5s play session during term time. Nearest Tube is Russell Square.

7. Holland Park Adventure Playground

Holland Park, W8 · All ages · Free · Map · Website

Holland Park is one of the most beautiful parks in London, and the adventure playground matches that standard. There is a large zip wire, a tall climbing frame, swings, and a play structure with slides. It sits within the park so you get the benefit of the Japanese Kyoto Garden, the woodland walk, and peacocks roaming around nearby. The playground is well-maintained and has a good mix of equipment for different ages. It is not the biggest playground in London, but the setting elevates it.

Parent tip: Visit the Kyoto Garden and see the peacocks on the way to the playground. The cafe in Holland Park is excellent but pricey. There are clean toilets near the playground. Best accessed from the Holland Park Tube entrance on the north side.

8. Gloucester Gate Playground

Regent's Park, NW1 · All ages · Free · Map · Website

Recently refurbished and genuinely impressive for a park playground. Gloucester Gate has a brilliant toddler section with low-level climbing, sand play, and water features, plus a larger area for older kids with ropes, climbing walls, and a tall slide. The refurbishment has made it one of the best-equipped playgrounds in central London, and because it is at the quieter northern end of Regent's Park, it never feels as crowded as you would expect. The surrounding park is perfect for a post-playground walk, scoot, or picnic.

Parent tip: The toddler area is enclosed and separated from the older kids' section, which is a relief. There is a small cafe kiosk near the playground. Camden Town Tube is a 5-minute walk away. Combine with London Zoo if you want a bigger day out — the zoo entrance is very close.

9. Victoria Park Playgrounds

Victoria Park, Tower Hamlets E3 · All ages · Free · Map · Website

Victoria Park has not one but two excellent playgrounds, one at each end of the park. The west playground has a large climbing structure, swings, and a good sandpit. The east playground has a brilliant splash pad that operates in summer — one of the best free water play areas in London. The park itself is gorgeous with a boating lake, a cafe at the Pavilion that serves proper food, and wide paths that are excellent for cycling and scooting. East London families already know this, but it deserves a wider audience.

Parent tip: The splash pad at the east playground runs from roughly May to September and is free. Bring swimwear and a towel. The Pavilion Cafe is one of the best park cafes in London — arrive early on weekends. The park is accessible from Mile End or Hackney Wick stations.

10. Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

Stratford, E20 · All ages · Free · Map · Website

Beyond Tumbling Bay (featured above), the wider Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park has multiple playgrounds and play areas spread across the site. There are smaller play areas near the Copper Box Arena and along the canal, plus the fountains in the main plaza that shoot water jets from the ground — kids go absolutely wild for these in summer. The whole park is designed for families, with wide paths, gentle slopes, and excellent cycling and scooting routes. If you only know Stratford for the Westfield shopping centre, the Olympic Park will change your mind entirely.

Parent tip: The water fountains in the main plaza are free and run in warmer months — bring a change of clothes. The park is huge so bring a scooter or balance bike for getting around. There are multiple cafes but the one near Tumbling Bay is the most family-friendly.

Playground Survival Tips

All of the playgrounds mentioned above are featured in the Little London parks guide, and most of them are completely free. For more ideas that will not cost you anything, browse our free things to do with kids in London.

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