At some point in those first few months as a parent, someone will ask you what classes you are doing. Not whether you are doing classes. What classes. As if there is a curriculum for babies that you somehow missed during the birth debrief.
And then you look into it and realise there are approximately four thousand options, all with waiting lists, all costing more than your gym membership, and all happening at 9:30am on a Tuesday when you have not yet worked out how to leave the house before 10.
The baby and toddler class circuit in London is a world unto itself. Some classes are genuinely brilliant — they give your child something you cannot replicate at home, and they give you a reason to get dressed and talk to other adults. Others are fine but forgettable. And a few are an expensive way to watch your child ignore the teacher for 45 minutes while eating a rice cake off the floor.
Here is an honest guide to the classes that are actually worth your time, your money, and the 7:30am alarm.
Music classes are the gateway drug of the baby class world. They are usually the first thing parents sign up for, and for good reason — babies and toddlers genuinely respond to music in a way that feels almost magical. The question is which format works for your child and your budget.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 3 months to 4 years · Term-time weekly sessions · Map · Website
Monkey Music is the one most parents encounter first, and there is a reason it has been running for over 30 years. The sessions are tightly structured — each class follows a set format with original songs, instruments, and props — and the progression from the baby classes through to the pre-school groups is genuinely well thought out. The teachers are trained specifically in the Monkey Music method, so the quality is consistent across locations. Your child will learn the songs, you will learn the songs, and you will find yourself singing them in the shower for months afterwards.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 0 to 5 years · Term-time and holiday sessions · Map · Website
Hartbeeps is Monkey Music turned up to eleven. It is a full-blown sensory experience with LED lights, bubbles, glowing props, and original music that is genuinely catchy rather than painfully repetitive. The rooms are transformed with lighting effects and the teachers perform with real energy. Babies are transfixed. Toddlers are transfixed. Parents are often transfixed. It is theatrical in a way that most baby classes are not, and that makes it feel special rather than just another singalong in a church hall.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 4 to 17 years · Weekly term-time sessions · Map · Website
Little Voices is for the slightly older end — children from around age 4 upwards — and combines singing with drama in small group sessions. The classes are capped at small numbers, which means your child actually gets individual attention rather than being one of twenty kids shaking a tambourine. If your child loves performing, singing along to everything, or narrating their own life in dramatic fashion, Little Voices gives them a proper outlet. The teachers are performing arts trained and the end-of-term showcases are surprisingly impressive.
If your child is the one climbing the furniture, launching themselves off the sofa, and treating every surface as a potential trampoline, movement classes are not optional — they are survival. These classes burn energy in a structured way and teach physical skills that are genuinely useful.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 6 months to 7 years · Weekly term-time sessions · Map · Website
Tumble Tots has been going since 1979 and it still works. The format is simple: a hall full of climbing equipment, balance beams, tunnels, trampolines, and mats, all set up in a structured course that children work through with a parent (for the younger groups) or independently (for older children). The equipment is colourful and well-maintained, the sessions follow a clear structure with warm-up songs and a parachute finale, and children absolutely love it. It is not flashy or Instagram-worthy, but it does exactly what it promises — builds confidence, coordination, and physical skills through active play.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 2 to 7 years · Weekly sessions · Map · Website
Mini Athletics takes the multi-sport approach — each week focuses on different athletic skills like running, jumping, throwing, and balance. The sessions are high-energy and well-structured, with warm-ups, skill stations, and games that keep children engaged for the full session. What sets it apart from a general tumble class is the focus on actual sports skills rather than just free play. Children learn to throw properly, run with form, and compete in a fun, non-pressured way. The coaches are enthusiastic and good at managing the controlled chaos of a room full of toddlers.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 18 months to 7 years · Weekly sessions · Map · Website
Little Kickers is football for toddlers, and before you roll your eyes, it is actually very good. The youngest group (First Kicks, 18 months to 2.5 years) is more about coordination, running, and kicking a ball in the vague direction of a goal than it is about tactical formations. But the structure is solid, the coaches are trained to work with very small children, and the sessions build progressively so that by age 4 or 5, children are playing actual mini games. If you or your partner care about football — and statistically, at least one of you does — this is a Saturday morning you will genuinely enjoy.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 1 year upwards · Weekly term-time sessions · Map · Website
Synergy offers structured gymnastics classes with proper equipment — beams, bars, vaults, and floor mats — in a way that feels professional but still fun. The parent-and-child sessions for the youngest age group teach basic movement skills on real gymnastics equipment, and the independent classes for older children get progressively more technical. If your child is naturally physical and you want something with more rigour than a soft play session, Synergy provides that. The coaches are qualified gymnasts and the facilities are purpose-built, which makes a noticeable difference.
Not every child wants to run, climb, and kick things. Some want to paint, perform, and cover themselves in glitter. Creative classes are where the mess happens — and where some children truly come alive.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 6 months to 12 years · Weekly sessions and holiday camps · Map · Website
Mini Picassos runs proper art classes for children, and by proper I mean they use real art techniques and materials rather than just handing out colouring sheets. The sessions are themed and progress through different skills — painting, sculpture, printmaking, collage — in a way that is age-appropriate but genuinely educational. For toddlers, it is messy sensory play with purpose. For older children, it becomes real art instruction. The studios are bright, well-equipped, and set up so that mess is expected and encouraged. You will take home artwork. Some of it will be surprisingly good.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 4 to 7 years · Weekly term-time sessions · Map · Website
Perform combines drama, dance, and singing into 60-minute sessions that are structured, energetic, and genuinely engaging. Each term follows a theme and builds towards a mini performance, which gives children something to work towards. The teachers are professional performers — actors, dancers, singers — and they bring a level of energy and commitment that children respond to. It is not a quiet, sit-in-a-circle kind of class. It is loud, physical, and expressive, and children who thrive here tend to be the ones who need an outlet for all that dramatic energy.
Swimming is the one class that almost every parent agrees is essential. The earlier children get comfortable in water, the better. And sensory classes for the very youngest babies offer something you genuinely cannot replicate at home.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 0 to 13 months · Weekly term-time sessions · Map · Website
Baby Sensory is designed for babies from birth, and it is one of the few classes where you can take a genuinely tiny newborn without feeling like you are in the wrong place. Each session is a series of sensory activities — lights, textures, sounds, bubbles, fabrics, music — that are designed to stimulate development in those crucial early months. The class follows a set structure with a hello song, themed activities, and a goodbye song, which gives the session a rhythm that babies quickly learn to anticipate. For new parents, the social element is at least as valuable as the class itself. These sessions are where you meet the other bleary-eyed adults who are also just trying to get through the day.
Multiple locations across London · Ages 12 weeks to 4 years · Weekly sessions · Map · Website
Turtle Tots is baby and toddler swimming done well. The pools are warm (warmer than your average public pool, which matters enormously when you are dunking a baby), the classes are small, and the instructors are trained specifically in infant aquatics. The programme is progressive, building water confidence through songs, games, and gentle submersion techniques. By the toddler stages, children are learning to kick, float, and move through the water independently. Swimming is arguably the most important life skill you can teach your child, and starting early makes a real difference to their comfort and confidence in water.
Here is the honest answer: it depends on the class, and it depends on the child.
Some classes are worth every penny. Swimming is the obvious one — it is a life skill, and starting young genuinely matters. Music classes for babies are brilliant because they offer something most parents cannot easily replicate at home, and the social element for new parents is invaluable. Movement classes for physical toddlers are a sanity saver. Creative classes for artistic children give them materials and freedom that your kitchen table cannot match.
But there is a trap that London parents fall into, which is filling every morning with a scheduled activity because you feel like you should. A two-year-old does not need five classes a week. They need time to play, explore, get bored, and figure things out on their own. One or two classes that your child genuinely loves is worth more than a packed schedule that leaves everyone exhausted.
The other thing nobody tells you: the best class for your child is the one where they light up. Not the one with the best reviews, the longest waiting list, or the most impressive Instagram. If your toddler loves kicking a ball, Little Kickers will be the highlight of their week. If they love making noise, Monkey Music will be the one. Watch what your child gravitates towards and follow that.
And if a class is not working — if your child cries every week, refuses to participate, or is clearly not enjoying it — stop going. There is no developmental milestone that requires suffering through a 45-minute tambourine session. Try something else, or try again in six months. They change fast at this age.
All of the classes mentioned above are listed in the Little London directory, along with full details and links to book. Browse our guides to soft play in London and free things to do with kids for more ideas that do not involve a termly subscription.
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