
BONUS EPISODE: What’s on in London in June 2026, Royal Events, Exhibitions, Theatre, Heatwave Travel Tips
In this special bonus episode of the Anglotopia Podcast, Jonathan Thomas launches an experimental new monthly format: a London events guide covering what's actually on in the city this month. June is arguably London's finest month — 16 to 17 hours of daylight, the longest evenings of the year, and an events calendar absolutely bursting at the seams. Jonathan walks through everything worth knowing about June in London: the major royal events including Trooping the Colour and Royal Ascot, the blockbuster summer exhibitions at Tate Modern, Tate Britain, the Royal Academy, the National Portrait Gallery, the V&A, and more, plus what's on in London theater from Shakespeare's Globe to the West End, live music at Wembley and the Roundhouse, and practical tips for surviving — and thriving in — a London heat wave. If this episode proves popular, Jonathan will make it a monthly fixture. Let him know what you think in the comments.
Links
Royal Events
⠀Exhibitions — Book Ahead
- ~Frida Kahlo at Tate Modern~
- ~Royal Academy Summer Exhibition (opens June 16)~
- ~Anish Kapoor Retrospective at Hayward Gallery (opens June 16)~
- ~Marilyn Monroe at National Portrait Gallery~
- ~Barbara Hepworth at the Courtauld Gallery (from June 1)~
- ~Schiaparelli: Fashion Becomes Art at the V&A~
- ~Wes Anderson Exhibition at the Design Museum~
- ~James McNeill Whistler Retrospective at Tate Britain~
- ~The Queen's Fashion at The King's Gallery~ (sold out through 2026 — book 2027 dates now)
- ~Inside Aardman: Wallace & Gromit at Young V&A~
- ~Hokusai: 36 Views of Mount Fuji at Dulwich Picture Gallery~ (closes June 30)
⠀Theater
- ~A Midsummer Night's Dream at Regent's Park Open Air Theatre (from June 20)~
- ~Much Ado About Nothing at Shakespeare's Globe (from June 11)~
- ~To Kill a Mockingbird — New West End Adaptation (opens June 25)~
- ~Cyrano de Bergerac — West End (opens June 13)~
- ~Buy West End Tickets via Anglotopia's Link~ (supports Anglotopia)
- ~TKTS Booth at Leicester Square — Half-Price Day Tickets~
⠀Long-Running West End Shows
- The Lion King
- Hamilton
- Wicked
- Les Misérables
- Matilda
- Mamma Mia
- Six
- Harry Potter and the Cursed Child (almost always sold out — book well ahead)
- Sinatra — The Musical
⠀Live Music
- Harry Styles at Wembley Stadium (from June 12)
- Olivia Dean at the O2 (from June 12)
- Orville Peck at the Roundhouse, Camden
⠀Practical Resources
- ~National Gallery Extended Summer Hours (from July 1)~
- ~Londontopia London Events Calendar~
- ~Argos UK — Buy a Fan on Arrival~
- ~Anglotopia June London Events Article~ (link to article)
- ~Friends of Anglotopia Club~
⠀
Takeaways- June is arguably London's best month to visit — 16 to 17 hours of daylight, reliably pleasant weather, and the richest events calendar of the year, though it is also peak tourist season with hotel prices running 20 to 40 percent above spring rates.
- Trooping the Colour — the monarch's official birthday parade — is the major royal event of the year in 2026. Even without a ballot ticket to Horse Guards Parade, you can experience the procession on the Mall and the balcony appearance at Buckingham Palace by arriving very early and staking out a good spot.
- Every major summer blockbuster exhibition in London requires advance booking — some, like The Queen's Fashion at The King's Gallery, are already sold out through 2026. Book tickets as soon as you finish listening, even if your trip dates aren't confirmed yet.
- The Frida Kahlo survey at Tate Modern, the James McNeill Whistler retrospective at Tate Britain, and the Marilyn Monroe exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery are Jonathan's top three must-book exhibition picks for the month.
- The Royal Academy Summer Exhibition — the world's largest open submission art show, running since 1769 — is a uniquely chaotic, democratic, and wonderful experience where everything on the walls is for sale and any artist can enter.
- Shakespeare's Globe is staging Much Ado About Nothing from June 11, and Regent's Park Open Air Theatre opens A Midsummer Night's Dream on June 20 — watching Shakespeare outdoors on a long June evening is one of the quintessential London summer experiences.
- London generally does not have air conditioning in older buildings, hotel rooms, or most tube lines. The first thing you should do after arriving in summer is buy a fan — Jonathan recommends going straight to Argos, Britain's version of a catalog store, for an affordable one.
- The tube's older lines (Central, Piccadilly) get brutally hot in summer due to London clay absorbing and retaining heat underground. The Elizabeth line is fully air conditioned and runs east-west across the city — use it as much as possible in a heat wave.
- The National Gallery is experimenting with extended summer evening hours, staying open until 7 PM most evenings and until 9 PM on Fridays from July 1 — Jonathan's suggestion: have an early dinner, then walk over for a free evening of world-class art.
- Don't try to pack too much in. Pick three or four things you genuinely care about, build your days around those, and leave time to wander, sit in Green Park with a deck chair, or walk along the Thames in the long evening light. June in London is as much about the atmosphere as the attractions.
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Soundbites- "The light is the headline for June. You get sixteen to seventeen hours of daylight. Twilight stretches from around eight PM to nearly ten PM. You can have a full day of exploring, sit down for dinner, and still walk home along the Thames and have some daylight." — Jonathan on why June is London's best month.
- "If you've ever wondered what the best month to visit London is, a lot of people will quietly tell you it's this one." — Jonathan on June in London.
- Plan your day around it. Get up stupidly early — three, four, five in the morning — get your spot on the Mall and soak up the atmosphere. It'll be like a party atmosphere." — Jonathan on how to experience Trooping the Colour without a ticket.
- "The Queen's Fashion at The King's Gallery is sold out for the rest of the year, and I know a lot of people are gonna be really disappointed when they try to get tickets and they simply can't." — Jonathan's warning on the most in-demand exhibition of the summer.
- "The walls are packed from floor to ceiling and everything is for sale. It's chaotic and wonderful. And it's a great way to see up-and-coming artists and established artists side by side." — Jonathan on the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition.
- "Shakespeare under the open sky in one of London's loveliest parks on a warm June evening — it doesn't get dark till ten PM anyway. Enjoy some champagne, enjoy some theater out in the green. That's my top theater pick for the month." — Jonathan on Regent's Park Open Air Theatre.
- "The first thing you should do after you land is go to what the British call an ironmonger — a hardware store — and buy a fan. Don't skimp. It is essential for Americans traveling in Europe." — Jonathan's number one summer travel tip.
- "The London clay is a heat sink. It absorbs heat and then it doesn't let it back out. So the tube gets really hot in the summer. If you are prone to heat issues, avoid the tube except the Elizabeth line, which is fully air conditioned." — Jonathan on navigating London in a heat wave.
- "I sat there in the rain in the 40s, got soaking wet. And I — not exaggerating — almost got hypothermia. It was July. I could not warm up when I got back to the hotel because the heating wasn't on and there weren't enough blankets because it was July." — Jonathan's cautionary tale about British summer weather.
- "Argos is exactly like Service Merchandise — you go in, there's a big catalog, you pick your thing, and it comes out on a conveyor belt. Get a fan. Don't even look at the weather forecast first. Just trust me — you're going to need a fan." — Jonathan's most practical London summer tip.
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Chapters- 00:21 Introduction — Jonathan launches the experimental monthly London events format
- 01:15 The Feel of June in London — Long days, the light, and why June is special
- 02:20 June Weather — What to expect, heat waves, and the maritime humidity problem
- 03:45 Peak Tourist Season — Crowds, hotel prices, and why June still beats July
- 05:00 Trooping the Colour — What it is, how to see it without a ticket, and Jonathan's tips for getting a good spot
- 08:30 Royal Ascot — Fascinators on the tube, the royal procession, and how to get tickets
- 10:00 Wimbledon — The ballot, resale tickets, strawberries and cream, and what to do if you can't get in
- 11:30 How to Book Exhibitions — Why advance booking is non-negotiable and the Queen's Fashion sellout warning
- 13:00 Frida Kahlo at Tate Modern — Jonathan's pick and why Tate Modern is worth seeing for the building alone
- 14:30 Royal Academy Summer Exhibition (June 16) — The world's largest open submission art show
- 15:30 Anish Kapoor at the Hayward Gallery (June 16) — The Cloud Gate connection and why it's worth seeing
- 16:15 Marilyn Monroe at the National Portrait Gallery — Just opened, book fast
- 17:00 Barbara Hepworth at the Courtauld Gallery — And why Somerset House is worth a visit anyway
- 17:45 Schiaparelli at the V&A — Fashion exhibitions and why the V&A excels at them
- 18:15 Wes Anderson at the Design Museum — A treat for film fans
- 18:45 James McNeill Whistler at Tate Britain — A sellout show, book immediately
- 19:30 Wallace & Gromit at Young V&A — The Aardman exhibition Jonathan is hoping to catch in August
- 20:15 Closing This Month — Mikalojus Čiurlionis at the Royal Academy (closes June 21) and Hokusai at Dulwich (closes June 30)
- 21:00 Theater — Why June is the best time for London theater
- 21:30 Regent's Park Open Air Theatre — A Midsummer Night's Dream, Jonathan's top pick of the month
- 22:00 Shakespeare's Globe — Much Ado About Nothing from June 11
- 22:30 New West End Openings — To Kill a Mockingbird (June 25) and Cyrano de Bergerac (June 13)
- 23:00 Long-Running Shows — Lion King, Hamilton, Wicked, Six, Les Mis, and how to get discount tickets
- 24:00 Live Music — Harry Styles at Wembley, Olivia Dean at the O2, Orville Peck at the Roundhouse
- 25:00 Practical Tips: Heat — Does London have air conditioning? (Mostly no)
- 26:30 The Fan Imperative — Buy one at Argos, the British Service Merchandise
- 28:30 Pack for All Weathers — The July outdoor concert near-hypothermia story
- 30:00 Humidity and Heat — Why British summer heat hits differently than dry American heat
- 31:00 Use the Long Days — 17 hours of light, late museum hours, rooftop bars, evening walks
- 32:00 National Gallery Extended Hours — Stay open till 7 PM, Fridays till 9 PM from July 1
- 33:00 Don't Overpack Your Itinerary — Pick three or four things, leave time to wander
- 34:00 Wrap-Up — Londontopia events calendar, listener feedback request, Friends of Anglotopia
Video Version
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