Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea: The Best Day Trip from London

Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea: The Best Day Trip from London

Less than an hour from London by train, Southend-on-Sea is one of those places that Londoners have a funny relationship with. It’s close enough that it’s always been the East End’s seaside escape — the place families headed for a day of fish and chips, penny arcades, and the famous pier. And for that reason, it’s easy to dismiss as a bit naff, a bit retro, a bit too close to home to feel like a proper trip.

That would be a mistake.

Southend has genuinely come into its own over the past few years, and when you pair it with its neighbour Leigh-on-Sea — a genuinely charming fishing village with a brilliant food scene, independent pubs, and an Old Town that looks like it should be somewhere in Cornwall — you’ve got one of the best day trips or weekend escapes you can do from London. I’d take this over a crowded Brighton Saturday any time. We spent a lovely family 3 day weekend ourselves!

Here’s everything you need to know.

Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea: The Best Day Trip from London

VISITING SOUTHEND-ON-SEA & LEIGH-ON-SEA: THE ESSENTIALS

Transport / Southend is one of the easiest day trips from London — trains from Fenchurch Street take around 50 minutes to Southend Central, or around 60 minutes from Liverpool Street to Southend Victoria. Both stations are walkable to the seafront. Book your train here. If you’re driving, it’s about 40 miles via the A13 or A127 — compare rental car prices on DiscoverCars if you want to make a proper weekend of it and explore the wider Essex coast.

Stay / Southend has hotels to suit every budget, and Leigh-on-Sea has some lovely B&Bs and self-catering options if you want to stay somewhere with more character. Search accommodation in Southend-on-Sea on Booking.com.

Connect / You’ll need mobile data while you are in the UK, I always recommend using an eSIM (there’s absolutely no need for a physical one!). I always use Sim Local, and you can get 5% discount with code TRAVELWITHPAU. Get it here.

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Why Visit Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea?

The combination is what makes this trip worth doing. Southend gives you the classic British seaside experience done properly — the world’s longest pleasure pier, a fun-fair, golden sand, and the kind of cheerful chaos that only the English coast in summer can produce. Then you walk or drive ten minutes west to Leigh-on-Sea and suddenly you’re in a completely different world: cobbled lanes, weather-boarded fishermen’s cottages, cockle sheds straight off a postcard, and some genuinely brilliant places to eat and drink.

It’s the same formula that makes Rye and Camber Sands work so well. And like that trip, it’s one you can do in a day or stretch into a weekend without running out of things to do.

How to Get There

By train: The easiest option by far. Trains from London Fenchurch Street run directly to Southend Central and take around 50 minutes — this is the fastest and most frequent service. Trains from London Liverpool Street go to Southend Victoria and take around 60 minutes. Both stations are a short walk from the seafront. Services run frequently throughout the day; book in advance on Trainline for cheaper fares.

For Leigh-on-Sea specifically, trains from Liverpool Street stop at Leigh-on-Sea station, which drops you right in the middle of the action. Perfect if you want to do Leigh first and Southend later. Book it here.

By car: Around 40 miles from central London — roughly 50–60 minutes via the A13 or A127, depending on traffic (avoid the A13 on a Friday evening). Driving gives you flexibility, especially if you want to explore the wider coastline or stay for the weekend. Compare car hire rates on DiscoverCars — booking ahead gets you the best price.

By air: London Southend Airport has flights to European destinations — useful if you’re combining this with a wider trip. Book a private airport transfer with WelcomePickups for a stress-free arrival.

A Brief History of Southend-on-Sea

Southend didn’t really exist as a town until the late 18th century — it was quite literally the south end of the village of Prittlewell, which is why the priory there predates the town by several centuries. The arrival of the railway in the 1850s changed everything, opening up the Essex coast to London day-trippers and transforming Southend into one of the most popular seaside destinations in Britain.

At its peak in the early 20th century, Southend was pulling in millions of visitors a year. The pier — opened in 1889 and extended to its current record-breaking length in 1929 — became the defining symbol of a town that took its seaside seriously. It survived two world wars, several fires, and a collision with a boat, and it’s still standing.

Leigh-on-Sea has a quieter, older story. It was a thriving fishing port long before Southend existed, supplying fish and shellfish to London’s markets via the Thames. The cockle boats that still work out of Leigh’s Old Town are direct descendants of a trade that has been running here for centuries. When the railway arrived, Leigh largely avoided the fate of becoming a resort and stayed a working fishing village — which is exactly what makes it so appealing today.

Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea: The Best Day Trip from London

Things to Do in Southend-on-Sea

Walk (or ride) Southend Pier

The pier is the reason Southend is on the map, and rightly so. At 1.33 miles (2.14 km), it’s the longest pleasure pier in the world — a record it has held since 1889 and one it shows no signs of giving up. Walking the full length and back is around 5km, which sounds manageable until you’re halfway out and realise you’re further from shore than most people ever get without a boat.

If walking both ways sounds ambitious, ride the Pier Railway — a narrow-gauge train that has been shuttling visitors back and forth since 1890. There’s a small museum at the pier head, a café, and views of the Thames Estuary that, on a clear day, stretch to the Kent coast. It’s utterly British and completely brilliant.

Practical info: Pier admission is £3 for adults; pier train return is £5 for adults. Check the Southend Pier website for current prices and opening times.

Adventure Island

Right at the base of the pier, Adventure Island is a traditional seaside funfair with over 40 rides and attractions. Entry to the park itself is free — you pay per ride or buy a wristband. It’s brilliant for families and, honestly, a lot of fun for adults too. The bigger rides are genuinely thrilling and the views from the top of the Rage roller coaster (now you’re looking at that pier from the other angle) are great.

SEA LIFE Adventure Southend

Right by the seafront, SEA LIFE Adventure is one of the best aquariums in the South East and a brilliant option if you’re visiting with kids — though honestly, you don’t need children to enjoy it. The highlight is the enormous ocean tank with sharks and rays gliding overhead, but the touch pools, seahorse sanctuary, and tropical displays are just as good. It’s indoors, which makes it a solid plan B if the weather turns (and this is the Essex coast, so plan for it).

Book SEA LIFE Adventure tickets to skip the queue and save money on the door price.

Practical info: Allow 1.5–2 hours. Located on Eastern Esplanade, a short walk east of the pier. Book ahead in summer — it’s popular.

Southend Seafront & Beach

Southend has around 7 miles of seafront, and the main beach — particularly around the pier — is sandy and lively in summer. There are arcades, seafood stalls, ice cream kiosks, and the full range of classic British seaside entertainments. It’s not quiet or refined, but that’s not the point. Lean into it.

Rossi’s Ice Cream is a local institution that has been making ice cream in Southend since 1932. It’s on the seafront and the queue is usually a good indicator of quality.

Chalkwell Beach

If you want the seaside without the funfair crowds, head a mile or two west to Chalkwell Beach. It’s calmer, greener (backed by gardens rather than arcades), and popular with locals rather than day-trippers. A good option if you’re after a quiet walk along the water before heading into Leigh-on-Sea.

Prittlewell Priory

A 12th-century Cluniac priory right in the middle of Southend, which most visitors walk straight past without realising it’s there. The priory is now a small museum set in beautiful grounds, with exhibits covering the history of the town from medieval times to the present day. It’s quiet, free to enter (small charge for the museum), and a world away from the seafront noise.

Things to Do in Leigh-on-Sea

Explore the Old Town

Leigh’s Old Town sits at the bottom of a steep hill, separated from the modern town above by the railway line. It’s a cluster of weather-boarded fishermen’s cottages, narrow lanes, independent pubs, and working cockle sheds — the kind of place that makes you wonder how it hasn’t been entirely discovered and ruined yet. It hasn’t, quite, and that’s part of its charm.

The best thing to do is simply wander. Walk along the waterfront, watch the fishing boats, look at the boats drying on the mud flats at low tide, and find a pub. The Old Town is small enough to see in an hour or two, which makes it perfect as the second half of a Southend day trip.

Eat Cockles Straight from the Shed

Leigh is famous for its cockles, whelks, and shellfish, and the cockle sheds at the bottom of Old Town have been selling them for as long as anyone can remember. Osborne Bros is the most famous — buy a tub of cockles, whelks, or dressed crab and eat them on the seafront wall with a splash of vinegar. It’s the definitive Leigh experience and costs almost nothing.

Two Tree Island

A short walk from Leigh Old Town, Two Tree Island is a nature reserve on a tidal island in the Thames Estuary, managed by the Essex Wildlife Trust. It’s a brilliant spot for birdwatching — particularly waders and wildfowl in winter — and the walk around the island offers great views across to Canvey Island and the Estuary. Free to visit, peaceful, and completely overlooked by most visitors.

Leigh Heritage Centre

A small but well-put-together museum dedicated to the history of Leigh-on-Sea’s fishing community. It covers the cockle trade, the working boats, and the role Leigh played in the Dunkirk evacuation of 1940 — when Leigh’s fleet of small fishing vessels crossed the Channel to help rescue Allied troops. That story alone is worth knowing.

Where to Eat in Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea

In Leigh-on-Sea Old Town:

  • The Peterboat — a proper old pub right on the waterfront with a sun trap terrace and good food. The fish and seafood dishes are the obvious choice. One of the best pub settings in Essex.
  • Ye Olde Smack — another Old Town institution, a tiny 16th-century pub that’s all low ceilings, local ales, and atmosphere.
  • Osborne Bros — for cockles, whelks, dressed crab and prawns eaten outdoors. Not a restaurant; a cockle shed. Do it anyway.
  • The Bell Inn — a bit further up from the Old Town but worth the climb for the food and the view back down over the Estuary.

In Southend:

  • Rossi’s — the ice cream, obviously. Go for the local flavours.
  • The Pipe of Port — a wine bar and bistro in the centre of Southend that punches above its surroundings. Good for a proper sit-down lunch.
  • Seafront fish and chips — multiple options along the seafront; find the one with the longest queue of locals and join it.
  • The Basilica — a family-run Sicilian Italian that’s been on Hamlet Court Road since 1974. Wood-fired pizzas, handmade pasta, and excellent seafood. One of the best restaurants in the whole Southend area — book ahead.
  • Prowse — a Turkish and Mediterranean restaurant perched above the arches on Shorefield Road in Westcliff, with glorious estuary views. The lamb shish and mixed grill are excellent, portions are generous, and it’s consistently one of the highest-rated restaurants in the whole Southend area. Book ahead.

Where to Stay in Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea

Southend makes a perfectly good day trip, but staying overnight transforms it — you get the seafront in the evening when the day-trippers have gone, and Leigh-on-Sea’s Old Town pubs at a genuinely relaxed pace.

In Southend: The town has a range of hotels from budget chains near the station to seafront options close to the pier. Search Southend-on-Sea hotels.

In Leigh-on-Sea: B&Bs and self-catering cottages in and around the Old Town are the best option if you want character over convenience. Waking up in Leigh and walking down to the cockle sheds for breakfast is a genuinely lovely way to start a morning. Search Leigh-on-Sea accommodation here.

Southend-on-Sea & Leigh-on-Sea: The Best Day Trip from London

Best Time to Visit

Summer (June–August) is the obvious choice — the beach is at its best, Adventure Island is in full swing, and the Old Town pubs spill out onto the waterfront. Weekdays are significantly quieter than weekends, when half of East London seems to descend on Southend.

Spring and autumn are underrated. The seafront is quieter, the light over the Estuary is beautiful, and the pubs in Leigh’s Old Town are far more atmospheric on a cool, grey afternoon than in the height of summer. Two Tree Island is also best for birdwatching outside peak summer.

Winter is surprisingly atmospheric — the pier looks extraordinary on a clear winter’s day, and the cockle sheds are open year-round. Southend also does a decent Christmas market.

How Long to Spend There

One day: Very doable. Arrive at Southend Central, walk the pier, hit Adventure Island (or the beach), then take the train one stop to Leigh-on-Sea for the afternoon — Old Town, cockles, a pint at The Peterboat. Back in London for dinner.

A weekend: The sweet spot. Stay in Leigh-on-Sea, do Southend properly on day one, then spend your second day at Two Tree Island and exploring the wider Essex coast. Add a drive to Mersea Island for more excellent oysters if you have a car.

Southend-on-Sea FAQ

How far is Southend-on-Sea from London?
Around 40 miles by road, or 50–60 minutes by train from London Fenchurch Street or Liverpool Street. It’s one of the quickest seaside escapes from the city.

Is Southend-on-Sea worth visiting?
Yes — particularly if you pair it with Leigh-on-Sea. Southend alone can feel like a lot of seafront noise; Leigh gives the trip a completely different and genuinely lovely dimension.

How long is Southend Pier?
1.33 miles (2.14 km) — the longest pleasure pier in the world. Walking it takes about 25–30 minutes each way; the pier railway runs alongside if you’d rather ride.

Is Southend beach sandy?
Yes — unlike most South East beaches, which are shingle, Southend has sandy beaches along much of its seafront. Chalkwell Beach, a mile west towards Leigh, is quieter and backed by gardens.

What is Leigh-on-Sea known for?
Its Old Town, fishing heritage, and shellfish — particularly cockles, whelks, and dressed crab from the famous cockle sheds. It’s also increasingly known as a food and drink destination, with some of the best pubs and independent restaurants in Essex.

Can you do Southend-on-Sea as a day trip from London?
Absolutely. A day is enough to cover the highlights of both Southend and Leigh-on-Sea. If you want a more relaxed pace — or to properly explore Two Tree Island or the wider Essex coast — a weekend trip is even better.

Enjoyed this? You might also like my guide to Visiting Rye & Camber Sands — another brilliant day trip or weekend escape from London — or my Jurassic Coast guide if you’re after something a bit further afield.

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