Our pick of the best Christmas Tours from London. Spend the day visiting some of the most famous attractions in England. From UNESCO World Heritage Sites at Stonehenge to cosy Christmas lunches in traditional English pubs, and moving services at Canterbury Cathedral, there are many ways to spend Christmas Day 2025 on a day trip from London.

Prehistoric Stonehenge. See the ancient monoliths at Stonehenge and make your Christmas a memorable one. We hope we have all the ingredients for the perfect traditional Christmas.
Stonehenge Winter Sunrise

Salisbury, Stonehenge, Bath and Windsor at Dusk with Traditional Christmas Lunch
Make your Christmas an unforgettable day with a beautiful day trip from London to four of the UK’s most iconic locations – the historical Salisbury, the enigmatic Stonehenge, the charming Bath and the lovely Windsor. All this as you also get to enjoy a delectable Christmas lunch! BOOK HERE

London an Stonehenge Christmas Tours including Windsor, Stonehenge, Lacock, Bath and 14th Century Pub Lunch- Book here
Simply Stonehenge on Boxing Day – Morning Tour
Mysterious Stonehenge is one of the world’s greatest puzzles. These towering rocks have stood on Salisbury Plain for around 5,000 years and we still don’t know who put them there or why! Get closer to the truth this Boxing Day with a visit to Stonehenge from Central London travelling on a comfortable coach. BOOK HERE
Windsor, Oxford and Avebury’s Stone Circle with Traditional Christmas Lunch
This Christmas go on a great British adventure and discover three fantastic locations: the quaint town of Windsor, the charming University City that is Oxford and the historical stones of Avebury. Your exciting day trip with one of our professional guides will include a delicious three-course meal at a traditional British pub. BOOK HERE
FANTASTIC FESTIVE LUXURY COACH TOURS
Make extra-special memories this festive season with our selection of unforgettable journeys to Britain’s most iconic locations. Join us on a fantastic festive journey of discovery around London and beyond as your captivating guide unravels the sights, stories and magic of Britain at this most wonderful time of year. BOOK HERE

PRIVATE TOUR OPTION:
Only want to travel with your family or chosen group? Why not book the entire vehicle and take a private tour? Choose any Stonehenge itinerary from only £99 per person! (very limited availability) View our 
Custom Tours

Stonehenge Guided Tours
The Stonehenge Experts
www.StonehengeTours.com

A major new archaeological find of causewayed enclosures and artifacts near Britain’s famous Stonehenge site is about to “rewrite” the history of the area and of northwestern Europe’s early inhabited history.

newobserver

Built 5,650 years ago—more than 1,000 years before Stonehenge—one of the enclosures appears to have been a major ceremonial gathering place.

The major enclosure’s precise original function remains a mystery, but the scant available evidence suggests that it was used for a mixture of ceremonial, religious, political, and mortuary roles.

According to a press release issued by a construction consultancy company involved with an unrelated new building project at the site, archaeologists have “discovered important new sites that rewrite the Stonehenge landscape” and which “predate the construction of Stonehenge itself.”

The remains, found at Larkhill and Bulford, were unearthed during excavations ahead of the construction of new British Army family accommodation.

About 70 enclosures of the type found are known across England and Europe, the press release continued.

The structure is one of the “earliest built structures in the British landscape,” and was used “for temporary settlement, as ceremonial gathering places, to manage and exchange animals, including the first domesticated cattle and sheep and for ritual activity.”

The Larkhill enclosure has produced freshly broken pottery, dumps of worked flint and even a large stone saddle quern used to turn grain into flour. The Neolithic period saw the first use of domesticated crops and this find provides evidence of this.

The Greater Cursus, an earthwork nearly 1.8 miles in length, is the longest structure. It connects and divides parts of the landscape, and separates the Larkhill causewayed enclosure from the place that became Stonehenge.

“The people who built the causewayed enclosure are the ancestors of the builders of Stonehenge and were shaping the landscape into which the stone circle was placed,” the press release continued.

“Their work shows that this was a special landscape even before Stonehenge was constructed. People were already living and working within what we now call the Stonehenge landscape and they were building the structures that would culminate in the Stonehenge complex of stones and earthworks.

Read the full story in the New Observer Online

Stonehenge Guided Tours offer daily tours of Stonehenge and custom private guided tours including Stonehenge and the surrounding landscape.  Stonehenge private access tours allow you to go onside the inner circle before or after the site is officially open. Join the Stonehenge experts and here all the many new theories.

Stonehenge Guided Tours
Operating Stonehenge Tours Since 1990
www.StonehengeTours.com