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  1. Há 2 dias · On Tube, DLR, London Overground, Elizabeth line and National Rail services in London: Peak fares - Monday to Friday (not on public holidays) between 06:30 and 09:30, and between 16:00 and 19:00...

    • Bus and Tram Fares

      Hopper fare. Pay as you go at adult rate on buses and trams...

    • Day Travelcards

      Tube, DLR, London Overground, Elizabeth line and National...

    • Fares

      How much it costs and how to pay to travel around London....

    • London Zone Map
    • What London Transport Zones Do I Need?
    • How to Pay For Transport Outside Your Normal Transport Zone
    • Stations in Two Zones
    • How to Save Money on Travel to Central London from Zones 2-6
    • Popular Places to Visit Outside Central London

    You can see the zones on a tube map, coloured in either white or grey. 1. View a standard PDF version of the tube map 2. If you stay in a part of London that is not on the tube network, see the National Rail services map (pdf)to find the zone for your closest train station.

    Find the closest underground or train station to your accommodation. Then find the zone of the station you want to travel to. If you’re visiting London for sightseeing or to shop this will probably be zone 1. When you know the zones you need to pay for, what you do depends on the type of ticket/pass you buy:

    There may be occasions when you need to travel outside the zones on your weekly or monthly Travelcard. The procedure is slightly different if you have a Travelcard loaded on an Oyster card, or a paper Travelcard:

    Some stations are on the border of two zones. These stations have a white box around their name on the tube map. Tickets to these stations are slightly different. For example: 1. Earl’s Court tube station is in zone 1/2. If you stay in Earl’s Court and take the tube to any other station in zone 1 (central London), you pay the zone 1 single fare wit...

    A major benefit of the Travelcard is that it’s valid on the buses for the whole of London, regardless of the zones you buy. If you stay in zones 2-6 and want to travel to zone 1 (central London) a good money-saving tip is to buy a weekly or monthly Travelcard excluding zone 1, but including zone 2. You can then take the tube/train to the zone 2 sta...

    Tourist attractions

    Chiswick House – zone 2 (Turnham Green) Cutty Sark – zone 2 Dulwich Picture Gallery – zone 2 Ham House – zone 4 Hampton Court Palace – zone 6 Kenwood House – zone 2 (Archway) Kew Gardens – zone 3 National Maritime Museum – zone 2 Osterley House – zone 4 RAF Museum Hendon – zone 4 William Morris Gallery – zone 3

    Shopping

    Westfield London (Shepherd’s Bush/White City) – zone 2 Westfield Stratford – zone 2/3 Camden Market – zone 2

    Sport and music venues

    The O2 – zone 2/3 Twickenham Rugby Stadium – zone 5 Wembley Stadium – zone 4 Emirates Stadium – zone 2 ABBA Arena – zone 2/3 (See stations in two zones above)

  2. Fare zone 1 is the central zone of Transport for London's zonal fare system used by the London Underground, London Overground, Docklands Light Railway and National Rail. For most tickets, travel through Zone 1 is more expensive than journeys of similar length not crossing this zone.

    Station
    Local Authority
    Managed By
    1981 To 1983 [6]
    City
    London Underground
    City
    London Underground
    City
    London Underground
    West End
  3. Within London, all London Underground, National Rail, London Overground, Elizabeth Line and Docklands Light Railway stations are assigned to six fare zones. Fare zone 1 covers the central area and fare zones 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 form concentric rings around it.

  4. Zones 1-3 £8.50 £8.50 £42.40 £13.50 £13.50 £42.40 £162.90 £1,696 Zones 1-4 £10.40 £10.40 £51.90 £13.50 £13.50 £51.90 £199.30 £2,076 Zones 1-5 £12.30 £12.30 £61.70 £19.10 £13.50 £61.70 £237.00 £2,468