REVIEW · LONDON
London: Jack the Ripper Small Group Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Brit Icon Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Whitechapel after dark has a way of sticking with you. This London Jack the Ripper small-group walk takes you into Whitechapel’s back streets and murder-site areas, with a professional guide explaining what happened in 1888 and why the story still haunts the city. It’s built for a group size up to 20, so the details don’t get lost in noise.
I like two things most. First, the tour is paced as a tight 2-hour walk, with a clear sense of where you are and why each stop matters. Second, you don’t just hear names and dates—you visit the murder sites and get the context of where victims were found, plus the theories and the facts the case is built on.
One possible drawback: the walk involves a moderate amount of walking, and the subject matter is grim. If you’re not up for dark true-crime storytelling, or if you tire easily on foot, it may feel like too much.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Meeting at 182 Bishopsgate: How to find the guide fast
- The 2-hour Whitechapel walk: what you’ll actually cover
- Small group max 20: why the format works
- The story in context: murders, investigations, and the manhunt
- Murder-site stops: how to “read” modern Whitechapel
- Guides that bring energy (names you might hear)
- Price and value: what $24.25 buys you
- Who should book this Jack the Ripper tour
- A few practical tips to make it more enjoyable
- Should you book this Jack the Ripper Small Group Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the London Jack the Ripper Small Group Walking Tour?
- What is the price per person?
- How large is the group?
- Where do I meet the guide?
- How do I get to the meeting point from Liverpool Street Station?
- What does the tour include?
- What language is the tour in?
- Is there an age limit?
- Is the tour a lot of walking?
- When does the tour start and what time does it end?
Key things to know before you go

- Small group (max 20) for better listening and a more focused experience
- Professional ripperologist guide leading the story and answering the big questions
- Stops at murder-site locations tied to the victims and the investigations
- Alleyway atmosphere helps you visualize where someone could hide in the shadows
- Theories vs. real facts side-by-side, since Jack’s identity was never proven
- 1888 manhunt context that explains why the hunt became one of Britain’s biggest
Meeting at 182 Bishopsgate: How to find the guide fast

The tour meets at 182 Bishopsgate, London EC2M 4NP, on the left side of the entrance of the City of London police station. Plan to arrive about 10 minutes early so you’re not sprinting through East London at night while holding your phone like a flashlight.
If you’re coming by train, aim for Liverpool Street Station. Leave via the Bishopsgate West exit, then look across Bishopsgate—you should see the police station right away. It’s a solid meeting point because it’s a known landmark and easy to orient yourself around, even if you’re new to the area.
The tour ends back at the meeting point, so you don’t have to figure out a second route home. That matters for a 2-hour evening activity when your legs are already starting to complain.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London.
The 2-hour Whitechapel walk: what you’ll actually cover

This isn’t a long, slow meander. You’re on a 2-hour walking route designed to move you through the Whitechapel areas connected to the murders and the investigations.
Here’s what you should expect the walk to feel like:
- You start with the 1888 backstory—how these killings unfolded and why they triggered such an intense response.
- Then the guide leads you into dark alleyways and side streets where the story makes more sense when you’re standing in the space.
- Along the way, you stop at key murder-related locations, including where victims’ bodies were found.
- You finish with the unresolved part: Jack the Ripper’s identity was never discovered, so the guide separates what’s known from what people suspect.
The best part of a walking tour like this is that it turns a headline into geography. You begin to grasp how distance, street layout, and crowding worked in 1888—without needing a bunch of modern theatrics.
Small group max 20: why the format works

A group capped at 20 people changes the vibe in a real way. For a case like Jack the Ripper, there’s a lot to keep straight: the timeline, the locations, and the constant question of who could have done it. In a large group, those details can blur fast.
In a smaller setup, you can do three useful things:
- Hear the guide clearly at each stop
- Ask follow-up questions without derailing the entire route
- Get more “spotlighting” at the locations, not just a quick pass
It also means the guide can keep a steady pace. Several guides are praised for holding attention with sharp explanations and even a bit of humor—useful when the topic is grim. If your evening needs to be engaging without turning into a lecture, this format is a good fit.
The story in context: murders, investigations, and the manhunt

The tour is built around one core idea: the murders weren’t just scary—they sparked one of the biggest manhunts in British history. You’ll learn how the response escalated, what investigators tried, and why the effort failed to produce a definitive culprit.
A big focus is the balance between:
- Real facts (what the case is tied to)
- Stories and theories (what people believe might explain the pattern)
That matters, because Jack the Ripper is famous in part due to uncertainty. The identity was never proven, and theories multiply because the original answers never arrived. A good guide doesn’t just list suspects; they show you what the evidence supports and what it doesn’t.
One practical thing I appreciate in a case-file style tour: it helps you understand why people argue about this case even today. You walk away with a clearer sense of what’s confirmed, what’s disputed, and why the mystery stayed alive.
Murder-site stops: how to “read” modern Whitechapel

Walking to the murder sites is the heart of the experience. You’re shown the locations tied to the murders and you also hear where victims’ bodies were found. The guide then connects those spots back to the timeline and to what investigators were trying to accomplish.
One thing to keep in mind: London changes. Some places may look different than they did in 1888. That’s not a problem—it’s part of why this tour is useful. When the area has redeveloped, you get better at using the guide’s directions to reconstruct what the street might have felt like back then.
Think of it as mental archaeology:
- You look at the current street scale
- You listen to the details the guide gives you
- You connect those to how someone might have moved, hidden, or blended in
Even if you’re not obsessed with true crime, it helps you see East London as a living place with layers, not just a set of photo stops.
Guides that bring energy (names you might hear)
This tour is led by a professional ripperologist guide, and the difference shows quickly. Guides on this route are described as passionate, engaging, and clear—exactly what you want for a story with lots of small details.
Names that have stood out include Ian, Angie, Jericho, Philip, and John. You may be led by someone different on your date, but the consistent theme is delivery: strong knowledge, a sense of storytelling, and an ability to make the area feel like it has a pulse—even when the subject is brutal.
If you like your history with good pacing, this kind of guide is the key ingredient. One guide style can turn an ordinary street into a scene. Another can make the timeline feel logical instead of messy.
Price and value: what $24.25 buys you

At $24.25 per person for a 2-hour guided walk, you’re paying for three things:
- A professional guide who can explain the cases and the uncertainty around identity
- A small-group experience capped at 20 people
- Time-efficient access to the locations tied to the murders and investigations
This isn’t a sit-down museum format. You’re getting a moving, narrative route that also doubles as an East London orientation. If you’re visiting and you want to understand Whitechapel without building your own research plan from scratch, that’s where the value is.
It’s also worth noting the tour runs at different starting times (based on availability). That lets you fit it around dinner plans or your evening energy level.
Who should book this Jack the Ripper tour

This is best for you if:
- You’re a first-timer to Whitechapel and want a guided way to connect modern streets to 1888 events
- You like true crime history that includes both facts and theories
- You want a small-group format where the guide’s voice carries
It’s not ideal if:
- You don’t handle moderate walking well
- You prefer lighter themes for your evening out
- You’re expecting a spooky haunted-house vibe. This is about the real case, not just atmosphere
Age-wise, the minimum age to participate is 16 years. The walking pace is described as moderate, so good shoes matter.
A few practical tips to make it more enjoyable
- Wear comfortable walking shoes. You’ll be on foot for 2 hours, and East London streets can be uneven.
- Dress for the weather. Nights here can feel cold fast, and you’ll be outside for most of the tour.
- If you’re sensitive to details, consider that the tour covers the murders and the investigations, including the grim parts of the story.
- Go in curious, not skeptical. The identity was never discovered, so part of the fun is hearing how theories try to connect dots without claiming certainty.
Should you book this Jack the Ripper Small Group Walking Tour?
If you want an evening activity that gives you real context—while also guiding you to the actual murder-site locations—this is a strong option. The small group size, the professional ripperologist guide, and the stop-based route are the reasons it works.
Book it if:
- You like true-crime history
- You want to explore Whitechapel with structure
- You value a guide who can keep the timeline understandable
Skip it if:
- You’d rather avoid grim content
- You don’t enjoy walking tours
- You’re looking for a purely theatrical ghost story
Bottom line: for $24.25 and a 2-hour guided walk through Whitechapel’s key sites, you’re getting a focused, story-driven route that turns London streets into a clear, explained mystery.
FAQ
How long is the London Jack the Ripper Small Group Walking Tour?
The tour lasts 2 hours.
What is the price per person?
The price is $24.25 per person.
How large is the group?
The group is limited to a maximum of 20 people.
Where do I meet the guide?
Meet your guide 10 minutes before the tour to the left of the entrance of the City of London police station at 182 Bishopsgate, London EC2M 4NP.
How do I get to the meeting point from Liverpool Street Station?
Leave Liverpool Street Station using the Bishopsgate West exit, then look across Bishopsgate. You should see the police station on the opposite side.
What does the tour include?
It includes a professional ripperologist guide.
What language is the tour in?
The tour is English.
Is there an age limit?
Yes. The minimum age to participate is 16 years.
Is the tour a lot of walking?
There is a moderate amount of walking involved.
When does the tour start and what time does it end?
The tour has starting times based on availability, and it ends back at the meeting point.






















