London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish

REVIEW · LONDON

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish

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Operated by Tours Teatralizados RV Londres ltd · Bookable on GetYourGuide

London gets under your skin fast. This Jack the Ripper tour runs in Spanish and takes you off the usual path, then down into a subway-linked part of Newgate Prison. Major Thomas Weir guides you with dramatized, paranormal storytelling that turns well-known streets into something darker.

Two things I like a lot: the small group size (max 8) and the way the route is built around specific stops tied to the murders. You don’t just pass sites; you get guided attention at Mitre Square, Spitalfields, and the Ten Bells area, then continue toward Little Britain and Smithfield.

One drawback to consider: the experience is not suitable for wheelchair users, and it’s also not for kids under 5. And while the tour includes subway access and the Newgate prison descent, the subway ticket between Liverpool Street and Farringdon is not included.

Key Highlights You Should Actually Care About

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Key Highlights You Should Actually Care About

  • Major Thomas Weir’s dramatized, paranormal narration keeps the pace story-driven
  • Max 8 people means you’re not shouting over a crowd
  • A subway descent tied to Newgate Prison is the signature twist
  • Stops concentrated in the Whitechapel and Spitalfields area follow the story in a logical route
  • £4 included at The Viaduct Tavern gives you an easy place to refuel at the end

Why This Spanish Jack the Ripper Tour Goes Past the Usual Stuff

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Why This Spanish Jack the Ripper Tour Goes Past the Usual Stuff
Most Jack the Ripper tours stay on the surface. This one takes the story into London’s infrastructure—using the subway connection and a visit to a part of Old Newgate Prison, described as a 17th-century site with strong paranormal associations today. That matters because it changes the feeling. You’re no longer only imagining the past on city sidewalks. You’re physically moving through the kind of spaces that make the era feel real.

The other smart choice is language. Spanish guidance isn’t just a translation of an English script. It’s presented as a full tour experience in Spanish, with the storytelling anchored by Major Thomas Weir. If Spanish is your comfort zone, this is the kind of tour where understanding every turn of phrase pays off, especially when the guide sets mood and connects locations to the murders.

The tone is also clearly built for atmosphere: alleyways, conspiracy, terror—focused on three of the five murders—and placed across the streets where events unfolded over a three-month stretch. If you want a casual walk with big facts sprinkled in, this isn’t that. It’s more like guided theater, with history as the backbone.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London.

Meeting at St Botolph without Aldgate: Get Oriented Fast

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Meeting at St Botolph without Aldgate: Get Oriented Fast
Your start point is St Botolph without Aldgate Church, by Aldgate Tube station, in front of Itsu. The guide waits at the church door holding a dark blue umbrella. That detail is genuinely useful. London meeting points can be chaos, especially if you arrive 10 minutes late. Plan to be early, scan for that umbrella, and you’ll avoid the typical pre-tour stress.

Before you go, think about how you’ll handle a 3-hour walking-and-standing tour. Wear shoes you’re happy to use for uneven pavement and repeated stops. There’s also a prison-and-subway element, so you’ll likely do some time in darker, more enclosed spaces as part of the program. If you’re sensitive to creepy themes, you’ll still probably be okay—this is themed storytelling—but it’s clearly aimed at the paranormal end of the spectrum.

Also, keep an eye on the language factor. Spanish is the tour language, so if your Spanish is basic, bring a willingness to fill in gaps and enjoy the atmosphere anyway. If your Spanish is solid, you’ll be able to follow the guide’s connections between places and events without constantly checking your notes.

Mitre Square and Spitalfields: Where the Route Feels Purpose-Built

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Mitre Square and Spitalfields: Where the Route Feels Purpose-Built
This tour anchors its main story in the Whitechapel-Spitalfields world, starting with Mitre Square, then moving through Spitalfields. These aren’t stop-and-take-a-photo moments. You get guided time at each location, framed around the Jack the Ripper narrative.

Mitre Square matters for a practical reason: it gives you a starting node, then the story expands outward. Instead of bouncing randomly around London, you follow a route that feels like it was designed for this exact subject. You also get the kind of detail that makes street corners click. The guide’s dramatized approach helps you connect what you see now with what happened there then.

Spitalfields is where the tour starts to feel more like a living neighborhood than a list of famous names. You’ll be guided through the area with attention on alleyways and local shadows. That’s the point. Jack the Ripper stories aren’t only about dates and names; they’re about how people moved, hid, and feared in tight spaces.

One small consideration: because the route is story-heavy and guided, you’ll want to pay attention early. If you tune out for the first segment, the later subway-and-prison shift won’t land as well. Go in ready to listen.

The Ten Bells Area: A Stop That Turns Corners Into Clues

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - The Ten Bells Area: A Stop That Turns Corners Into Clues
Next comes the Ten Bells in Spitalfields. This is one of those names people hear, but many tours treat as a quick photo stop. Here, it’s a guided stop, which makes a big difference. The guide uses this location to keep the story moving, linking the mood and the movement of the narrative to where you’re standing.

Why it’s valuable: you learn how the story is threaded through distinct areas. You’re not only hearing about murders in general terms. You’re watching the tour guide build a map in your head, with the Ten Bells stop acting like a marker along the route.

Drawback-wise, the tour’s paranormal tone means this segment is likely not for you if you prefer strictly academic history. The focus is on mood and dramatization. If that’s your style, great. If you’re more into plain facts, treat it as a theatrical storytelling approach with history embedded inside.

Liverpool Street to Little Britain: The Subway Move That Changes Everything

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Liverpool Street to Little Britain: The Subway Move That Changes Everything
Now you shift from walking the neighborhood to taking the subway at Liverpool Street station. This is a key moment in the experience because it marks the transition from street-level history to something more underground, literally.

The tour description notes access to a subway part of London, and it also states that a tube ticket between Liverpool Street and Farringdon is not included. That’s worth planning for so you’re not stuck figuring out payment options mid-story. If you’re budgeting, treat the subway ticket as an extra cost even though the tour includes subway access as part of the program.

Once you arrive in the Little Britain district, the vibe shifts again. The guide focuses on darker themes associated with the area: body snatchers, tortures, hospitals, and the sense of hidden suffering beneath the city’s daily life. The practical value here is that the tour helps you understand why London’s reputation for mystery isn’t just folklore. It came from real institutions, real fear, and real spaces where people didn’t have control.

If you’re the type who likes connections, Little Britain is where your understanding starts to broaden beyond Jack the Ripper into the wider “fear ecosystem” of historic London.

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Smithfield Market: A Strong Link Between Dark Events and Public Space
After Little Britain, the itinerary includes Smithfield Market for another guided stop. This is an important placement. The tour has already moved through tight neighborhoods and dark themes. Smithfield Market adds contrast: it’s a public, identifiable place, which helps you see how stories like this lived alongside normal city life.

You might expect a tour like this to stay stuck in one lane—always creepy, always underground. Instead, Smithfield Market pulls you back into a recognizable London setting while still keeping the story anchored. For many people, that contrast is what makes the tour stick afterward: it’s easier to remember when the guide places darker themes against everyday geography.

The only drawback is timing. At this stage you’ve already had several guided stops and a subway segment. If you’re sensitive to long standing or cold air in underground transitions, go easy on snacking beforehand and keep water handy for later. The tour finishes with a pub stop, but you’ll still want energy for the final walking.

Newgate Prison Descent: The Moment Most People Will Remember

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Newgate Prison Descent: The Moment Most People Will Remember
The tour goes down to an old Newgate Prison part, described as tied to the 17th century. This is the signature attraction: you’re not just hearing about prison walls and executions. You experience the setting the tour frames as one of London’s stronger paranormal activity areas.

Why this matters for your experience: the story becomes physical. The sensations of being in confined, older spaces change how you process the narrative. It’s one thing to hear about terror. It’s another to stand where fear was meant to be contained.

Also, the itinerary includes access to a subway part and then the prison visit, so the sequence builds dread in stages. You go from street corners to subway movement to prison depths. That structure makes the final impact stronger, which matches what many people highlight: the ending tends to feel like a chilling surprise you don’t get on standard Jack tours.

A practical note: darkness and enclosed spaces can make phones and cameras less useful. If you like taking photos, expect limited shots. Your best play is to focus on what the guide is pointing out and what you can remember later.

The Viaduct Tavern Finish and the Included £4

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - The Viaduct Tavern Finish and the Included £4
You end at The Viaduct Tavern. The tour includes £4 in the price to spend there, and the time is set aside for local snacks for about 20 minutes. That’s a smart design detail. After dark stories and prison atmosphere, having a predictable place to reset with food is genuinely helpful.

This included amount also boosts value because it’s not only a “story tour.” You’re getting an actual stop where you can refuel without hunting for something quickly. If you’re traveling with someone who gets hungry easily, this can be a small lifesaver.

Also, finishing in a pub gives you an easier transition back to normal London. You can talk about what you heard while it’s still fresh, and you don’t have to immediately sprint to your next reservation.

One small consideration: 20 minutes goes fast. Decide in advance whether you want a drink or only food. The included £4 is great, but it won’t cover a full pub meal if you go heavy.

Price and Value: Is $26.94 a Good Deal?

London: Jack the Ripper Tour and Underground Prison in Spanish - Price and Value: Is $26.94 a Good Deal?
At $26.94 per person for about 3 hours, the key question is what you’re actually paying for. You’re paying for four big value pieces:

  • A dramatized Jack the Ripper experience in Spanish
  • Several guided stops tied to specific locations across the story route
  • Access to a subway part of London plus a visit to a part of Newgate Prison
  • £4 included at The Viaduct Tavern

The price also isn’t pretending the subway is free. The tube ticket between Liverpool Street and Farringdon isn’t included, so you should plan for that small extra. But even with that in mind, the Newgate prison element and the subway-linked access are the parts that usually cost more on their own.

The 2-for-1 angle is how the operator sells the blend: you get Jack the Ripper plus medieval London moments. You should think of that as a payoff for staying on one structured route instead of cobbling together separate experiences.

For value, I’d call it a solid choice if you want:

  • a story-driven tour (not a lecture),
  • a small group size,
  • and the unusual subway + prison combination.

If you only want famous landmarks and you hate themed dramatization, you might feel like you’d rather put your money elsewhere.

Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Skip It)

This is a great match if you’re the type who enjoys:

  • paranormal-themed storytelling,
  • Jack the Ripper history tied to walking geography,
  • Spanish as your tour language,
  • and a group experience capped at 8 people.

It’s also a good pick if you like tours that go beyond the usual big-name stops. You’ll spend time on streets and areas people often overlook, and the final prison descent is the sort of thing that creates a memory you can’t replace with another generic photo-walk.

You might skip it if:

  • you need fully accessible routes (it’s not suitable for wheelchair users),
  • you’re traveling with a child under 5,
  • or you prefer a strictly academic tone with minimal dramatization.

Should You Book This Jack the Ripper and Newgate Prison Tour?

If you want the classic Jack the Ripper walk but also want something genuinely unusual—like a subway-connected Newgate Prison visit—this is an easy yes. The small group size helps the tour feel personal, and the Spanish narration makes the experience more rewarding if you like understanding every detail.

Book it if your ideal London evening involves mood, guided attention at specific stops, and a last-hour feeling that you’ll remember. Skip it if you’re tired of themed storytelling or you need strict accessibility.

FAQ

FAQ

What language is the tour guide?

The live tour guide is Spanish.

How long is the tour?

The tour lasts about 3 hours.

What group size is it?

It runs as a small group with a maximum of 8 participants (minimum of 2).

Where do we meet?

Meet at the door of St Botolph without Aldgate Church. The guide will be waiting with a dark blue umbrella next to Aldgate Tube station in front of Itsu.

Where does the tour finish?

The tour finishes at The Viaduct Tavern (EC1).

Does the tour include the subway ticket?

The subway ticket between Liverpool Street and Farringdon is not included, but the tour includes entrance to a part of subway London.

Is £4 included at the end?

Yes. £4 is included to spend at The Viaduct Tavern, and you’ll have about 20 minutes for local snacks.

Is it suitable for young children or wheelchair users?

Children under 5 years old are not admitted. The tour is not suitable for wheelchair users.

Is free cancellation available?

Yes, you can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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