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About the National Portrait Gallery
Fresh from a stunning refurbishment, the National Portrait Gallery is one of London’s best free spots for a fun, flexible cultural outing. The walls are filled with familiar faces – from Shakespeare and Elizabeth I to David Bowie and Stormzy – so kids and teens actually recognise people (which always helps).
The gallery offers free family trails, art workshops, and space to explore at your own pace. Teens love the mix of historic paintings and modern photography, and even younger kids enjoy the portraits-as-people-spotting game. It’s completely accessible and welcoming to everyone, including neurodiverse visitors and buggies. The café’s fab, and the shop’s filled with sketchbooks, creative toys and arty gifts. Located just behind Trafalgar Square, it’s easy to pair with a wander to Big Ben or Covent Garden too.
Top tip from the KidRated Team:
Pick up a free family trail from the front desk – it turns the gallery into a fun treasure hunt with drawing challenges and cool characters to spot.
Yes. There are free family trails, sketching stations, and loads of portraits that spark a solid round of “who’s that then?” Kids aged 6–12 love spotting famous faces and making up stories. It’s like a time-travel guessing game with added wigs.
Definitely. Whether they’re into music, activism, fashion or football, they’ll spot people they know – from Stormzy to Shakespeare, or maybe even their favourite YouTuber. It’s British culture, but make it IRL.
Definitely the famous stuff – Sunflowers, The Arnolfini Portrait, and The Fighting Temeraire are all showstoppers. But also look for the quirky things kids love – flying babies, golden halos, and very serious saints with questionable beards. Ask at the front desk for a free kids’ trail map – they’re fab.
Start at the Impressionists – bold colours, swirling skies and recognisable scenes that grab even reluctant viewers. Then reward yourselves with a cake in the café. That’s an art-lover’s day out done right.
Definitely – try the grand staircase, or pose in front of a famous painting (with no flash, of course!). Or go outside and capture yourself against Trafalgar Square for a classic London shot.
Absolutely. Easy to get around, calm, and packed with familiar faces from their schooldays, favourite films, or political milestones. Lots of benches too, so it’s ideal for a gentle cultural wander with the grandkids.
General entry is free and you can just turn up. For special exhibitions, which often have a small charge, it’s best to book ahead – especially during school holidays or weekends.
Yes – it’s step-free and fully accessible with lifts, ramps, baby-changing facilities and quiet spaces if anyone needs time out. There are wheelchairs available to borrow at the front desk too.
Yes, and it’s a good one. The Portrait Café has cakes, coffee, sarnies and lunch boxes for kids. Bonus points: it’s a calming space that rarely gets hectic.
Yes – the Gallery often runs free drop-in workshops, creative sessions, and events during holidays and weekends. Perfect for mini-artists and history buffs in the making.
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Kids enjoyed the Grayson Perry exhibition on right now. Youngest read up about the exhibition before and was a lot more engaged as a result.