REVIEW · LONDON
Five attraction pass including Madame Tussauds & The London Eye
Book on Viator →Operated by Madame Tussauds London · Bookable on Viator
A London checklist, minus the ticket chaos. This five-attraction pass bundles big-name sights in central London, so you’re not juggling printers, apps, or separate bookings all day. The standout angle is how it steers you into a smooth route, starting with Madame Tussauds and then letting you visit the rest at your own pace.
I especially like the variety: wax stars and a 4D Marvel experience at Madame Tussauds, then total mood swings to the London Dungeon’s theatrical story world and the London Eye’s slow, panoramic ride. SEA LIFE also gives you a clear change of pace with up-close marine life, including penguins and sharks. One thing to watch: the first stop is where your timed entry exchange happens, and lines for ticket pickup/security can be a pain if you’re not ready to wait.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Watch Before You Go
- The $94.60 Pass: What You’re Really Paying For
- Timed Entry at Madame Tussauds: Your Day’s Bottleneck (Plan Around It)
- Madame Tussauds London: Royals, Wax Stars, Taxi History, and Marvel 4D
- SEA LIFE London Aquarium: Rainforest Adventure 360 Views and Real Up-Close Encounters
- London Dungeon: Theaters, Actors, and 1000 Years Told in English
- London Eye: 30 Minutes Up High and Clear-Day Landmarks
- Shrek’s Adventure! London: Donkey’s Bus Ride and Family-Friendly (But Loud)
- Getting Between Stops: Central London With Underground Options
- Price and Value Check: When the Pass Makes Sense
- Should You Book This London Attractions Pass?
Key Things I’d Watch Before You Go

- Timed entry focus at Madame Tussauds: your first booked slot is chosen at purchase and can’t be changed.
- Pick your own order after Madame Tussauds: the rest can be done in whatever sequence works best for your day.
- All central London: you can keep walking and Underground hops short.
- SEA LIFE + London Eye = best “weather-proof” pairing: indoor tanks on one side, big views on the other.
- London Dungeon is English-led: sensory effects help, but the experience is run in English.
The $94.60 Pass: What You’re Really Paying For

At $94.60 per person, you’re buying a shortcut. Instead of paying separate admission prices and trying to line up timing for each attraction, this pass gets you access to five major stops with a mobile ticket.
The real value isn’t just the headline cost. It’s the time and mental energy you save. You can build one simple plan for central London: start at Madame Tussauds, then continue through SEA LIFE, the London Dungeon, the London Eye, and Shrek’s Adventure without constantly re-planning how you’ll get in.
Also, each included admission is listed as about 1 hour per stop in the itinerary. That makes it easier to estimate your day. Add walking time and potential waits, and you’ll still have a workable rhythm rather than a frantic schedule.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London.
Timed Entry at Madame Tussauds: Your Day’s Bottleneck (Plan Around It)

Madame Tussauds is the anchor point. You’ll exchange your voucher there and begin your adventure at the attraction with a timed entry slot you choose when buying the ticket, and that timed entry choice can’t be changed after the lead passenger name is added.
This matters because it turns Madame Tussauds into the one place where your timing is most locked in. If you want a stress-free day, treat Madame Tussauds as the start of your “clock,” not just another stop. Arrive with a little buffer so you’re not rushing when you’re trying to get through security and ticket exchange.
One more practical note: your lead passenger name can’t be changed, and you should bring ID that matches that lead traveller name. It’s the kind of detail that can ruin your morning if you forget it.
Madame Tussauds London: Royals, Wax Stars, Taxi History, and Marvel 4D

Madame Tussauds London is a crowd-pleaser for a reason. You’ll get wax figures across film, music, sports, and history, plus a few extra set pieces that make it more than just a room full of statues.
Here’s what you’re in for:
- The NEW Royal Balcony Experience and photo-friendly backdrops connected to the young Royals, including Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
- A nostalgic taxi ride through 400 years of London’s past.
- A Marvel Super Heroes 4D experience.
What I like about bundling these is pacing. Wax figures are fast to enjoy and easy to browse at your own speed. Then you get a couple of “scene-based” attractions that add story and motion, which helps if your group includes both adults who want the wow factor and kids who need something more active.
The possible snag is straightforward: the first stop is also where you may face the longest line for ticket redemption and entry. If you’re going with kids or just want a calm start, go earlier rather than later.
SEA LIFE London Aquarium: Rainforest Adventure 360 Views and Real Up-Close Encounters

After the shine of Madame Tussauds, SEA LIFE is a clean reset. This aquarium leans into walking through immersive displays and seeing animals at close range.
The highlights you should look for:
- Rainforest Adventure with new 360° views of jungle inhabitants.
- A strong animal line-up, including penguins, rays, tropical fish, and sharks.
Why SEA LIFE works well in the pass: it’s easy to enjoy without needing to “keep moving.” You can pause when something catches your eye, especially if you’re there with children who want to stop and point out every fish that swims by.
The other big benefit is practicality. Aquariums are indoor, so if your day includes rain, SEA LIFE can keep your plan intact. You’re not stuck scrambling for an alternative.
If you like animal viewing, this stop alone can feel like a full outing, which makes it a great mid-day anchor before you switch back to bigger, louder attractions.
London Dungeon: Theaters, Actors, and 1000 Years Told in English

The London Dungeon is not a quiet museum. It’s a theatrical walk-through with live actors, special effects, and multi-sensory staging.
You’ll hear, touch, smell, and feel as the experience moves through scenes covering over 1000 years of history. The tone is designed to be funny as well as scary, with you kept moving from show to show.
Two things you should know before you go:
- The tour is run in English. Non-English speakers can still enjoy the sensory format, but it may not land the same way without the language.
- It can be intense. Even when you expect a “fun scary” theme, it’s still a suspense-style attraction with actors and effects.
I like pairing the Dungeon with the London Eye later in the day. The Dungeon gets your adrenaline up, then the Eye gives you a slow decompression: seated, breathing room, and wide city views.
London Eye: 30 Minutes Up High and Clear-Day Landmarks

The London Eye is the classic skyline experience, and this pass gives you admission to a ride that lasts about 30 minutes per rotation. At 135 meters (442 feet), you’re up above the street level with high-tech glass capsules and big sight lines across central London.
On a clear day, you can see major landmarks including:
- Big Ben
- Buckingham Palace
- St Paul’s Cathedral
- Westminster Abbey
- Trafalgar Square
What makes the London Eye a good use of the pass: it’s simple and low-effort once you’re on board. You don’t need to understand history to enjoy it. You just need a camera, a little patience, and a willingness to look around.
Practical tip: plan your day so the Eye isn’t your last desperate stop. If it’s crowded, you’ll feel it more when it’s at the end of your energy.
Also, note this important closure window: the London Eye will be closed 5 Jan to 18 Jan 2026. If your trip could overlap those dates, double-check before you buy.
Shrek’s Adventure! London: Donkey’s Bus Ride and Family-Friendly (But Loud)

Shrek’s Adventure! London is pure storybook chaos in the best way. You board a magical DreamWorks Tours red bus driven by Donkey, then follow the action through the fantasy world of Far Far Away.
The experience includes meeting characters from the films, with names mentioned for:
- Princess Fiona
- Puss in Boots
- Gingy
- and an antagonist, Rumpelstiltskin, who causes trouble
It’s designed as an interactive tour, and it’s family-friendly on paper for a reason. In real life, though, it can be loud, and it may feel intense for very young kids. If you’re traveling with children, aim for the age range that can handle the noise and the suspense-style disruptions.
This is also a smart stop to pair with Waterloo-area travel. The entrance is noted as a 5 minute walk from Waterloo Underground Station, which keeps transit simple compared to attractions that require longer cross-city detours.
Getting Between Stops: Central London With Underground Options

One reason this pass works for many itineraries is that each location is in central London and described as easy to reach by public transportation, with Underground stations nearby.
Some locations you can plan around with clear transit anchors:
- Madame Tussauds is near Baker Street Underground Station.
- The London Eye is a 5 minute walk from Waterloo Underground Station.
- Shrek’s Adventure! London is also a 5 minute walk from Waterloo.
That Waterloo double is useful. If you want to reduce walking fatigue, group those two together and make Waterloo your “hub” for one chunk of the day.
For the other stops—SEA LIFE and the London Dungeon—plan on short walks from nearby Underground connections. The pass is designed so you’re not stuck with long, cross-city travel between attractions.
Price and Value Check: When the Pass Makes Sense
This is a “pack it in” ticket. You don’t buy it to do just one thing. You buy it because you want multiple major attractions without the hassle of separate tickets.
That’s why it tends to work best for:
- Families who want variety without spending hours researching ticket times
- First-time visitors who want the biggest London hits in one central loop
- People who like structured planning but still want flexibility once they’re inside
The value is strongest when you actually use the five inclusions. If you skip one attraction, the pass can start to feel less like a deal and more like you paid for what you didn’t do.
One additional caution from how these attractions are set up: the pass helps most with the entry flow at the start. It doesn’t magically erase security checks or lines at every attraction. So the pass is a money-saver and schedule-saver, not a line-eliminator.
Should You Book This London Attractions Pass?
If you want an efficient, central London route built around five headline attractions, I’d book it. The mix is strong: famous faces at Madame Tussauds, an animal-focused break at SEA LIFE, theatrical thrills at the London Dungeon, skyline views on the London Eye, and a fun, story-driven stop at Shrek’s Adventure. It’s also easy to understand for planning because each stop is listed as roughly an hour.
I’d pause before booking only if one of these describes you:
- You’re highly sensitive to crowds and want to avoid any early-day line risk at the first stop.
- Your group includes very small kids who might not handle loud effects and suspense-style scenes.
- Your travel dates fall within 5 Jan to 18 Jan 2026, when the London Eye is closed.
For most people, this pass is a practical way to turn London into a simple checklist—without turning your trip into a spreadsheet.






















