London Tower Bridge port
The cruise port at London Tower Bridge, England
Where is London Tower Bridge port?
This dock—served by tenders—is right in downtown London, by Tower Bridge and the HMS Belfast near the Tower of London.
What cruise itineraries use London Tower Bridge port?
Most cruises out of London Tower Bridge visit the British Isles and Ireland, Baltic, and Scandinavia.
Which cruise lines use London Tower Bridge port?
Only smaller ships can come this far up the Thames, including cruises run by FTI Cruises, Hebridean Island Cruises, National Geographic Expeditions, Silversea, and Windstar Cruises.
How can I get from London Tower Bridge port to London?
You already are right in London! The closest Tube stop is Tower of London.
Cruises links
- CruiseDirect.com - One of the top cruise discounters in the business, consistently underselling the higher rack rates you'll see posted on the web sites of the cruise companies themselves. CruiseDirect.com even has a last-minute page with discounts on soon-to-leave ships.Partner
- Cruisecompete.com - You know the commercials for LendingTree.com? That whole "When banks compete, you win..." spiel? Well this the same thing for cruises. You put in the date and destination and ship (any or all of those), and it sends your cruise request to a whole bunch of cruise brokers and discounters. Each of them then contacts you with a quote on how little they can do that cruise for you. Basically, it does the shopping around for you, pretty cool, huh? Partner
- Priceline.com - The famous discounter of hotels rooms also does cruises.Partner
- CruiseCritic.com - Editorial site with ship reviews, plenty of good crusing intel, and very active forums. (Disclosure: I have written for them, and have several friends on the editorial staff.)
- Singlescruise.com - Books groups of singles (ages 21 on up, but mostly 35–55) onto cruise ships, offering its own onboard program of events and mixers—and, most importantly, matching you with a same-gender cabinmate (of roughly the same age) so you don't have to pay the dreaded "single supplement."