The Lion King
Lyceum Theatre
from £43.75
21 shows on sale
Lyceum Theatre
from £43.75
Novello Theatre
from £18.75
Sondheim Theatre
from £31.25
from £48
Apollo Victoria Theatre
from £31.25
Cambridge Theatre
from £25
Duchess Theatre
from £22
Palace Theatre
from £112.50
Gillian Lynne Theatre
from £30
Theatre Royal Drury Lane
from £36.88
Bridge Theatre
from £18.75
St Martin's Theatre
from £31.25
Adelphi Theatre
from £36
Apollo Theatre
from £31.25
London Coliseum
from £20.31
Gielgud Theatre
from £25
Savoy Theatre
from £42.69
Lyric Theatre
from £12.50
Royal Albert Hall
from £31.25
Theatre Royal Haymarket
from £12.50
Few cities do family theatre like London, and for many children a West End matinee becomes the memory of the whole trip. The trick is matching the show to the age group rather than simply picking the biggest title. This page collects every family-suitable show on sale now, and the line-up below covers the reliable favourites by age.
For young theatregoers, gentle and shorter is better: Stick Man adapts Julia Donaldson's picture book into an hour of songs and puppetry, and Paddington The Musical at the Savoy Theatre brings London's politest bear to the stage. From around age six or seven, the big spectacles land brilliantly: The Lion King at the Lyceum, Matilda The Musical at the Cambridge Theatre, Disney's Hercules and the Royal Shakespeare Company's breathtaking My Neighbour Totoro. Older children and teenagers graduate to Wicked, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child and singalong favourites like Mamma Mia!, while The Play That Goes Wrong proves a play can out-laugh any film.
Matinees are the family sweet spot: earlier start, easier bedtime and usually better availability than Saturday evening. Most West End theatres offer booster seats free of charge, ask an usher when you arrive. Arrive 30 minutes early to settle in, order interval drinks and snacks before the show starts, and note that theatres set minimum ages (commonly around 3 or 4) with specific guidance per show, so check the show's page before booking. For more budget headroom, see our tickets under £30 page or what's on in the school holidays.
The Lion King is the classic first show: instantly familiar, visually stunning and suitable from around age six. For younger children, Stick Man or Paddington The Musical are gentler introductions.
Most theatres do not admit very young children, commonly setting the minimum around age 3 or 4, and every show publishes its own age guidance. Check the show's page before you book.
Yes, most West End theatres provide booster seats free of charge on a first-come basis. Ask a member of staff when you arrive.
Matinees suit most families better: children are fresher, theatres are used to younger audiences in the daytime, and post-show London is still open for dinner.
Anything from an hour for young-children's shows like Stick Man to around 2 and a half hours for the big musicals, always with an interval. Running times are listed on each show's page.
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The highest-rated West End shows on sale this week, ranked by thousands of real audience reviews. The Lion King and My Neighbour Totoro lead at 4.9.
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