As drinks are usually more expensive in London, compared to other parts of the country, people sometimes choose to have a pint at a Wetherspoon’s. But prices vary depending on which of Sir Tim Martin’s pubs you visit.

Customers pay different amounts depending on where they are in the city. The general rule is that the more central you are, the more expensive your drink will be.

Pantry and Larder have put together an interactive map that has helpfully identified each Wetherspoon, and you can check how expensive the menu items are.

But the list of the most and cheapest pubs will change slightly depending on the drink you choose. Have therefore chosen to rank them according to the price of a pint of Guinness.

This is because it was named the country’s most popular choice in a recent YouGov survey. Second, if you were interested, was San Miguel.

London’s most expensive Wetherspoon’s

A little trivia for you. Interestingly, there are two Wetherspoon’s with the exact same name in the town.

There is a ‘Moon Under Water’ in Leicester Square and in Colindale. The former offers a pint of Guinness for £6.47. At Heathrow airport they are also expensive – £6.30.

Cheapest in town

The cheapest pints of Guinness can be found at The Half Moon in Mile End, The Great Spoon of Ilford, The Rochester Castle in Stoke Newington, The London and Rye in Catford and The New Cross Turnpike in Welling, The Alfred Herring in Palmers Green, The King’s Ford in Chingford, The Colley Rowe Inn in Collier Row, The Whispering Moon in Wallington, The Sir Julian Huxley in Selsdon, The Botwell Inn in Hayes

The city’s other Wetherspoon pubs sell their pints of Guinness for prices ranging between the two highest, such as £5.74, £5, £4.48, £3.89 and £3.66.

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