Photo of Jack The Ripper Museum in Greater London1 / 2
Museums

Jack The Ripper Museum

📍 London, Greater London

4.1(2,531 Google reviews)

Self-guided museum across 5 floors with period-accurate recreations of 1888 East End rooms, a police station, and a historic pub setting. Optional 90-minute walking tours with research historians run daily. Audio guides available separately.

Victorian social historyResearch historian toursPeriod recreationsEducational focusFamily appropriateAudio guide recommended
★★★★★Featured review by Lily Chan

The museum itself is very interesting—allow about an hour. It’s not about gore, but about the real social history of Victorian London in 1888, which sets the scene perfectly. The highlight was the walking tour with 'Elegant Sam'. (The tour took 1.5-2 hours.) He is a research historian and his expertise really shows. He led us through the streets, pointing out the original locations of pubs and brothels, and brilliantly explained the contrast between the 1888 landscape and the modern city. It gave me so much to reflect on. Sam is engaging, professional, and brings the history to life in a way that is both educational and captivating. A fantastic experience from start to finish.

🏆 Family Action Verdict

Best for families with children aged 10 and up who have an existing interest in Victorian history or mystery. The museum handles the subject with historical sensitivity rather than sensationalism, making it more educational than shocking. Younger children will find the five-floor vertical layout tiring and the reading-heavy displays less engaging.

ℹ️ What to Know Before You Go

💡The audio guide adds context beyond the display panels — worth getting on arrival
Walking tours run daily and are led by research historians — book separately at the museum
🎟️The museum is vertical across five floors with a lift available
🚗Visit on a weekday to avoid queues — advance booking is not essential

💬 What Families Are Saying

View all reviews →
4.1

2,531 Google reviews

Educational and historically accurate40%
Walking tours highly praised30%
Detailed Victorian recreations20%
Family-appropriate handling of subject10%
L

Lily Chan

4 weeks ago

The museum itself is very interesting—allow about an hour. It’s not about gore, but about the real social history of Victorian London in 1888, which sets the scene perfectly. The highlight was the walking tour with 'Elegant Sam'. (The tour took 1.5-2 hours.) He is a research historian and his expertise really shows. He led us through the streets, pointing out the original locations of pubs and brothels, and brilliantly explained the contrast between the 1888 landscape and the modern city. It gave me so much to reflect on. Sam is engaging, professional, and brings the history to life in a way that is both educational and captivating. A fantastic experience from start to finish.

I

Ingrid Marson

3 months ago

Highly recommend this museum to learn more about Jack the Ripper and about life in the East End in this period. I paid £5 for an audio guide and it was well worth it to get some extra information about what I was seeing and reading. The murders were covered sensitively, and I found the insight into the impoverished life of the women in this area poignant, for example, the picture of coffins which poor people slept in. There are various rooms to explore and each of the rooms has sound effects, which created a chilling ambience. Pat at the reception desk was helpful and friendly. A great hidden gem and well worth the entrance free!

K

Keith Hainge

2 months ago

Visited on a damp weekday . I did not buy a ticket in advance as I did'nt expect to find the museum crowded & it was'nt. I walked down from Aldgate tube & although many buildings on the way are relatively modern you can still get a feel of how the area might have been in the 1880's. I paid a fiver on top of the admission fee for use of the audio guide which comes without headphones so you need to hold it close to your ear when using. There is a small selection of gift items for sale. For those with mobility problems it is good to find a lift to all the floors although I reckon it would be a tight manoeuvre with a wheelchair. It's an easy to follow route on 5 floors , starting by ascending to the first floor & continuing up to the 4th before returning to the basement for the last part of the tour. Each staircase has the walls covered with copies of newspaper articles of the times & one can appreciate how lurid & explicit the media was. Every floor is set as a tableaux - the first a section of Mitre Square , the second an imagined room of how The Ripper's lounge may have appeared based on the considered suspects. The third floor is set as police headquarters & the fourth floor as the living room of a Rippers victim . In the basement is a set up of a bar at "The Ten Bells " public house. If you have the audio there are 30 different reference points where you can listen to some pertinent facts relayed in an eldritch voice. On the whole I found the museum well done with a wealth of information available . It would have been easy to dwell on the more sordid & sensational aspects of the affair & whilst these are not avoided , the victims are sensitively portrayed & their lives given an in depth examination. The bedroom tableaux is rather poignant & when one considers that even that was a " luxury " for many it gives one pause for thought. Excellent toilet facility in the basement. Even avid readers of The Ripper affair might gain something from a visit.

A

Angela M. Santander M.

a month ago

The Jack the Ripper Museum offers a very visual journey through the history of Victorian London. While the subject is dark, the museum is surprisingly family oriented and approachable for children, with detailed recreations of the era's settings. It’s a small, vertical museum where you climb through different floors to see the scenes. It didn’t completely blow me away, but it’s definitely an entertaining and immersive experience for families looking for a bit of mystery. A good, quick stop if you are exploring the Whitechapel area!

Reviews from Google

Overview

The Jack the Ripper Museum reconstructs Victorian London across five floors with detailed period rooms, police station displays, and authentic pub settings. The focus is firmly on social history — the lives of the victims and the East End community of 1888 — rather than graphic content. Self-guided visits take around an hour. Daily walking tours with research historians extend the experience by 90 minutes and are independently praised in reviews.

🕐 Opening Hours

Monday09:30 – 18:00
Tuesday09:30 – 18:00
Wednesday09:30 – 18:00
Thursday09:30 – 18:00
Friday09:30 – 18:00
Saturday09:30 – 18:00
Sunday09:30 – 18:00

📍 Other Museums in London

View all →

📍 Similar Activities Nearby

View more in Greater London