REVIEW · RICHMOND UK
Richmond: Ted Lasso Guided Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Brit Movie Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Ted Lasso turns Richmond into set magic. This walking tour strings together show locations across all three seasons with real Richmond streets, plus practical local context. I especially like the mix of big fan moments (Ted’s door selfie) and behind-the-scenes storytelling. One heads-up: it runs rain or shine, and the sidewalks can get muddy if the weather is bad.
The route starts at Richmond Railway Station and ends with a Thames view tied to Keeley’s photo shoot, so you get a tidy half-day plan without babysitting a schedule. The guides are local fans, and names like Emmy and Carly come up again and again for their energy and scene details. The only real drawback is that it’s a walking tour, so it isn’t a fit if mobility is a concern.
In This Review
- Key Points Before You Go
- Why Richmond Makes This Ted Lasso Tour Feel Real
- From Richmond Station to Ted’s Door: The Walk You’ll Remember
- AFC Richmond Stops: Roy and Keeley’s First Date Moment
- The Crown and Anchor Drink Stop That Fans Actually Care About
- Rebecca and Bernard: When Scenes Meet Real Homes
- The Final Thames Vista: Keeley’s Photo Shoot Ending
- Guides Make the Difference: Emmy, Carly, and the Fan-Friendly Hosting
- Price and Value: Is $47 Worth It?
- Weather, Footwear, and How to Stay Comfortable
- Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book the Richmond Ted Lasso Guided Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- Where does the tour meet?
- How long is the Ted Lasso guided walking tour?
- Is the tour guided and in English?
- Does the tour run in bad weather?
- What should I bring?
- Is it refundable if I cancel?
Key Points Before You Go

- Richmond Station start, Thames-sunset style finish so you’re anchored to a clear route
- 12+ filming locations across all three seasons, not just a couple of fan favorites
- Ted’s front door selfie moment plus multiple photo stops built into the pacing
- A pub stop at the Crown and Anchor for full AFC Richmond vibes
- Small-group energy is a recurring theme, which helps with questions and pictures
- Rain gear beats denial since the tour keeps going in wet weather
Why Richmond Makes This Ted Lasso Tour Feel Real

Richmond isn’t just a convenient day trip from London. It’s the kind of place where streets, shopfronts, and river views actually do the work for storytelling. When a show leans on atmosphere, Richmond gives it plenty: brick facades, tidy squares, and that slow Thames pull to the west.
That’s why this tour works so well for Ted Lasso fans. You’re not chasing random coordinates. You’re walking through a real neighborhood while a guide connects what you’re seeing to what you’ve watched on screen. It turns casual watching into a sort of visual memory game, where the show moments make more sense because you can finally stand where the camera did.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Richmond Uk.
From Richmond Station to Ted’s Door: The Walk You’ll Remember

You start outside Richmond Railway Station, at the main entrance/exit. When you leave the station, you turn left, and you’ll spot the little card shop area and a building labeled Station Building. Arrive a few minutes early so you’re not sprinting in umbrellas.
From there, the tour moves as a true walking experience, not a sit-and-watch lecture. Over about 2.5 hours, you’ll cover more than 12 sites with stops that map to key scenes and character beats. The pacing is built for looking up, stepping aside for photos, and hearing the why-behind-the-what.
The headline moment is the photo stop at Ted’s front door. It’s designed as a quick, fun reset: you get your selfie in the exact kind of spot fans dream about, then the guide brings the scene context back into focus. If you want pictures that feel like they belong to the show, this stop is worth the whole planning effort.
AFC Richmond Stops: Roy and Keeley’s First Date Moment

One of the most fun parts of this tour is how it mixes football feelings with relationship beats. You don’t just get coaching vibes. You also hit the places tied to major romance and character milestones, like the spot where Roy and Keeley had their first date.
That stop matters because it highlights the show’s pacing: it treats relationships as plot, not side notes. Standing there, you can see how the production likely used everyday Richmond streets to sell chemistry. It’s a reminder that the show’s charm isn’t only about jokes—it’s also about where those jokes happen.
And because the tour is guided by a local fan, you’ll get the scene framing as you walk, not after the fact. That makes the places feel less like trivia cards and more like lived-in moments you recognize.
The Crown and Anchor Drink Stop That Fans Actually Care About

Yes, it’s a tour built around the show. But the best fan tours understand something simple: a location needs a human moment. That’s why you get a chance to enjoy a drink at Ted’s local Crown and Anchor.
Even if you only grab a quick drink, the pub stop changes the tone. It gives you a natural break, and it turns the walk into a proper Richmond experience, not just a filming-location scavenger hunt. It also helps you slow down and look around as you’re in that AFC Richmond mood.
One practical note: the activity description says a drink stop is part of the highlights, but it doesn’t say it’s on the house. So budget like it’s a normal pub visit.
Rebecca and Bernard: When Scenes Meet Real Homes

Not every stop is about a famous facade. Some are about character geography—where you place emotions in physical space.
This tour includes visits tied to Rebecca’s home and to Bernard, including a location connected to the moment where he had to apologize to Phoebe for being mean to her. Those stops have a different feel than the door or pub locations. They’re quieter. They’re more about listening and looking, then letting the scene play in your head while you’re actually outside in Richmond.
This is where the guide storytelling really earns its keep. A good host doesn’t just point at a door and move on. They connect the filming choice to what the scene needed: tone, distance, privacy, and how characters are framed in relation to the street.
If you care about the show’s character growth, these home-area stops will likely land harder than you expect. They make the story feel grounded instead of purely comedic.
The Final Thames Vista: Keeley’s Photo Shoot Ending

The tour finishes at the location tied to Keeley’s photo shoot, with a beautiful vista overlooking the River Thames. That ending choice is smart. It gives you a satisfying visual payoff after a chunk of show-specific stops.
It also means you end with something you can keep enjoying even after the tour. The Thames view is the kind of thing that makes Richmond feel like more than a filming backdrop. It’s a strong closer because it shifts from show trivia into real-world scenery.
If you still have energy, you’re in a great spot to linger in the area—easy to turn the tour into a half-day with dinner or a relaxed riverside walk.
Guides Make the Difference: Emmy, Carly, and the Fan-Friendly Hosting

The biggest recurring theme in the tour experience is the guide. You’ll be walking with an expert local guide and fan, and the names that show up in people’s accounts include Emmy, Carly, Bruce, Matt, Vic, and Sandy.
What stands out isn’t only that they know the show. It’s that they know how to run a group through a neighborhood while keeping the experience fun. In wet weather especially, guides described staying upbeat even when umbrellas were doing their best impression of a weather system.
Practical upside: because the tour is guided, you don’t have to guess where a scene was intended to feel dramatic or romantic. The host does the translation for you, then gives you time for photos so you’re not stuck rushing through in rain.
Price and Value: Is $47 Worth It?

For $47 per person and 2.5 hours, the value hinges on what you want from your London-area day.
If you’re the kind of fan who re-watches scenes and wants the joy of standing where they were filmed, this is a strong deal. You’re getting:
- 12+ location stops
- built-in photo moments
- behind-the-scenes context
- real Richmond time, not just static sightseeing
The cost also makes sense because Richmond isn’t free. Even if you don’t buy anything, you’re paying for a human guide who can connect scene details to a real neighborhood. A DIY walk would be cool, but you’d spend more time figuring out the story links and less time understanding why the production chose certain spots.
If you’re only casually aware of the show, it might feel more niche. But if Ted Lasso is part of your comfort shows, this tour is the kind of ticket that turns a rainy London plan into a story-driven afternoon.
Weather, Footwear, and How to Stay Comfortable

This tour runs rain or shine, and the walking part means you’ll want shoes that can handle wet sidewalks. Bring comfortable shoes and plan for puddles and mud if conditions are nasty.
Here’s what I’d do in your shoes: pack a small umbrella or a waterproof layer, and accept that your day won’t be pristine. The tour’s a fan experience, not a fashion show. If you dress for walking, the weather usually becomes a minor inconvenience instead of a deal-breaker.
Also, because it’s outdoors, give yourself a couple of minutes of buffer in the morning. Richmond station is easy to access, but you still want time to regroup if the group gathers slightly later in the rain.
Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
This tour is ideal if you:
- love Ted Lasso and want Richmond locations tied to specific character moments
- want a guided walk with photo stops rather than just sightseeing
- like your entertainment with real geography and practical pacing
It may not be the best fit if:
- you have mobility impairments, since the tour is not suitable for that
- you dislike walking for a solid chunk of time
- you need a fully indoor plan when it rains
Should You Book the Richmond Ted Lasso Guided Walking Tour?
If Ted Lasso lives in your head rent-free, I’d book this. The structure makes sense: start at Richmond Station, hit 12+ show locations, enjoy the Crown and Anchor stop, grab your Ted door selfie, and finish with a Thames vista that feels like Richmond—not just a set.
The main risk is weather comfort. If you’re prepared for rain and mud with the right shoes and layers, that risk shrinks a lot. And if you’re the type who likes getting the “why” behind what you see on screen, the guided format is exactly what you want.
Go in as a fan. Leave with a neighborhood you can picture through the show.
FAQ
Where does the tour meet?
The tour meets outside the main entrance/exit of Richmond Railway Station. When you exit the station, turn left, and look for the little card store and the building that says Station Building.
How long is the Ted Lasso guided walking tour?
The tour lasts about 2.5 hours.
Is the tour guided and in English?
Yes. It includes a live tour guide and the tour is in English.
Does the tour run in bad weather?
Yes. The tour takes place rain or shine.
What should I bring?
Wear comfortable shoes since it’s a walking tour. If it’s wet, you’ll also want to be ready for rainy conditions.
Is it refundable if I cancel?
Yes. You can cancel up to 3 days in advance for a full refund.





