London’s best flea markets (2024)

London’s best flea markets (1)

Need a creepy old doll’s head or a vintage suitcase? Here’s our pick of the best flea, antiques and junk markets in London

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Things To Do Editors
Written by
Chris Waywell

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Shops are for squares. If you want to pick up something really unique, you’ve got to make for one of London’s plethora of markets.You can go to Borough Market for food andColumbia Roadfor flowers; but where do you go when you’re looking for something you didn’t even realise you wanted? To the humble flea market, of course! There’s no greater joy than rummaging through piles of dusty treasures at the very best junk and antiques markets in London. Whether you’re looking for antique furniture, shiny silverware, vintage accessories or just enjoy having a good oldriffle through other people’s cast-offtat, here’s our pick of London’s best flea markets and secondhand fairs to spend your weekends wandering around. Time to get your barter on.

RECOMMENDED:The best markets in London.

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London’s best flea markets

1.Brick Lane Vintage Market
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Brick Lane

Though Brick Lane Market boasts a variety of markets, the highlight for fashion fans has got to be this bountiful vintage bonanza. You’ll find a buzzing crowd of arty students, bona-fide East End locals and hip attention-seekers riffling through rails stuffed with everything from ’20s finery to ’90s throwbacks, as well as the odd showstopping accessory.

Mon-Fri 11am-6.30pm, Sat 11am-6pm, Sun 10am-6pm. Check in advance here.

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Jean Goldsmith
2.Chatsworth Road Market
  • Shopping
  • Music and entertainment
  • Clapton

Clapton’s Chatsworth Road Market sure is old. In the ’30s it had 200 stalls peddling their wares five days a week. After the war, the market dwindled and finally petered out in 1990 leaving Chatsworth Road bereft. Chatsworth returned regularly in 2010, thanks to a campaign from locals and traders. Now you’ll findmore than 40 stalls sellingethically sourced garb from India, natural knitting wool,vintage clothes and accessories alongside stalls showcasing the work of local designers, plus gourmet food,cakes and preserves– and more than its fair share of hipsters.

Sunday 11am-4pm. More details here.

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© Adam Hollier
3.Portobello Road Market
  • Shopping
  • Vintage shops
  • Portobello Road

Best known for antiques and collectables, Portobello Road is actually several markets rolled into one: antiques start at the Notting Hill end; further up are food stalls; under the Westway and along the walkway to Ladbroke Grove is where you’ll find retro fashion and emerging designers. It gets absolutely jam-packed on Saturdays, which is also when you’llfind the biggest range of stalls: go ready to get swept up in the joyful chaos.

Mon-Wed 9am-6pm, Thu 9am-1pm, Fri 9am-7pm, Sat 9am-7pm (antiques). More details here.

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Andy Parsons
4.Wood Street Indoor Market
  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • Walthamstow

Whatever your heart desires, you’ll find it in this rabbit warren of a building in Walthamstow. There are food stalls, beauty shops, jewellery makers and more at Wood Street. What it’s absolutely best at, though, is old stuff: vintage clothes, antique homeware, retro toys. There’s even a football-memorabilia shop. Best of all? It’s all under cover, so it makes for the perfect rainy day out.

Tue-Sat, 10am-5.30pm. More details here.

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5.Alfies Antique Market
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Lisson Grove

Housed in a huge art deco building, Alfies Antique Market has been one of London’s top spots for collectors, celebs and bargain-hunters for more than 40 years. Everything is carefully curated, and this is reflected in the prices, but if you’re serious about picking up a beautiful one-of-a-kind gem, this huge antiques arcade is hard to beat.

Tue-Sat 10am-6pm. More details here.

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6.North London Vintage Market
  • Shopping
  • Womenswear
  • Muswell Hill

A small market with a stellar stall line-up focusing mainly on items for the home. Look out for quirky pieces such as tea sets from the ’30s, coat hooks from the ’50s andcolourful curtains from the ’60s. Kitchen finds aside, there’s also vintage clothing on sale for those who can’t live without a retro fashion fix – items range from brooches and petticoats to tea dresses and handbags.

First weekend of every month. Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 1pm-5pm. £1.50 admission. Check here for future dates.

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7.Flea at Vinegar Yard
  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs

This weekly vintage and makers market in Vinegar Yard SE1, brings heaps of antiques, clothing, homeware, books, bikes and cameras. It’s is less about old junk and more about careful curation. Withits colourful display of eclectic goods, you’ll definitely end up leaving with something. It just probably won’t be what you came for.

Sat 11am-6pm, Sun 10am-5pm. More details here.

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Robert Greshoff Photography
8.Greenwich Market
  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • Greenwich

Greenwich’s long-established covered market boasts daily arts and craft stalls, with a few decent food traders too. Antiques and collectables dealers join them on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, trading in jewellery, vintage clothes, old books, 1950s and ’60s ceramics, lamps, cameras and more. There are also vintage stalls at the weekends at the foot of Crooms Hill and beside Greenwich Picturehouse cinema.

Tue, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun 10am-5.30pm. More details here.

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9.Hackney Flea Market
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Stoke Newington

Despite the name, Hackney Flea Market has been known to pop up as far afield as Peckham and Walthamstow. But wherever you find it, this roaming market offers an eclectic range of items including jewellery, vintage fabrics, mid-mod furniture, old maps and kitchenalia. Homemade delicacies are on hand throughout the day, as well as DJs, to keep sugar levels and spirits high.

Check here for future dates.

10.Kingsland Market
  • Dalston

Opened in 1880 as a ‘waste’ market for people to trade unwanted goods, this Hackney hotspot was once the place to go for secondhand stuff, but by 2015 trading had dwindled to just one stall. The new market runs weekly on Saturdays. In keeping with 138 years of tradition, there are stalls selling secondhand bargains, vintage goods and collectables, antiques, and also the occasional ‘waste’ trader. Long live Kingsland Market!

Sat, 9am-4pm. More details here.

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Carolina Faruolo
11.Old Spitalfields Antiques Market
  • Things to do
  • Literary events
  • Spitalfields

Though not everyone is a fan of the redevelopment of Spitalfields (particularly those pushed out by the rising rents), the market has had a new lease of life. The East End stalwart now comprises the refurbished 1887 covered market and the adjacent modern shopping precinct. Every Thursday there’s a good antiques market with Victoriana, mid-mod classics and ’60s/’70s/’80s homeware kitsch. There’s also the Vinyl Marketon the first and third Fridays of the month, with everything from obscure ’60s psychedelia to ’90s New York hip hop.

Thu, 8am-5pm. More details here.

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Photograph: Chris Waywell
12.Deptford Market
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Deptford

Deptford Market on the High Street is a regular street market (pants, rugs, fruit and veg), with a sidewing of proper dead-nanjunk attached. On Douglas Way by the Albany, there’s a sprawling, messy mass of stallholders peddling everything under the sun. Sorting through half-used tins of talcum powder and broken electronics makes finding the treasure even more rewarding, but (generally) don’t attempt to barter for it. Prices are already dirt cheap and traders have zero time for punters they think are taking the piss.

Every Wed, Fri and Sat, 9am-5.30pm. More details here.

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© Jubilee Market Hall
13.Covent Garden Jubilee Market
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Covent Garden

The charming covered market hall locatedon the south side of Covent Garden’s famous Piazza is open every day for a variety of stalls. Mondays from 5am-5pm are devoted to antiques and collectables. Browsers willfind an eclectic array of knick-knacks, including porcelain plates, old coins, art deco figurines and legend ‘John the Hat’, who has flogged steel and silver cutlery here formore than 20 years.

Mon 5am-5pm (antiquesand collectables). More details here.

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© Bermondsey Square Antiques Market
14.Bermondsey Square Antiques Market
  • Shopping
  • Bookshops
  • Bermondsey

You’ll find china, silver andglassware shimmering in the morning light at BermondseyAntiques Market. Early birds willbe rewarded with bargains and firstdibs on jewellery, eighteenth-centuryItalian paintings and old French maps.The way Londoners shop has changed drastically since the market’s inception in 1855,but a rummage through the dusty offerings here still feels like you’ve wandered into a Dickens novel (something you generallydon’t getat Westfield).

Every Friday, 6am-2pm. Check in advance here.

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15.Sunbury Antiques Market
  • Shopping
  • Markets and fairs
  • Surrey

For those willing to travel OUTSIDE LONDON *gasp*, this bi-monthly market is well worth a trek. A hotspot for professional prop buyers, it’salsogreat for average joes looking for anything-but-average homeware. It attracts European traders too, so you don’t have to cross the Channel for your chic vide-grenier French farmhouse furniture.A second location at Sandown Park Racecourse means double the vintage joy. Get there early (6.30am!) for the pick of the litter.

Check here for future dates.

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Love a bargain?

Photograph: Jess Orchard
London’s best car-boot sales
  • Shopping
  • Second-hand shops

You can’t beat one of these great car-boot sales in London, where you'll find much more than just chipped crockery and musty old clothes

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    London’s best flea markets (2024)

    FAQs

    What is London's most famous market? ›

    Top London Markets
    • Gabriel's Wharf - Weekends 10:00 - 18:00. ...
    • Greenwich Market - Wednesday to Sunday 10.00am - 17.30. ...
    • Petticoat Lane/Brick Lane - Sunday 10:00 - 17:00. ...
    • Portobello Road Market - Saturdays from about 06:00 - 16:30. ...
    • Spitalfields Monday to Friday 10:00 - 16:00, Sundays 09:00 - 17:00.

    What is the most famous flea market in the world? ›

    Best flea markets in the world: get one of a kind and vintage...
    1. El Rastro - Madrid, Spain. ...
    2. Portobello Road - London, UK. ...
    3. Mauerpark - Berlin, Germany. ...
    4. Chatuchak Market - Bangkok, Thailand. ...
    5. Brooklyn Flea - New York City, USA. ...
    6. Grand Bazaar - Istanbul, Turkey. ...
    7. Rose Bowl Flea Market - Pasadena, USA.

    Which London street is famous for antiques? ›

    Rummage for treasures at Portobello Road Market in west London's Notting Hill. Dating back to the 19th century, Portobello is one of London's oldest markets and it provided the setting for the 1999 movie Notting Hill, starring Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts.

    Which markets are best in London? ›

    Where to Go Shopping Like a Local in London?
    • Covent Garden Market.
    • Camden Market.
    • Borough Market.
    • Old Spitalfields Market.
    • Southbank Book Market.
    • Brick Lane Market.
    • Bermondsey Antiques Market.
    • Cabbages & Frocks.

    What is the name of London's flea market? ›

    The Giant London Flea Market is London's largest indoor flea market, hosting over 100 of the finest traders of vintage home decor, & peddlers of preloved bargains.

    What is the most popular shopping street in London? ›

    Oxford Street is one of the busiest streets in the world. The bustling crowds are attracted by a huge range of shops and department stores that offer the best in high street fashion, sportswear, and Britain's most famous brands. Selfridges department store is a particular highlight.

    What is the famous weekend market in London? ›

    Borough Market

    The famous Borough Market is London's oldest – dating back to the thirteenth century. Now, it's also the busiest and most popular for gourmet goodies. Here, traders satisfy the city's insatiable appetite for beautifully displayed organic fruit and veg, cakes, bread, olive oil, fish, meat and booze.

    Which London street is famous for going shopping? ›

    Wander along Oxford Street – one of the most famous London shopping streets – which is home to more than 300 shops, designer outlets, high-street chains and landmark stores.

    What is the covent garden market famous for selling? ›

    Once home to the world-famous fruit and vegetable market, Covent Garden's Apple Market continues to support market traders, offering a range of unique handmade crafts and goods throughout the week.

    Is Portobello Road worth visiting? ›

    If you love pottering through markets for unique finds, then Portobello Road Market is absolutely worth visiting. This is one of the best places to purchase one-of-a-kind items for yourself and your loved ones.

    Where is the best place to shop in London? ›

    Best Places for Shopping in London
    • Our Favourite Spot for Music Lovers- Brixton. ...
    • Shopping for Pop Culture Entertainment Enthusiasts- Forbidden Planet. ...
    • Snack Shopping for Gourmands- Borough Market. ...
    • Best Shopping for Unique Gifts and Souvenirs- Camden Market. ...
    • The Best Spot for Boutique Shopping- Carnaby Street.

    Which is the more famous road for shops in London? ›

    Oxford Street

    This shopping street in London is said to be the world's biggest high street, with more than 90 flagship stores retailing stunning fashion buys, tech must-haves, homeware and more. Tucked away in West End London, Oxford Street stretches from Tottenham Court Road to Marble Arch via Oxford Circus.

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