Local Area Guides
Where to Eat Near Victoria London: A Food Guide for Guests at The Eccleston
Staying near Victoria Station in London SW1W puts you two minutes from one of the capital’s most quietly celebrated independent eating streets. Elizabeth Street — the kind of destination that locals recommend and visitors discover and then can’t stop talking about — is the starting point for eating well from The Eccleston on Eccleston Place. Here’s a complete guide to where to eat near Victoria London, from morning coffee to a special-occasion dinner.
Morning
Peggy Porschen Parlour, two minutes on foot on Elizabeth Street, is the obvious first stop for guests staying near Victoria London — the pink-fronted patisserie that’s been drawing Belgravia regulars for years. The cakes are genuinely as good as the photographs suggest; the coffee is good enough to justify the trip on its own.
The Thomas Cubitt, also on Elizabeth Street, opens for brunch at weekends — a handsome gastro pub named after the builder responsible for much of Belgravia’s 19th-century development, with a dining room upstairs and a bar that catches good morning light. Worth booking ahead at weekends. For something quicker, the cafés along Elizabeth Street fill up fast on weekend mornings — arriving before ten is the honest tip.
The pink-fronted patisserie on the corner of Elizabeth Street and Ebury Street — open since 2010 and still the most-recommended morning stop in this part of Belgravia. The cakes are as good as the photographs suggest.
View on map →Named after the master builder who constructed most of Belgravia. Breakfast from 8am on weekdays, weekend brunch in the first-floor dining room — book ahead on Saturdays and Sundays.
View on map →Lunch
Colbert, a twelve-minute walk on Sloane Square, is the reliable first choice for lunch near Victoria London — a grand, all-day Parisian brasserie that does an excellent set lunch without any surrounding Sloane Square pretension. Steak frites, croque monsieur, a glass of something cold: exactly what lunch should be.
La Poule au Pot on Ebury Street — a six-minute walk from The Eccleston — is the romantic, candlelit French bistro that has been getting Belgravia lunch right since 1964. The kind of place where a two-hour lunch happens without anyone planning it.
Enoteca Turi in Pimlico, twenty minutes on foot, is the wine-led Italian worth the walk — a serious wine list, deeply knowledgeable service, and cooking that takes its regional Italian credentials seriously.
A grand all-day brasserie on Sloane Square — steak frites, croque monsieur, and a reliable set lunch without Sloane Square pretension. Exactly what lunch should be.
View on map →A Belgravia institution since 1964, on Ebury Street opposite Orange Square. Candlelit, unchanged, and the kind of lunch that runs past two without anyone planning it.
View on map →An all-Italian wine list of 500+ labels, seasonal regional cooking, and a Michelin Guide listing. The wine-led Italian worth the walk — now under Master of Wine David Gleave.
View on map →Afternoon
The Duke of York Square market (Wednesday and Saturday) is twelve minutes on foot and one of the better food markets in central London — artisan bread, cheese, and produce in a setting that makes the trip worthwhile even without buying anything.
Elizabeth Street itself handles the afternoon well for anyone staying near Victoria London: Peggy Porschen for a mid-afternoon cake, the florists for a long look, and the independent boutiques for the kind of window-shopping that costs nothing and takes longer than expected.
Around 40 independent food traders every Saturday — artisan bread, cheese, fresh fish, and international street food in one of Chelsea’s finest squares. Next to the Saatchi Gallery.
View on map →Two minutes from The Eccleston — a short stretch of independent boutiques, florists, and patisseries that rewards a slow afternoon better than almost anywhere else in SW1W.
View on map →Evening
Gordon Ramsay Restaurant on Royal Hospital Road, Chelsea — twenty minutes on foot — is the special-occasion choice for guests near Victoria London looking for something truly exceptional. Three Michelin stars since 2001, an exceptional tasting menu, and one of the finest dining rooms in London. Book well ahead, months if possible.
The Thomas Cubitt works equally well for dinner as it does for brunch — the upstairs dining room is one of the more elegant pub dining rooms in Belgravia, and the kitchen handles a proper evening meal without the formality or the bill of its Chelsea neighbours.
La Poule au Pot is as good by candlelight as it is at lunch — and considerably more romantic after dark. The one to book for a quiet evening dinner within easy walking distance of The Eccleston near Victoria.
Three Michelin stars since 2001, upheld in the 2026 Michelin Guide. The special-occasion choice for guests near Victoria London — book well ahead, and note the £150 per guest deposit required.
View on map →The first-floor dining room is one of the more elegant pub dining rooms in Belgravia — seasonal British cooking, a proper wine list, and a two-minute walk home afterwards.
View on map →As good by candlelight as it is at lunch — and considerably more romantic after dark. The one to book for a quiet evening dinner without leaving SW1W.
View on map →For anyone staying near Victoria London, The Eccleston on Eccleston Place puts almost everything above within a walk rather than a tube journey — one of the quieter advantages of a Belgravia SW1W address.
Staying at The Eccleston? View the apartments or read more about the neighbourhood in An Honest Guide to Belgravia SW1W and 48 Hours in Belgravia London.