The O2 Arena is one of the world's busiest venues, and when a sold-out concert ends, 20,000 people head for the exits at once. Getting home smoothly from the Greenwich Peninsula — especially late, and especially in a crowd that size — takes planning. This guide covers getting home from the O2 after a concert, and why a pre-booked transfer beats the post-show surge.
The O2 sits on the Greenwich Peninsula (SE10), served mainly by North Greenwich Tube (Jubilee line) and the riverboat. But with a 20,000 capacity emptying at once after a concert, North Greenwich station manages huge crowds and long queues, and ride-share apps surge hard. For a smooth, quick getaway — especially in a group or after a late finish — a pre-booked transfer from an agreed point on the peninsula is the calm alternative.
A sold-out O2 empties thousands onto the peninsula together — North Greenwich Tube queues hard.
Ride-share apps spike after a concert, exactly when everyone wants a ride.
Concerts end late, when the Tube is winding down and getting home gets harder.
The O2's spot means limited exit routes, concentrating the crowds.
| From | Saloon | Executive | MPV | 8-Seater |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| East London | £81 | £92 | £92 | £104 |
| Central London | £81 | £92 | £92 | £104 |
| Kent | £103 | £117 | £119 | £127 |
| Essex | £108 | £123 | £126 | £135 |
| From | Saloon | Executive | MPV | 8-Seater |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| East London | £146 | £166 | £166 | £187 |
| Central London | £146 | £166 | £166 | £187 |
| Kent | £185 | £211 | £214 | £229 |
| Essex | £194 | £221 | £227 | £243 |
Fares vary by your home postcode. Saloon seats 4, MPV 6, 8-seaters for groups heading home together.
The scale of the challenge at the O2 Arena is what sets it apart, since a sold-out show sends a crowd of some twenty thousand people surging out onto the Greenwich Peninsula all at the same moment, into an area whose geography offers only limited routes back to the rest of London. North Greenwich Underground station, efficient though it is, becomes the focus of enormous queues as the bulk of the crowd funnels towards the Jubilee line, and the concentration of demand is precisely the condition under which ride-hailing apps apply their steepest surge pricing, so that the very moment you most want a ride is the moment it costs the most and takes the longest to secure. For a large group, or for anyone simply wanting to get home without a lengthy wait after a late-finishing concert, this combination of crowds and cost makes the standard options frustrating. A pre-booked transfer changes the equation entirely by having a driver ready at an agreed point away from the main crush, at a price fixed when you booked regardless of how heavily the apps are surging that night, so you can walk clear of the crowds and head straight home in comfort while the queues for the Tube and the surge-priced cars are still building behind you.
A: North Greenwich Tube queues hard with 20,000 leaving; a pre-booked transfer from an agreed point takes you straight home.
A: Often heavily — a fixed-price transfer avoids it entirely.
A: Yes — MPVs and 8-seaters keep the group together and split the cost.
A: Yes — a driver waits, so no dash for a last Tube after a late finish.
Getting home from the O2 means beating a 20,000-strong crowd, the North Greenwich queue and ride-share surge. A pre-booked fixed-price transfer from an agreed point on the peninsula takes you straight home — no queue, no surge, the easy end to a concert night.
Beat the 20,000-person exit — agreed pickup, no surge.
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