(A guest Op-Ed)
For a family
of four arriving at Stonehenge on a summer Saturday, the bill starts at roughly
£80 before anyone has set foot near the stones.9 They will queue for a
shuttle bus, walk a roped-off path at a polite distance from the monument, and
be back in the car park inside two hours. Meanwhile, the Natural History Museum — which last year welcomed a record-breaking 7.1 million visitors — costs nothing at all.13 Increasingly, families
are making exactly that calculation. And the numbers show it.
In 2025,
Stonehenge welcomed 1,253,405 visitors — an 8 per cent fall on the previous
year and roughly 22 per cent below its pre-pandemic peak of approximately 1.6
million in 2019.2,19
It slipped to 25th in the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions rankings,
behind Windsor Castle and RHS Garden Wisley.1 This happened in a year when the
broader sector managed a modest 2 per cent increase to 165 million total visits
across 409 ALVA sites. Even that aggregate figure remained 7 per cent below
2019.1
Stonehenge, in other words, is not merely failing to recover from the pandemic
— it is actively falling behind in a sector that is itself still struggling.
This is not a
blip. It is the visible symptom of a deeper malaise at English Heritage, the
charity responsible for more than 400 historic sites across England. The
organisation’s own 2024/25 Annual Report reveals that pay-to-enter sites
collectively attracted only 5.7 million visitors against internal targets,
contributing to financial strain so severe that it triggered a “reshaping
programme.”7
That programme proposes at least 189 job losses — roughly 7 per cent of its
2,535-strong workforce — with cuts expected across curatorial, site management,
marketing, and visitor operations roles.3,17 A further 21 sites face
winter closures, and another 22 are being reclassified to open only on select
days.4
One site, English Heritage has noted, welcomed just 11 visitors over an entire
November weekend.5
Stonehenge was
supposed to be the ballast against this kind of storm. As English Heritage’s
highest-revenue generator — a site that operates without government subsidy and
funds conservation across the portfolio through ticket sales, membership, and
secondary spend — it is the engine that keeps the rest of the machine running.
When the engine falters, everything downstream suffers. And English Heritage’s
own board knows it is faltering. The Trust Board minutes from March 2025
recorded high visitor satisfaction across 20 surveyed sites, with improvements
at many — “excluding Stonehenge.”6 The Annual Report quantified the gap: the
overall visitor experience score dipped slightly to 8.79 out of 10, but strip
out Stonehenge and it held steady at 8.98, with 70 per cent of visitors rating
their experience “excellent.” Stonehenge’s increased weighting in the survey
data coincided with a measurable drop in those top-tier ratings, prompting the
board to commission action plans.7
The internal
data merely confirms what visitors have been saying publicly for years. One
Tripadvisor reviewer in September 2025 reported paying £34.50 for an adult
ticket plus £3 for parking, only to find poorly maintained pathways between the
visitor centre and the stones, and a general sense of commercial extraction
from what should be a transcendent encounter with 5,000 years of human history.8 The
recurring complaints are consistent: high prices for a managed experience that
keeps people at arm’s length from the monument, overcrowding at peak times, a
visitor centre that feels like a warehouse with a gift shop attached, and a
lingering suspicion that the site is optimised for throughput rather than
wonder. Travel bloggers have coined it a “megalithic disappointment” — a
one-off bucket-list tick rather than something worth returning to.8,10
The cruel
contrast is with institutions that have invested boldly and reaped the rewards.
The Natural History Museum’s trajectory is instructive. Its visitor numbers are
now 31 per cent above pre-pandemic levels — driven by reimagined garden spaces
that attracted over 5 million visitors in their first year, a new permanent
gallery on climate solutions that has already drawn more than 2 million people,
and immersive experiences such as Our Story with David Attenborough.13,14
ALVA’s director, Bernard Donoghue, attributed the success in part to those
transformed outdoor spaces, calling the museum an “astonishingly fun, joyful
day out.”11
The lesson is not that Stonehenge should become a museum — it is that capital
investment, continuously refreshed programming, and a commitment to opening new
reasons to visit year after year can transform an institution’s fortunes even
in a cost-of-living crisis. The Natural History Museum plans to open a new or
revitalised permanent gallery every year until 2031.13
Stonehenge’s core offer, by contrast, has remained essentially static since the
visitor centre opened in 2013: view the stones from afar, browse the
exhibition, ride the shuttle, go home.
This matters
because the competitive landscape has fundamentally shifted. Donoghue’s
diagnosis of the wider sector is blunt: visitors today are “more tactical than
ever in deciding how they spend their leisure pounds and their leisure hours”
and their expectations of a great visit “are higher now than they have ever
been.”11
The day trip to an attraction now competes within the family budget with free
alternatives and streaming subscriptions. In that environment, a paid heritage
site charging premium prices must deliver an experience that justifies the cost
— not just once, but persuasively enough that visitors recommend it and
consider returning. Stonehenge is increasingly failing that test. Academic
research stretching back almost two decades has identified access restrictions,
perceived over-commercialisation, and the gap between visitor expectations and
reality as persistent weaknesses.12 The specific complaints have barely
changed; only the ticket prices have — upward.
English
Heritage is not unaware of the problem. Its 2025–2030 Strategic Plan speaks of
ambitions under the banner “Care, Share, and Grow,” including better visitor
experiences, enhanced education provision, and financial sustainability.7 Planning
permission has been granted for a new Learning Centre and Neolithic classroom
near the existing visitor facilities, due to open in autumn 2026.15 These
are welcome, if overdue, steps. But a learning centre alone will not reverse a
decline driven by value perception, logistical frustration, and emotional
disappointment. Bolder measures are needed: dynamic pricing that rewards
off-peak visits and makes the site accessible to families priced out of peak
weekends; enhanced on-site interpretation that deepens engagement beyond the
current walk-and-gawk circuit; investment in the kind of immersive, regularly
refreshed programming that has driven growth at institutions like the Natural
History Museum and the Ashmolean; and a hard look at the logistics that turn an
encounter with prehistory into an exercise in queue management.
The broader
heritage sector faces a punishing economic environment. ALVA described 2025 as
financially the toughest year since the pandemic, compounded by increased
employer National Insurance contributions and above-inflation minimum wage
increases.11
English Heritage cannot control macroeconomic headwinds. But it can control
what happens when someone arrives at its most famous site and asks whether the
experience was worth the money. Right now, too many visitors are answering no.
The stones
themselves remain extraordinary — 5,000 years of human ambition and mystery
compressed into a circle of sarsen and bluestone on Salisbury Plain. The
tragedy is not that Stonehenge has lost its power. It is that the organisation
charged with sharing that power is letting it seep away, and taking the
financial foundations of England’s wider heritage with it.
References
1. ALVA, ‘Visitor Figures
2025’, 20 March 2026. alva.org.uk/details.cfm?p=403&codeid=895.
2. Museums Association,
‘Natural History Museum breaks all-time record for visitor figures’, 20 March
2026.
3. English Heritage,
‘Reshaping English Heritage’, January 2025.
english-heritage.org.uk/about/search-news/pr-reshaping-english-heritage.
4. Museum Observer,
‘English Heritage Plans 200 Redundancies and Winter Closures Amid Financial
Struggles’, 2025.
5. Museums Association,
‘English Heritage workforce could shrink by 7% in major restructure’, 30
January 2025.
6. English Heritage Trust
Board Meeting Minutes, 12 March 2025.
english-heritage.org.uk/about/our-people/our-trustees/trustee-meeting-minutes.
7. English Heritage,
Annual Report and Accounts 2024/25.
8. Tripadvisor reviews,
Stonehenge Visitor Centre, September 2025; Adventure Brits, ‘Is Visiting
Stonehenge A Megalithic Disappointment?’, June 2025.
9. English Heritage
Stonehenge ticket prices 2025/26. english-heritage.org.uk;
visitstonehenge.co.uk/en/tickets.
10. Girl Takes Mundo, ‘How
To Visit Stonehenge For Free’, 9 February 2026.
11. Arts Professional,
‘Visitor attraction numbers see “modest” but “consistent” growth, ALVA finds’,
20 March 2026.
12. Mason, P. & Kuo,
I-L. (2007) ‘Visitor Attitudes to Stonehenge: International Icon or National
Disgrace?’, Journal of Heritage Tourism, 2(3), pp. 168–183.
13. Natural History Museum,
‘Record breaking 7.1m visitors make it UK’s most popular visitor attraction’,
20 March 2026. nhm.ac.uk.
14. Natural History Museum,
‘Over 5 Million Visitors to Gardens in First Year’, July 2025. nhm.ac.uk.
15. Wikipedia,
‘Stonehenge’, citing English Heritage announcement March 2025: planning
permission for Learning Centre and Neolithic classroom, due autumn 2026.
16. Civil Society, ‘English
Heritage proposes cutting at least 189 staff roles’, January 2025.
17. Prospect Union,
‘Prospect warns against proposed English Heritage redundancies’, 2024.
18. Artlyst, ‘Natural
History Museum Breaks UK Records With 7.1 Million Visitors’, March 2026.
19. Statista / ALVA,
‘Number of visits to Stonehenge in England from 2010 to 2023’. Pre-pandemic
peak c. 1.6m in 2019.



