Walks you can reach from Canary Wharf by train
Middlesex · South East England
MapA day hike is just a simple train journey away — plan your next day of green.
Alternatively, view walks directly from Canary Wharf.

Maidenhead to Marlow (Berkshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Thames riverside path, wooded escarpment views, short steep hill and pretty 18th-century town.
Warnings: Riverside can flood.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Ealing Broadway Circular via Osterley Park (Middlesex)
30 minutes direct from Canary Wharf.
Urban green spaces, canal towpath, river Thames towpath, parks, gardens and suburban streets.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

West Drayton to Cookham (Middlesex)
45 minutes direct from Canary Wharf.
Lowland heaths, mature woodland, canal towpath, farmland and historic riverside village.
Warnings: Can be muddy.
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Slough to Egham (Buckinghamshire)
45 minutes direct from Canary Wharf.
Flat urban start, parkland, deer park, historic royal landscape, ornamental gardens and lake.
Time: 4h
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Cookham to Maidenhead (Berkshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Hills, escarpment with valley views, beech woods, open fields, riverside Thames Path, wooded estate banks and town outskirts.
Time: 5h
Walk details: the Saturday Walkers Club (tips, local insights and turn-by-turn directions).

Maidenhead to Windsor and Eton Riverside (Berkshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Recommended: A scenic, mostly traffic-free route using waterside and green paths out of Maidenhead through Braywick Nature Reserve, then crossing the Thames on the Summerleaze footbridge to follow a wooded stretch of the Thames Path and before leaving the river at Boveney to cross meadows and pass under railway arches into Eton. Mostly flat apart from the bridges; can get muddy after rain in Braywick Park and along the riverside. Passes Dorney Lake; no refreshment stops between Bray and Eton, though there are picnic places. Take a toilet break at Braywick Leisure Centre as facilities are sparse afterwards.
Woodland: two fifths under tree cover.
Time: 3h–6h
End-of-walk reward: Plenty of refreshment options in Eton, with Windsor just across the river.
Warnings: The riverside path is rugged and can get very muddy after rain. Cycle barriers on the Cut Foot Bridge. Direct access to the river along a long stretch — watch for tripping hazards.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Maidenhead to Slough (Berkshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Recommended: A beautiful, mostly traffic-free route via Bray, Dorney and the Jubilee River, leaving Maidenhead on green paths through Braywick Nature Reserve, crossing the Thames on the Summerleaze footbridge, passing Dorney Lake, then following the Jubilee River on a flat, well-maintained cycle path with lakes and bird hides and before a final busy-road stretch into Slough. Mostly good path; can get muddy in Braywick Park and along the river after rain. Passes Dorney Lake, a venue for the 2012 Olympic Games; carry refreshments as options are limited between Bray and Slough.
Time: 3h30–6h30
Lunch: Two refreshment options at Dorney mid-way: a garden centre cafe and the Palmer Arms pub.
Warnings: A brief section joins the road with no segregated footpath (quiet). The final stretch along Windsor Road into Slough is busy and a bit unpleasant but safe. The Jubilee River path is rugged and can get very muddy after rain, with little shade.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Henley-on-Thames to Maidenhead (Oxfordshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Fine views, big skies with kites. A varied and beautiful walk through woods, fields, deer parks and manicured parkland, with hills, fine views and many red kites, ending with suburban streets into Maidenhead. Good paths but lots of stiles and kissing gates, narrow rooty paths and steep in places; squelchy and likely very muddy in winter. Follows parts of the Chiltern Way and Thames Path; High Wood is managed by the Berkshire College of Agriculture, which asks walkers to keep to the designated path.
Time: 5h–9h30
3 lunch spots: the Olde Bell, the Honey Pot, or the Rising Sun
Warnings: Several stiles and kissing gates; narrow rooty paths, steep in places, can get very wet and muddy in winter.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Taplow Circular via Thames Path (Buckinghamshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.

Slough to Gerrards Cross (Buckinghamshire)
45 minutes direct from Canary Wharf.
Gorgeous nature reserves and rural estates. A varied route taking in nature reserves and rural estates alongside roads, former tips and unusual edge-land spaces. Stiles, narrow paths, broken gates and mud and deep puddles; Stoke Common is boggy either side of the path. Some grassland sections with grazing livestock. Passes through Stoke Common nature reserve (boggy, with a Scandinavian feel) and Bulstrode Park, plus Gerrards Cross Common. A road with pavement passes close to shops in Stoke Poges.
Time: 3h–6h
Lunch: Shops close to the route in Stoke Poges.
Warnings: Follows a busy road for a quarter of the walk. The B416 out of Slough is busy, with a pavement that becomes narrow and close to traffic. Crossing a busy road later, plus a long stretch beside a busy road with a narrow path against a wall to enter Slough. Mud and deep puddles persist even in dry spells; fields with cows.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Maidenhead to Beaconsfield (Berkshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Rewarded with a semi-circular bench with stunning views. Attractive stretches of the Thames Path and the Chiltern Way through woods, bookended by urban walks, with some lane walking and woodland mud and steep rooty woodland paths and steps. Mostly shaded by trees. Follows part of the Thames Path and the Chiltern Way Berkshire Loop. A short, very steep detour leads to Hedsor Church of St Nicholas for views to Lord Boston's Folly.
Woodland: a quarter under tree cover.
Time: 4h–8h
Lunch: Cookham makes a good midway break with shops, cafes and public toilets.
Warnings: There is a stretch along the busy A40, which must be crossed without a pedestrian crossing. Narrow kissing gate and steep rooty paths.
Walk details: Slow Ways.

Maidenhead to Ascot (Berkshire)
1 hour direct from Canary Wharf.
Mostly quiet residential streets, narrow lanes and field footpaths and with some stretches on roads that lack a pavement. Largely under tree cover.
Time: 4h30–9h
Warnings: Braziers Lane has no pavement and only a narrow road edge; make yourself visible to drivers, and reflective clothing helps in poor light.
Walk details: Slow Ways.