Our 2024 (Toilet) Roll of Honour

By Gail, Ollie

A picture of the author: Gail
A picture of the author: Ollie

Welcome to the Toilet Map blog! We’re kicking off with a wrap of the year, to thank our contributors for every edit and give you a little insight into how the Toilet Map keeps up-to-date.

First, some stats!


New toilets

We've had 854 toilets added to the Toilet Map this year, with another 800 updates of toilets we already show.

That’s amazing!

Website Visits

396,000 of you visited the Toilet Map in 2024.

That’s 40% more than 2023, we’re on a (toilet) roll!

Where did our visitors come from?

Here's a look at how visitors are discovering—and interacting with—the Toilet Map, based on the numbers:

Source Visitors Bounce Rate Visit Duration
Direct / None 183k 61% 1m 42s
Google 149k 55% 1m 36s
news.motability.co.uk 13.2k 42% 2m 02s
visitlondon.com 8.5k 42% 2m 36s
messages.uber.com 5.3k 61% 21s
Bing 5.1k 38% 3m 02s
Facebook 3.6k 67% 43s
DuckDuckGo 3.4k 43% 2m 30s
Reddit 2.9k 36% 1m 46s
secretldn.com 2.5k 59% 51s

Over 183,000 valiant explorers charted their own course straight to the Toilet Map, it seems many of them dive in, quickly check for the nearest loo, and head off to answer nature’s call. We're really happy that such a large number of people know to directly visit the site when they are in an hour of need.

Huge thanks to Motability and Visit London who have consistently referenced the map on their sites. Visitors tend to spend longer exploring the site, and their visits span across multiple pages.

We're not quite sure how Uber are using the service, but we're glad that they've found a use for it!

Social media was a large driver for engagement. We found that Reddit in particular was a source of engaged users, with people often recommending the Toilet Map as part of community discussions about public toilet provision across the country1.

So, who's really been winning in 2024?


2024 Council of the year (most updates to toilet data)

London Borough of Tower Hamlets

Kudos to London Borough of Tower Hamlets who are using the Toilet Map to support their new Community Toilet Scheme (CTS), pipping CTS veterans London Borough of Richmond-upon-Thames to the crown.

Our toilet mapping activity has covered the British Isles, right up to the 15 newly mapped loos on the Shetland Islands.

Special kudos to the person/s who added and updated 39 toilets on Guernsey & Sark back in April - one of our biggest updates and outside of our local area boundaries so missing from our Top Ten - it nearly snuck through! Locals and holidaymakers alike will be very grateful.

Edits may have been made by a member of the public, a council officer, another professional, or occasionally by us on the council’s behalf (current rate: flattery)

Here are the ten council areas with the most updates (new loo, edit or removal) in 2024

Rank Council Area Total Updates New Toilets
1 London Borough of Tower Hamlets 88 46
2 London Borough of Richmond upon Thames 81 47
3 Dumfries and Galloway Council 73 24
4 Argyll and Bute Council 64 15
5 Birmingham City Council 50 15
6 Westminster City Council 46 21
7 London Borough of Southwark 35 21
8 Wiltshire Council 31 15
9 Allerdale Borough Council 30 15
10 Shetland Islands 29 15

2024 Loo of the year (most visited page) 

Trafalgar Square Public Toilets (4.1K hits) 2

A landscape photograph of Trafalgar Square with the Fourth Plinth in the foreground and St Martins Church in the distance.
The entrance to the toilets is between them with a black totem sign reading 'Toilets' and symbols for male, female and accessible toilets.
The National Gallery is behind, on a raised level.

No surprises here as the map defaults to Trafalgar Square, London if it doesn’t know your location. That's why it has twice the hits of the next most popular toilet on our website. But why did we choose Trafalgar Square?

Well, London is instantly recognisable due to our familiarity with the place names, helping visitors to orientate themselves. And Trafalgar Square is special in both mapping and toilets.

Why? Here are some fun facts:

  • Distances to/from London are measured from Trafalgar Square - specifically, the traffic island to the south of Nelson’s Column, a 6-way junction known as ‘Charing Cross’.
  • This used to be the location of the final Eleanor Cross, a series of monuments positioned down the East of England. The monument still exists, and is now located outside Charing Cross Station.
  • The loos at Trafalgar Square are a huge set of public toilets, and the only ones managed by the Mayor of London (not personally), if we ignore for a moment TfL loos and those at City Hall. They were built as part of the Square’s redevelopment and pedestrianisation in 2003.

The other toilets in our Top 10 are more likely due to massive tourist numbers from Big Ben to Piccadilly Circus. But watch out - Westminster Underground Station toilets on Parliament Street are currently closed for much needed redevelopment by Westminster City Council.

Most visited toilet pages

Rank Location Visits
1 Trafalgar Square 4.1K
2 Charing Cross Station 2.6K
3 Cafe in the Crypt 2.5K
4 Westminster Underground Station (in subway) 2.2K
5 Horse Guards toilets 2.1K
6 Craven Street Temporary Urinal 2.1K
7 Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) 2K
8 Westminster Bridge 2K
9 The National Gallery 1.8K
10 Piccadilly Circus - inside Underground Station 1.8K

So, how did the year start?


2024 First edit of the year 

Friockheim Public Toilet Block, Scotland 3

A brick church with red door, cream window surrounds and a clock tower.
It sits at the corner of a road junction, twice the height of the village buildings behind.
The sky is blue with stormy clouds.

We had one toilet updated last New Year’s Day, and what a loo it was!

Friockheim Public Toilet Block on the East Coast of Scotland. A locally-run toilet, managed by volunteers, and refurbished following a fire in 20214.

Friockheim also boasts a 24h Changing Places toilet at The Hub @ Friockheim, impressive stuff for a village of 1130 people.

So now we've covered the first update of the year... will yours be the last?

And that's a wrap!

Thank you so much for every edit made to the map, whether you have added, edited or removed a toilet online, or sent us details of changes to make, by email or the feedback box. We’re grateful for every input, to help us help you find the loo!

Here’s to more and better toilet mapping in 2025 x


Footnotes

  1. Source: https://old.reddit.com/r/Scotland/comments/1ch152r/toilets_around_scotland_advice_ibd_disease/l1zhztr/

  2. The Fourth Plinth, Trafalgar Square, showing entrance to public toilets behind. Attribution: Matt Brown from London, England, CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

  3. Friockheim and Kinnell Parish Church. Attribution: Anne Burgess / Friockheim and Kinnell Parish Kirk / CC BY-SA 2.0

  4. Details: Owned By Angus Council & Maintained Friockheim Park Community Volunteers Community Group. Male & Female Toilet Facilities, Award Winning, Community Maintained, Clean & Safe. We are pleased to be able to provide Free Period Products in the ladies toilets in partnership with HeyGirls & Free Period Angus. Farnell Road, Friockheim, Arbroath, DD11 4XB