An evening around Baker Street

Baker Street reads like a spine through Marylebone: Regent's Park and its boating lake at the top, Portman Square at the bottom, and in between a district that has kept its Georgian proportions and its good manners. Once the commuter tide has gone, the area turns gentle. Lamps come on along Montagu Square, the mansion blocks glow, and Marylebone High Street, two streets east, settles into one of the most pleasant dinner runs in London. It is a place for an evening that feels composed rather than staged, which is exactly the register our Baker Street escorts aim for.

Guests who book around Baker Street tend to want that softer footing. This is not the neon end of the West End; it is supper at a corner table, a walk under the park's plane trees, and conversation that has room to breathe.

Where to drink and dine in Marylebone

Start with a drink where the mood takes you: the bar at the Chiltern Firehouse on Chiltern Street if you enjoy a little theatre with your glass, or the quieter hotel bars around Portman Square if you would rather not compete to be heard. For dinner, Marylebone rewards walkers. Fischer's brings a Viennese grand café to the High Street, Orrery sits calmly above the old stable block with views over a churchyard garden, and the small rooms along Seymour Place and Blandford Street change often enough that there is always something new to try.

Afterwards you are spoilt for gentle endings. Browse the shelves at Daunt Books if you are early, cross into Regent's Park for the long circle before the gates close, or look in at the Wallace Collection's courtyard by day on a longer arrangement. A last drink back at your hotel rounds the evening off without ceremony.

The seasons change the script pleasantly. In summer the Open Air Theatre plays inside Regent's Park and dinner can wait for the interval; queen Mary's Gardens hold their roses well into September, and the long light makes the walk up Baker Street part of the evening rather than a means to it. In winter Marylebone leans into firesides and early tables, and the district's bars feel made for a slow second drink. A good companion adjusts to either register without being asked, which is much of what you are booking.

Outcall to your hotel: how it works

The hotels here suit discreet visits unusually well. The Landmark on the Marylebone Road keeps its palm-filled atrium humming until late, and the smaller townhouse hotels around Gloucester Place and Dorset Square are used to guests who value privacy. Your companion arrives as any well dressed guest would, on time and without fuss. Many clients like to meet in the lobby or the bar first; others prefer the restaurant table directly. Either is normal, and you set the pace.

Dress is always appropriate to the venue, conversation is easy from the first minute, and discretion is complete in both directions. We ask only for simple screening, never more personal detail than an introduction requires, and nothing you tell us goes anywhere else.

Occasions that suit the area

Baker Street bookings have a recognisable shape. There are medical and business visitors staying near the Marylebone Road who want good company after a day of appointments. There are regulars who treat Fischer's or the Firehouse as their local and want a companion who can hold a table's attention without trying to. There are park walkers, gallery-goers and cricket followers up for a Test at Lord's, ten minutes north, who would rather share the day than narrate it afterwards. And there are travellers between Paddington and the West End for whom Marylebone is simply the most civilised place to pause.

For each of these we match on temperament first: warmth, curiosity and ease in smart rooms. The process is straightforward and explained step by step on our how it works page, and you can meet the current gallery at our companions. As a high class escort agency, every model has been personally met and vetted by our small team, and every photograph is genuinely of the companion shown, so there are no surprises at the door.

Rates, timing and first enquiries

Getting here is simple. Baker Street station stacks five Underground lines, Marylebone station is a short walk west, and taxis run along the Marylebone Road at every hour. Evenings most often begin with a seven or eight o'clock table, but the area is forgiving of later plans; kitchens on the High Street serve late, and hotel bars later still. With a few hours notice a same-evening introduction is usually possible, and longer arrangements, a full day around the park, a weekend, or travel beyond London, can be planned with a little more lead time.

Rates begin at £500 per hour and rise to £2,000 depending on the companion, with some quoted on application; overnights are priced individually. Enquiries reach us fastest on WhatsApp, though phone and the enquiry form work just as well, and someone answers at any hour. Tell us where you are staying near Baker Street, the sort of evening you would enjoy and any preferences that matter, and we will suggest the right introduction quietly and quickly.