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Storefront > Rent a pop up restaurant or bar > Pop-up Restaurant in London > Pop-up Restaurant in Leytonstone, London
Leytonstone offers a growing selection of short-term food and drink spaces for brands, chefs, and operators looking to launch a pop up restaurant, pop up bar, or pop up cafe in East London. From converted arches to independent venue rooms, the neighbourhood has flexible spaces that suit supper clubs, tasting events, residencies, and seasonal food concepts.
Leytonstone sits in the E11 postcode on the Central line, making it one of East London's most accessible neighbourhoods for both operators and guests. The area has seen consistent growth in independent food and drink culture over the past several years, driven by a younger local demographic and spillover from Walthamstow and Hackney.
For food operators, that means a receptive audience already comfortable with independent dining, ticketed supper clubs, and limited-run concepts. Rental rates for short-term food spaces in Leytonstone are typically lower than in Central London or Shoreditch, which gives operators more margin to experiment with format, menu, and pricing.
The neighbourhood's mix of Victorian railway arches, converted retail units, and community hall-style spaces also means there is genuine variety in what you can book. Whether you need a commercial kitchen already in place or a raw space to dress for a one-night supper club, options exist across both categories.
For a broader view of what's available across East London and the rest of the capital, Food Space In London covers the full city-wide inventory.
Short-term food and drink venues in Leytonstone cover several formats, each suited to a different type of activation.
Existing hospitality venues available for residencies or takeovers. These come with a bar, kitchen, and seating already configured. Ideal for guest chef dinners, brand drink launches, or weekly supper club formats.
Blank-canvas retail or event spaces that can be dressed as a dining room or pop up bar. These require more production but give operators full creative control over the guest experience.
Community and multi-use venues with catering facilities. These work well for food market-style events, ticketed tasting menus, or recurring neighbourhood dining concepts.
Street-level units with frontage, suited to a pop up cafe or quick-service food concept running for weeks to months.
For guidance on licensing requirements before you book, the UK Pop-Up Shop Regulations: Licences, Permits & Legal Requirements guide covers what food and drink operators specifically need to check before trading.
The full range of food and drink concept formats, from pop up restaurant to bar to cafe, is covered in the Pop Up Restaurant Bar Cafe Space For Rent project page.
Short-term food space rental in Leytonstone is priced on a daily, weekly, or monthly basis depending on the space and the operator's flexibility.
As a general guide for East London neighbourhood venues at this level:
Daily rates for smaller event or dining rooms typically run £150 to £500 per day, depending on size and equipment included.
Weekly rates for a dedicated space with kitchen access range from roughly £800 to £2,500 per week.
Monthly short-term licences for a fitted-out unit can run from £2,000 to £6,000 per month depending on location, condition, and what is included.
These figures are indicative. Actual pricing varies by space, and Storefront listings show live availability and confirmed pricing for each venue.
Shorter booking terms are the norm here. Most operators running a supper club venue or pop up bar in Leytonstone will book a few days at a time initially, then extend if the concept proves demand. That flexibility is one of the central advantages of short-term rental over a conventional lease.
If you are comparing options across Central London, Food & Drink Spaces in Soho, London and Food & Drink Spaces in Victoria, London give a sense of how pricing and space type differ in higher-footfall areas.
The operators who book short-term food and drink space in Leytonstone tend to fall into a few consistent categories.
Independent chefs and restaurant groups use the neighbourhood to test a new concept before committing to a longer lease. A four-week residency in a working kitchen generates real revenue data, customer feedback, and press coverage at far lower risk than signing a long-term licence.
Drink and beverage brands book pop up bar formats in Leytonstone for product launches, brand-building activations, and tasting events. East London's demographic profile aligns well with challenger drinks brands targeting a younger, independent-minded audience.
Supper club and private dining operators use the neighbourhood's community-style venues for ticketed dinner events. A regular Wednesday supper club or monthly tasting menu series is a proven format in areas like this.
Food market and street food operators looking to move into a fixed space for a defined period also use Leytonstone as a lower-cost proving ground before expanding further into London.
For comparison, Food & Drink Spaces in Dulwich, London reflects a similar neighbourhood dynamic in South London, useful if you are weighing multiple locations.
Storefront is the world's largest marketplace for short-term commercial space. The Leytonstone food search shows live listings filtered to food and drink use cases in the E11 area. Every listing includes confirmed availability, pricing, and space specifications.
You can filter by capacity, kitchen equipment, access dates, and rental term to match your concept's requirements. Most spaces on Storefront can be booked within 48 to 72 hours once terms are agreed.
If Leytonstone does not have availability that fits your dates or format, the broader London search covers every neighbourhood across the capital, with the same filters applied city-wide.
Leytonstone has short-term food and drink spaces including fitted hospitality venues with kitchens and bars, blank-canvas event spaces suitable for supper clubs, street-level units for pop up cafes, and community-style venues for food market or tasting events. Availability varies by date, so the Storefront search shows live listings with confirmed capacity and equipment.
Short-term food space in Leytonstone typically costs £150 to £500 per day for event-format spaces, £800 to £2,500 per week for a space with kitchen access, or £2,000 to £6,000 per month for a fitted-out unit on a short-term licence. These are indicative East London neighbourhood rates. Confirmed pricing is shown on each individual Storefront listing.
Yes. Selling alcohol requires a Temporary Event Notice (TEN) or a Premises Licence, and serving food to the public may require food hygiene registration with the local authority. The UK Pop-Up Shop Regulations guide on the Storefront blog covers what food and drink operators need to arrange before trading. Always check requirements at least a few weeks before your planned start date.
Yes. Most short-term spaces on Storefront can be booked for a single day or evening, making them well suited to one-off supper clubs, ticketed dinners, and tasting events. Operators running recurring supper club formats often book a recurring weekly or monthly slot once the initial night proves demand.
Leytonstone offers lower rental rates than Central London or Shoreditch, with an established independent food and drink audience and good Central line access. It suits operators who want to test a concept at lower cost before scaling up. Higher-footfall areas like Soho or Victoria carry higher rental rates but offer larger passing trade volumes. The right neighbourhood depends on your target customer and concept format.
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