Not already a member?
Join our community and
- Rate & review pubs
- Upload pictures
- Add events
JOIN for free NOW
Chat about:
Lancaster crawl 17th July 2026 with sheffield hatter
on the Pub Forum
Detail Pages
The Earl Spencer, SW18
SW18
SW18 5JL
Reviews (Current Rating Average: 5 of 10) see review guidelines
David Walton left this review about The Earl Spencer
Visited 04/11/24
Four hand pumps offering Black Sheep bitter, London Pride, Hobgoblin Gold and Lilley's peach cider. Keg offering of Moretti and the Sale di Mare unfiltered version, something called Korev lager, Inch's cider, Guinness, Amstel, Peroni, Neck Oil, Asahi, Brixton Reliance Pale Ale and Signature Brew Roadie.
Pleasant pub with an outside seating area. Inside the bar counter is an attractive protuberance off the wall opposite the entrance with stool seating particularly on the long side in front of the entrance. Polished boards throughout with some booth seating along the front windows and around the left-hand side, there were also similar behind the bar in the left-hand side of the venue. Several TV's were showing Monday evening Premiership footy on my visit. A chunky leather sofa sat in front of the non-operational fireplace against the right-hand wall inside the front door. Subdued lighting here made for a pleasant venue to sit and watch the footy. All round thought it was a decent venue.
On 23rd May 2026
- rating: 6
[User has posted 1770 recommendations about 1743 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Tris C left this review about The Earl Spencer
This dates from the late 19th century but I suspect was rebuilt in the 1930s, yet another public house reference to the eponymous family that once owned lands around Wandsworth. It also overlooks a car showroom that resembles Beaulieu Motor Museum, with a selection of mainly Ferraris, all totalling tens of millions of pounds.
The interior is essentially modern and can be seen on Google and their gallery, resembling a standard restaurant not a pub. There were just a few somewhat young drinkers in on my Saturday visit at nearly 10.00pm, but what was inescapable was the unwatched sport, played through the Hi-Fi with deafening commentary then adverts.
Cask amounted to Doom, Portobello Home Turf and Star at £2.80 a half and actually not bad, served by a bored-looking barmaid.
With the interior appearance, ambience and deafening adverts, this was a very poor experience; the superior Gardeners is next door.
On 3rd March 2024
- rating: 3
[User has posted 2337 recommendations about 2279 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Malden man left this review about The Earl Spencer
The main area is a bare boarded room with a central squint ended bar, seating being mostly at recycled old domestic dining tables, this room returns around to the left end of the bar to a smaller separate area. Green and cream walls, candles and foliage on the window cills, some décor of interest, a nice "Celebrated Toby Stout" mirror, wicker deer and cow heads, posters of fungi with the names in German and a concert flyer for The Merton Parkas, supported by Ultravox. The ceiling is moulded and has several fans, a selection of coloured glass balls fill another corner and there was a real fire on the go, roaring away with a pair of huge logs well alight. The kitchen and coffee machine down one end combined to make a proper din, so much so that I changed seats. The food menu looked fairly expensive and upmarket but no one was partaking on Saturday although it was well into the afternoon.
Six handpumps, in two banks of three, Adnams Broadside, Otter Amber, Sambrooks Wandle, Harveys Sussex, Timothy Taylor Landlord and Sharps Cornish Coaster. I had the Coaster which was fine. It seems to have improved as a pub for drinkers since the last review with a reasonable if safe choice, it isn't traditional by anyone's standards but pub styles continue to evolve and if they are to survive then so be it.
On 2nd March 2014
- rating: 6
[User has posted 1711 recommendations about 1684 pubs]
Please Note: This review is over a year old.
Rex Rattus left this review about The Earl Spencer
There were two ales on during my visit – Old Hooky and London Pride, with a Doom Bar clip reversed. The Pride was £1.75 for a half, so at something like £3.50 a pint it matches the pub next door (The Gardeners) in charging a top of the range price for this part of London.
This is a thoroughly madeover pub. It’s bare-boarded, with hard wooden settles, scrubbed solid wood tables, and a few normal tables and chairs. There are a few tables outside at the front. The bar back includes racks of wine bottles laid down, and with a shelf above them bearing large illuminated and multi-coloured jars of pickles and fruits. A large platter of loaves decorates the bar counter, presumably to aid the appearance of a continental bistro.
There are the usual single-sheet printed daily menus on the bar (but not the tables for some reason – possibly it makes them look untidy). There’s no pub grub to be had here, with a typical item being “deep fried goujons of whiting, salad, aïoli, lemon” at £11.50. The menu was certainly imaginative, but the best item on it for me would be the steak and chips – sorry, I mean the “chargrilled bavette steak, chips, watercress, tomato and tarragon butter”. The bread and butter is complimentary.
It’s a single-room pub/restaurant now, with a few photos on the wall providing decor, but with the majority of wall space taken up by three chalkboards advertising menu items; the wine list; and a coffee and tea menu. This is a decent enough place if you like gastropubs, but it’s now nothing like a traditional pub.
On 28th May 2011
- rating: 4
[User has posted 2621 recommendations about 2536 pubs]
