Assistant police commissioner Matt Twist sat at a table addressing the London Assembly.
Assistant commissioner Matt Twist told the London Assembly that 18 out of 37 police counters will be closed. Image: GLA webcast.

The last remaining police station front counter in Camden will close and only Charing Cross station in Westminster will remain open to the public, as part of plans to shrink the force across London.

Assistant commissioner Matt Twist told the London Assembly this week that 18 out of 37 counters will be closed — leaving just 20 open. Only a single counter in Haringey will be reopening.

Twist said the the move, which is part of a restructuring including shedding 1,700 officers and staff, will save the force ยฃ7mn in its bid to fill a ยฃ260mn funding gap.

As a result, Sir Sadiq Khan has been accused of failing to honour his manifesto promise to maintain a police front office counter in all 32 London boroughs.

In his manifesto prior to last yearโ€™s election, the Mayor of London pledged to โ€œensure the Met is able to effectively respond to the public, including maintaining a 24-hour police front office counter in every borough.โ€

He justified the closures by suggesting crime reporting at station counters has significantly reduced to just five per cent โ€œas people have shifted to the use of phones and online means.โ€

Twist added: โ€œAt some front counters, we see less than two and a half crimes a day reported. At the busiest, in Charing Cross, we see 15 crimes.

โ€œThe average is four crimes a day reported across three shifts, which are often staffed by two people.

โ€œWeโ€™ve made deliberate choices to protect neighbourhood policing and services that matter most to Londoners.

โ€œWhilst we are shrinking overall, we are changing the shape of our organisation to better serve the public and meet increasing demands for policing.

โ€œThis is about making the Met more accessible and visible in neighbourhoods at a time when the organisation is shrinking โ€“ and to do so, we need to cut the pie a bit differently.

โ€œWe are making the decision to reduce an underused resource to allow us to continue to strengthen neighbourhood policing teams.โ€

The Mayor of London was not present for the extraordinary plenary session at City Hall regarding the closures, instead sending deputy mayor of London for policing and crime Kaya Comer-Schwartz to face questions alongside assistant commissioner Twist.

Conservative Assembly Member Thomas Turrell asked if it was โ€œirresponsibleโ€ for the Mayor to have made the commitment in last yearโ€™s manifesto.

Comer-Schwartz said: โ€œThe Mayorโ€™s manifesto is clear about the importance of restoring visible neighbourhood policing and building safer, more confident communities in London.

โ€œThe Mayor has shown a dedication to keeping Londoners safe.โ€

The 14 full-time counter closures included Edmonton, Harrow, Kensington and Chingford, while four which were already operating on reduced hours will also be shut.

Twist said the move will also save 3,752 hours of police officer time per month. Non-specialist staff currently have to backfill front counter shifts that canโ€™t be resourced by Public Access Officers.

The Met took into account front counter demand, accessibility and geographic spread, and operational alignment to custody suites and investigative teams when deciding which ones to close.

Twist confirmed that Khanโ€™s front counter pledge, which was also included in the New Met for London plan, was broken due to a lack of funding.

โ€œWe could not have forseen that two years ago, when New Met for London 1 was written, the scale of the gap was going to be as big as it was at the end of 2024,โ€ he said.

โ€œSavings have to be made somewhere — this is the least worst option. Looking at the overall financial picture, which is really challenging — if we can save ยฃ7mn by reducing a service for which demand has reduced significantly over the last decade, that seems like the right thing to do.โ€

He said Londoners will still have the option of using stations which have their front counters closed to make a phone call.

Conservative leader Susan Hall accused Khan of being a โ€œcowardโ€ by sending his deputy mayor to face the London Assembly, adding: โ€œHe made a promise that he would have a 24/7 police station in every BCU, he has always said he will keep them open.โ€

Later, Comer-Schwartz, who admitted she found out about the scale of the cuts โ€œin June or Julyโ€, could not give give a guarantee every borough will retain at least one police station.

Liberal Democrat Assembly Member Hina Bokhari responded: โ€œIt begs the question really, what is the point of having a deputy mayor for policing and crime if you are not going to intervene on behalf of Londoners when these massive changes are being proposed.โ€

Reform UK Assembly Member Alex Wilson told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: โ€œHaving a visible and accessible counter in each borough was a manifesto pledge — itโ€™s a sorry situation to do this for the amount of money this will save.

โ€œLondon is lawless — yet Sadiq Khanโ€™s response is to close half of Londonโ€™s Met Police front desks.

โ€œHe says he hasnโ€™t got the money to keep them open. Thatโ€™s not true. He spends ยฃ1.4bn a year on Net Zero and just ยฃ1.11bn a year on crime.

โ€œSaving these front desks would cost just 0.36 per cent of his climate budget each year.โ€

Conservative London Assembly Member Keith Prince told the Local Democracy Reporting Service: โ€œItโ€™s apparent they have not thought this move through — itโ€™s not just crime thatโ€™s reported at front counters, some see them as places of safety.

โ€œThe Mayor not being here underlines the contempt with which he holds the Assembly.โ€

A Met spokesperson said: โ€œJust five per cent of crimes were reported using front counters last year, with only one per cent of these being made during the night. At the busiest front counter in London on average 15 crimes are reported a day — less than one an hour — and in the least busy, only 2.5 crimes are reported a day.

โ€œLondoners tell us they want to see more officers on our streets. The decision to reduce and close some front counters will save ยฃ7million and 3,752 hours of police officer time per month allowing us to focus resources relentlessly on tackling crime and putting more officers into neighbourhoods across London.โ€

In a statement, the London Liberal Democrats said: โ€œAs a result of these closures, the Mayor has betrayed Londoners and broken his manifesto pledge to keep a police counter open in every borough.

โ€œThis will come as a real kick in the teeth for local communities in the midst of growing public concern about crime.

โ€œThese police counters are essential not only for victims reporting a crime but also to provide much needed visibility and reassurance for local residents.

โ€œDespite the fact the Metropolitan Police have continuously warned about financial pressure, the Mayor has failed to act,โ€ they said.

However, while the number of police numbers across London will be reduced overall, up to 80 more officers (a 50 percent increase) will join the dedicated West End team “to bear down on crimes which Londoners care about the most — including antisocial behaviour, violence against women and girls, shoplifting and phone robbery — as part of the Metโ€™s focus on neighbourhood policing”, says the force.

Earlier this year The Met announced that the Royal Parks will lose its dedicated police team with officers redeployed to other units in London.

The Met Police confirmed the following police station front counters will be shut:

1. Kentish Town (Camden)
2. Tottenham (Haringey)
3. Edmonton (Enfield) — replaced by Wood Green**
4. Harrow (Harrow)
5. Bethnal Green (Tower Hamlets)
6. Dagenham (Barking and Dagenham)
7. Chingford (Waltham Forest)
8. Kensington (Kensington & Chelsea)
9. Hammersmith (Hammersmith & Fulham)
10. Twickenham (Richmond)
11. Lavender Hill (Wandsworth)
12. Wimbledon (Merton)
13. Hayes (Hillingdon)
14. Plumstead (Greenwich)
A further four currently reduced front counters will close.
15. Barking Learning Centre (Barking and Dagenham)
16. Church Street (Westminster)
17. Royalty Studios (Kensington and Chelsea)
18. Mitcham (Merton)

The 20 police station front desks which will remain open

  1. Romford
  2. Charing Cross
  3. Acton
  4. Brixton
  5. Lewisham
  6. Bromley
  7. Sutton
  8. Islington
  9. Wembley
  10. Colindale
  11. Stoke Newington
  12. Ilford
  13. Forest Gate — Stratford will remain as temporary front counter until Forest Gate reopens
  14. Kingston
  15. Hounslow
  16. Walworth
  17. Bexleyheath
  18. Croydon
  19. Wood Green — currently closed as front counter but proposed to re-open
  20. Pinner — is a volunteer site opening limited hours and will remain.

Extraordinary, London Assembly (Plenary) Wednesday 6 August 2025. Agenda. Webcast. A New Met for London.

Additional reporting by Linus Rees.

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