Lindsay Lohan reportedly has plans to make London her permanent home after finding peace and love in the British capital.

Tthe Mirror reported the 28-year-old actress "told friends that she wants to 'start again' in England" after finishing a run of her West end show, "Speed-The-Plow.". In London, the tabloid said, Lohan feels "less judged" about her past, which includes three stints in rehabilitation and charges of driving under the influence, driving with a suspended license and possession of cocaine. In 2011, a California judge also sentenced her to community service and 120 days in jail for misdemeanor theft and probation violation.

Now, the "Mean Girls" star is saying she would never live in Los Angeles again. 

"I won't live again in LA, hell no," the actress told The Guardian. "My friends tell me (expletive) when they come (to London) I don't want to hear. I don't even know who got married and who got pregnant. You turn on the news in LA and it is all gossip about people. All the stuff that is going on in the world right now -- and this gossip is the news?"

Lohan is not just in love with England's capital but has also begun a relationship with a "handsome banker," according to The Mirror.

"Lindsay has made her mind up, she has loved her time in London and wants to stay," an unnamed source told the tabloid. "She's got her boyfriend who (she) absolutely adores. She hopes that this one will work out."

The actress' lease on her West End apartment, where she has lived for nine months, is not up for another year, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Unlike in Los Angeles, Lohan feels free to roam about freely outside her walls.

"I can go for a run here on my own," she explained. "I do every morning, early, and I think how my friends in New York would still be up partying at that time."

"The Parent Trap" star said London has helped her "grow up."

"In LA I didn't know what to do, apart from go out every night," she said. "That's when my friends were free. And I would go out and there would be all these cameras there, and that's when it became difficult."