In 1816 he was the minister of the Fitzroy Chapel, Charlotte Street, London; he was engaged in its ministry at the time of his death.
He died in Charlotte Street, 11 March 1823 aged 49, and was buried in a vault under the middle aisle of Bloomsbury Church.
His Tour round North Wales, the result of his college vacation of 1798, was published in 1800 in two volumes.
A second edition appeared in 1814, and a third, with corrections and additions by his son, William Richard Bingley, in 1839.
As a companion to these works there appeared a volume entitled Sixty of the most admired Welsh Airs, collected by W. Bingley, arranged for the piano by William Russell in 1803, and again in 1810.
[1] A planned county history of Hampshire took up much of Bingley's time; it had backing from Brownlow North.
Thirty copies of a small portion of it, The Topographical Account of the Hundred of Bosmere, were printed for private circulation.