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London, England

Westminster Abbey

Every English coronation since 1066 has happened on this spot, and it is still a working church, which is why you cannot tour it on a Sunday. Inside, you walk past kings, queens, Newton, and Darwin, all packed close together under the vaults. The included audio guide does a lot of the heavy lifting.

Westminster Abbey Photo: Σπάρτακος (changes by Rabanus Flavus) (CC BY-SA 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
Is Westminster Abbey worth it?

The density of history here is the draw: royal tombs, Poets' Corner, the coronation chair, all in one church. Just remember it shuts to sightseers on Sundays, when only services run.

Worth it for

  • Anyone who wants to stand where the monarchs are crowned and buried
  • Readers making the pilgrimage to Poets' Corner

You can skip if

  • Sunday is your only free day, when the doors are closed to visitors and open only for worship

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Which ticket should you buy?

Standard admission with the multimedia guide suits most people. Book a timed entry online ahead to skip the queue. The verger-led tour is the one real upgrade, since it adds the Confessor's shrine, but it can usually only be booked in person on the day, so ask at the desk when you arrive. Plan a weekday or Saturday, as the Abbey is closed to sightseeing on Sundays.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Standard admission Self-guided entry to the Abbey with the included multimedia audio guide, covering the nave, royal tombs, Poets' Corner and the Lady Chapel Most visitors, who get the full church plus the narrated guide
Verger-guided tour (add-on) A guided walk led by one of the Abbey's vergers that also reaches the Shrine of St Edward the Confessor, which is not open to general visitors Visitors who want expert commentary and access to the shrine
20 Dean's Yard, London, SW1P 3PA View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

A thousand years of history

Every coronation since 1066 has taken place here, and the Abbey holds the ancient Coronation Chair used in the ceremony. It has also hosted royal weddings and state funerals watched around the world, which gives the building a continuing role in national life rather than the feel of a museum.

The architecture is high Gothic at its most ambitious, with soaring vaults and the intricate fan ceiling of the Lady Chapel at the east end. The cloisters and the quieter side chapels reward a slower look once you have taken in the main nave and the sanctuary.

Tombs and memorials

More than three thousand people are buried or commemorated inside, including many monarchs. You walk past the tombs of kings and queens, often elaborately carved, set close together in the chapels behind the high altar.

Poets' Corner gathers memorials to writers including Chaucer, Dickens, and many others, while the nave holds the graves of figures such as Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin. The Grave of the Unknown Warrior, set into the floor near the entrance, is the one spot in the Abbey that is never walked over.

Visiting practicalities

The Abbey is a working church, so it closes to sightseeing visitors on Sundays and during major services on other days, when you can still attend worship free of charge. Tourist visiting runs Monday to Saturday on a timed-entry system, with the last admission well before closing.

An audio guide is included with admission and helps make sense of the many tombs and chapels. Allow around ninety minutes to two hours for a full visit. Booking online ahead of time is usually cheaper than the gate and avoids the longest queues at peak times.

What's nearby

The Abbey could hardly be more central to royal and political London. The Houses of Parliament and the Elizabeth Tower that holds Big Ben stand directly across the road, and the river is just beyond, so you can fold all three into one walk.

From here St James's Park leads toward Buckingham Palace, and Trafalgar Square with the free National Gallery is a short walk north. The South Bank and the London Eye sit across Westminster Bridge, an easy crossing on foot.

Getting the most from a visit

Because the Abbey is still in daily use as a church, parts of it can close at short notice for services, rehearsals, or special events, so the odd chapel may be roped off when you visit. The free included audio guide is genuinely useful here, since the building is dense with tombs and small chapels that are easy to walk past without noticing what they are.

Photography is restricted inside the main church, which is worth knowing so you are not caught out, though the cloisters and outdoor areas are more relaxed. Dressing with the working-church setting in mind is appropriate, even though there is no strict dress code for visitors.

Arriving early on a weekday gives you the calmest experience, before the timed slots fill. If your schedule only allows a Sunday, you cannot tour as a visitor, but attending a service lets you experience the building's music and atmosphere at no charge, which some travelers prefer to the daytime route anyway.

Westminster Abbey: FAQs

Not as a sightseeing visitor. The Abbey closes to tourists on Sundays because it is a working church holding services. You are welcome to attend a Sunday service free of charge, but the paid visiting route is closed that day.

Yes. The Elizabeth Tower, which holds the bell known as Big Ben, and the Houses of Parliament stand directly across the road from the Abbey, so the two are easy to see together on the same walk.

Booking ahead is recommended. The Abbey uses timed entry, online tickets are usually cheaper than at the door, and reserving a slot helps you avoid the longest queues at busy times.

Around ninety minutes to two hours for a full look at the nave, the royal tombs, Poets' Corner, and the cloisters. The included audio guide helps you find the highlights if you have less time.

More than three thousand people, including many kings and queens, plus figures such as Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, and the writers commemorated in Poets' Corner. The Grave of the Unknown Warrior lies near the entrance.

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