Explore a place rich in history

The Abbey is a place that's touched the lives of kings, queens, statesmen and soldiers, poets, priests, heroes and villains since 960AD. Westminster Abbey has been the coronation church since 1066 and is the resting place of more than 3,000 great Britons.

The Nave of the Abbey

Why visit the Abbey

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Why visit the Abbey

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Three tourist visitors exploring the Cloisters of Westminster Abbey

Welcome to the Abbey

We warmly welcome many visitors each year to discover over ten centuries of British history in this remarkable building.

A still from the virtual tour: The Great West Door with arrows pointing north, east and west. On the side is a navigational menu featuring: Great West Door, Nave, The Crossing, North Transept, Chapel of St Edward, Lady Chapel, Poets' Corner

Virtual tours

Experience 1,000 years of history and find out more about the Abbey without leaving home.

We’re open to visitors most days, but as Westminster Abbey is a living working church, we may need to close some areas off to the public at times and offer reduced opening hours.

General opening times

Monday - Friday: 9.30am - 3.30pm (last entry)
Saturday: 9.00am - 3.00pm (last entry)
Sunday: Open for services

Verger-guided tours

For 90 minutes, you'll be personally guided by one of the Abbey’s vergers. This tour includes a visit to the Shrine of St Edward the Confessor (not open to general visitors) as well as the royal tombs, Poets’ Corner, the Lady Chapel and the Nave.

Group visits

We currently welcome guided tour groups of up to 20 visitors when accompanied by a Blue Badge Tourist Guide. Find out more about our current group visit arrangements.

How to get to the Abbey

The Chapter Office, Westminster Abbey, 20 Dean’s Yard, London, SW1P 3PA

Underground

Westminster (Jubilee, District & Circle Lines)
St. James’s Park (District and Circle Lines)

National Rail

London Victoria (0.8 miles)
London Waterloo (0.8 miles)

Buses

Find your best journey via the Transport for London website

Plan your visit

Our plan your visit page has everything you need to know about visiting the Abbey.

Attend a service

For a unique experience, attend one of the Abbey’s daily services – check the listing to find one that suits you.

Inside the Abbey

At the heart of the nation

A place for worship, celebration and ceremony, many of Britain’s most significant historic moments of the past one thousand years have happened here. Since 1066, the Abbey has hosted every coronation, and is the final resting place for the great kings, queens, poets, musicians, scientists and politicians of our past. We’d love you to come and take a look.

The Coronation Chair on a stepped wooden podium surrounded by gold-fringed red curtain in St George's Chapel, Westminster Abbey

The Coronation Chair

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The Coronation Chair

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Statues and monuments in Poets' Corner, including William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Jane Austen

Poets' Corner

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Poets' Corner

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Recumbent effigies of Henry VII and Elizabeth of York in the Lady Chapel, Westminster Abbey
Detail of the Coronation Chair, showing graffiti scratched into the wooden back of the chair
Gravestones and memorials in Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey, including Lewis Carroll, Henry James and Gerard Manley Hopkins
The Queen's Window by David Hockney, a colourful stained glass window showing a country scene
A medieval wooden door ajar revealing a small chamber with benches and a stone altar with a crucifix and candles
Bronze effigy of Henry III, wearing a crown, his head resting on a pillow
The choir stalls in Westminster Abbey, with red cushioned seats and small red lamps
The junction of two cloisters in Westminster Abbey
Stained glass windows and the central pillar of the Chapter House, Westminster Abbey
Statues of the Reverend Dr Martin Luther King Jr, St Oscar Romero and Dietrich Bonhoeffer above the West Door of Westminster Abbey
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The Lady Chapel

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

The Lady Chapel

Its glorious late medieval architecture, spectacular fan-vaulted ceiling and high stained glass windows continue to inspire wonder amongst those who visit it today.

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Coronation Chair

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

Coronation Chair

One of the most precious and famous pieces of furniture in the world, and the centrepiece of coronations for over 700 years - it’s on display for all our visitors to see.

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Poets' Corner

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

Poets' Corner

A place of pilgrimage for literature lovers, over 100 poets and writers are buried or have memorials here including William Shakespeare, Thomas Hardy, Charles Dickens, Ted Hughes, CS Lewis and Philip Larkin.

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The Queen's Window

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

The Queen's Window

David Hockney's first work in stained glass is a colourful country scene, commissioned to mark the reign of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Pyx Chamber

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

Pyx Chamber

One of the oldest surviving parts of Westminster Abbey, this low vaulted room off was built about 1070. The chamber still possesses its medieval tiled floor - and was once used as a treasury.

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Royal tombs

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

Royal tombs

Westminster Abbey is the final resting place of seventeen British monarchs, including King Edward the Confessor, King Henry V and Queen Elizabeth I.

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The Quire

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

The Quire

Come to one of the daily choral services at the Abbey and you will hear our Choir singing from their stalls in the quire - continuing a tradition dating back to the plainsong chanted by the monks of the 10th-century monastic foundation.

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The Cloisters

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

The Cloisters

One of the busiest parts of the Abbey in medieval times and where the monks spent much of their time. The Cloisters weren't just a route to the main buildings, but a place for meditation, exercise and annual rituals.

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Chapter House

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

Chapter House

Once a meeting place where monks gathered, this 13th Century building is covered with murals showing scenes from the Book of Revelation and the Last Judgement.

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Modern Martyrs

Top things to see and do at the Abbey

Modern Martyrs

Above the Abbey's Great West Door stand ten statues to modern martyrs - Christians who gave up their lives for their beliefs. Among them are Dr Martin Luther King Jr and St Oscar Romero.

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Kings, queens and royal visits

The Abbey has hosted many of Britain’s most significant historic events. It has been the coronation church since 1066, and we’ve held 16 royal weddings. 30 kings and queens are buried here.

Famous names of the Abbey

More than 3,000 famous people are buried and many others commemorated in the Abbey, including kings and queens, writers, musicians, scientists, politicians, and noblemen and women.

Support Us

Support Us

Support from our visitors and donors helps us care for the Abbey and keeps us open as a living working church. We are independent and receive no funding from the Church, the Government or, the Crown. So, your help really counts.

TripAdvisor Awards

Below are a list of awards awarded to Westminster Abbey.

Travellers’ Choice Award

Westminster Abbey was awarded the Travellers’ Choice Award in 2021. This award is given to attractions that consistently earn great reviews from travellers and that are ranked within the top 10% of properties on Tripadvisor.

The Tripadvisor logo. TEXT: 2021 Travellers' Choice

TripAdvisor Certificate of Excellence

Westminster Abbey was awarded the 2018 Hall of Fame Certificate of Excellence from TripAdvisor which 'recognises 5 consecutive years of consistently-high ratings from travellers'.

We appreciate your feedback, so please leave a review of the Abbey onthe TripAdvisor website.

TripAdvisor 2018 Certificate of Excellence