Explore a place rich in history

Explore 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.

Visit the Abbey

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

Book Tickets

General information

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.

You can view our full opening times to see which areas are open on the day you visit.

General opening times
Monday-Friday: 9.30am-3.30pm
Wednesday Lates: 4.30pm-6.00pm
Saturday (May to August): 9.00am-3.00pm
Saturday (September to April): 9.00am-1.00pm
Sunday: Open for services

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.

Plan your visit

Attend a service

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

Service listings

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.

Our history
Welcome to the Abbey

Welcome to the Abbey

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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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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.

Members of the Westminster Abbey Association gaze at the ceiling of the Lady Chapel during a special tour

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.

How you can help

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 on the TripAdvisor website.

TripAdvisor 2018 Certificate of Excellence