HomeRoyal NewsTrooping the Colour 2026: The King's Birthday Parade Returns to London on...

Trooping the Colour 2026: The King’s Birthday Parade Returns to London on 13 June

King Charles III will take the salute at Horse Guards Parade next Saturday as more than 1,400 soldiers, 200 horses, and 400 musicians mark the monarch’s official birthday — with the anti-monarchy group Republic promising a visible presence on The Mall.

One week from today, London stops.

The King’s Birthday Parade — Trooping the Colour — takes place on Saturday 13 June 2026. It is the centrepiece of the royal calendar. It has been so for the better part of three centuries. This year, the King’s Company of the 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards will troop their Colour in the presence of His Majesty King Charles III.

The mechanics are familiar but worth stating. More than 1,400 soldiers of the Household Division, 200 horses, and 400 musicians will assemble at Horse Guards Parade off Whitehall. The King will process from Buckingham Palace down The Mall, take the salute, inspect the Colour, and return to the Palace. The Royal Family will appear on the balcony. The RAF will conduct a flypast at 1pm. It will be precise. It will be enormous. It will be very loud.

This is the third Trooping the Colour of King Charles’s reign. The first, in 2023, saw him ride on horseback — the first reigning monarch to do so since Queen Elizabeth II in 1986. The second, in 2024, was notable for different reasons: the King had recently resumed public duties following his cancer diagnosis, and the Princess of Wales was absent from the Colonel’s Review as she continued her own recovery. Last year’s ceremony returned closer to full strength, with the Wales children — George, Charlotte, and Louis — drawing considerable attention on the balcony, as they reliably do.

This year, the Colonel’s Review — the second of three preparatory ceremonies — took place today, 6 June, the same day as Peter Phillips’s wedding in Kemble. A busy Saturday for the Royal Family by any measure.

The occasion will not pass without comment from Republic, the anti-monarchy campaign group, which has confirmed it will stage a peaceful protest on The Mall from 8.30am. The group has mounted demonstrations at Trooping the Colour in each of the past two years. Their position is straightforward and consistently stated: that the ceremony represents unearned privilege dressed in military uniform. The palace has not responded to their announcement. It rarely does.

What Republic’s presence does, whether intentionally or not, is provide an annual reminder that the ceremony exists in a context — one of declining republican sentiment among the older population but rising scepticism among the young. The crowd on The Mall will be large, enthusiastic, and largely tourist-heavy. The protesters will be smaller, visible, and entirely within their rights. Both will be there. Both, in their way, are part of the story.

The broadcast is live on BBC One from the morning of 13 June. For those attending in person, The Mall is free and open, though early arrival is advisable. Seated tickets on Horse Guards Parade were allocated by ballot, which closed in March.

The palace has released no further details about the day’s programme. It rarely needs to. The ceremony speaks for itself.


Marcus Webb is Crown & Court’s Royal News Correspondent. Fleet Street trained, with twenty years covering the British royal family, he has stood outside more palaces in the rain than he cares to count.

“The palace says nothing. Which tells you everything.”

Marcus Webb
Marcus Webb
Fleet Street-trained journalist with 20 years covering the British royals. Has stood outside more palaces in the rain than he cares to count. Writes fast, writes fair, always gets the story. "The palace says nothing. Which tells you everything."

From the Editor

Royal Reading List

The King Never Smiles book cover painting

The King Never Smiles

Paul M. Handley

View on Amazon
Thailand: A Short History book cover painting

Thailand: A Short History

David K. Wyatt

View on Amazon
A Kingdom in Crisis book cover painting

A Kingdom in Crisis

Andrew MacGregor Marshall

View on Amazon
The House of Orange book cover painting

The House of Orange in Revolution and War

Koch, van der Meulen & van Zanten

View on Amazon
Amalia book cover painting

Amalia

Claudia de Breij

View on Amazon
The Duchess of Cambridge book cover painting

The Duchess of Cambridge: A Decade of Modern Royal Style

Bethan Holt

View on Amazon

Follow Us

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow
0FollowersFollow

Latest Posts

The Quiet Revision: How a Forgotten 1991 Amendment Made Elisabeth Belgium’s First Queen in Waiting

A childless king's 1991 constitutional amendment ended male-preference succession in Belgium. Three decades later, it made Princess Elisabeth heir to the throne.

The Princess Who Wanted to Be a Student: What Princess Amalia Tells Us About Growing Up Royal

She named her horse Mojito, worked at a beach bar, turned down a million-dollar allowance, and moved into student accommodation. Then the kidnapping threats came. Growing up heir to the Dutch throne has been rather more complicated than most.

The Weight of Diamonds: Princess Amalia, the Dutch Star Tiara, and What It Means to Inherit a Crown

The Dutch Diamond Star Tiara was made for a wedding in 2002 from diamond stars given to a queen in 1879. When Princess Amalia wore it on 9 June 2026, she was making an argument about inheritance that goes considerably deeper than the gemological.

Thailand Has No Named Heir. That Is Now an Emergency.

A princess who might have steadied the succession is dead. A king with seven children has named none of them heir. Thailand is running out of time.

The Princess Thailand Almost Had as Queen: The Extraordinary Life of Bajrakitiyabha

She reformed prison conditions for women worldwide, earned a doctorate at Cornell, and was quietly positioned as a future pillar of the Thai throne. Then she collapsed and never woke up.