Plan my visit to Westminster Abbey
Explore coronation history, royal tombs, Poets' Corner, medieval chapels and timed-entry choices beside Parliament
Westminster Abbey is both a working church and one of Britain's densest historic visitor sites: coronations, royal weddings, state funerals, poets, scientists, monarchs and medieval craftsmanship all sit inside one Gothic building. The experience can feel overwhelming if you arrive without a plan, because the famous objects, chapels and memorials compete for attention from the moment you enter.
A good visit is less about seeing every memorial and more about choosing a focus. First-time visitors should make time for the Coronation Chair, the Quire, the Lady Chapel, Poets' Corner and the nave, then decide whether to add a verger tour, the Queen's Diamond Jubilee Galleries or nearby Westminster sights. The Abbey also rewards simply looking up, slowing down in quieter chapels and letting the building's scale do some of the work.
Most visitors will do best with a flexible highlights route of around 90 minutes to two hours. History-focused travellers may want a guide to connect the royal, religious and literary stories; families and mixed-interest groups may prefer a shorter spine with a few memorable pauses. Timing matters too: sightseeing admission is not the same as attending worship, Sundays work differently, and special services can change what is open.