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We provide lifelong support to serving and ex-serving personnel and their families.
8am to 8pm, 7 days a week
To support a veteran:
Your donation helps us to provide lifelong support to serving and ex-serving personnel and their families.
£70 could help fund a recovery course place at our battle back centre.
Support us every Month, regularly
For assistance with, donations or fundraising
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Locate your nearest RBL Branch
Volunteering Roles in Wales
The Centre for Blast Injury Studies at Imperial College London was established in 2011 to further the research into the difficulties surrounding blast injury.
Put the fun into your fundraising with a free pack of ideas to raise money for this year’s Poppy Appeal.
Download tools, assets and general support to help members represent the Royal British Legion using our new identity.
Originally from Jamaica, Albert Jarrett, 96, signed up to join the RAF in 1942 on the island before travelling to the UK in 1943.
John McCrae wrote the poem 'In Flanders Fields' which inspired the use of the poppy as a symbol of Remembrance.
Our manifestos outline key actions we think government should take to improve services for those in the Armed Forces community.
Armed Forces Day is a chance for us all to thank our serving troops, veterans, reservists, cadets, and their families for all they do to keep us safe.
Find guidance on how to manage the money you earn while serving in the Armed Forces, and how the Royal British Legion money advice service might be able to help you.
The Battle Back Centre Lilleshall was established in 2011 by The Legion to support wounded and sick Service personnel.
Find information about British Korean Veterans Association relief fund, eligibility criteria and what financial assistance available to British Korean War veterans in need.
Learn about making a claim for a War Pension or Armed Forces compensation if you are living with hearing loss that you think may be linked to your time in service.
Keith Botterill was underage when he joined the Australian Army. He was captured at Singapore and endured the horror of prison camps in Borneo.
The Royal British Legion and its sister charity, Poppyscotland, have launched an independent report reflecting on the impact of The Armed Forces Covenant.