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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
For assistance with, Membership queries
Locate your nearest RBL Branch
Check our guide and find out advice and support options for veterans and their families dealing with dementia, including organisations that can help.
Gilbert Bradley and Gordon Bowsher fell in love before the start of WW2; but when Gilbert joined the army their relationship survived through letters.
Pat Owtram joined the WRNS at 18, listening to and translated enemy communications, while she and her sister feared for their father who was a prisoner of war.
A disabled youngster in Wirral has a new lease of life after we teamed up with other Armed Forces charities to provide him with a purpose-built trike.
The Legion has welcomed a grant of £250,000 from the Armed Forces Covenant Fund Trust to help support care home residents.
Part of the Royal British Legion's family of charities, the National Memorial Arboretum is the UK's year-round centre of Remembrance.
John McCrae wrote the poem 'In Flanders Fields' which inspired the use of the poppy as a symbol of Remembrance.
Red poppies have been worn as a show of support for the Armed Forces community since 1921. Today the Poppy remains as the symbol of Remembrance at the heart of our Poppy Appeal.
Our The Royal British Legion Challenge is a unique experience in the wilderness of a mystery location in the UK. Please read the terms and conditions before signing up.
Volunteering Roles in Kent, Surrey, East Sussex & West Sussex
Ex-serving personnel who have suffered an injury or illness as a result of service before 6 April 2005, can make a claim under the War Pension Scheme.
By the end of 1945 troops were back home in the UK. But a UK that looked very different from the one they’d left when at the outbreak of war.
While sisters Pat Davies & Jean Argles served in the Second World War as codebreakers, their father had been captured and taken as a prisoner of war in the Far East.
We support the teaching of Remembrance across the UK and have designed a range of free teaching resources for Key Stages 1- 4.
Royal British Legion urges the UK Government to improve the Armed Forces Bill to enable the Covenant to truly deliver on behalf of those who have served our country.
“Being able to support all the staff hands-on, which in turn allows them to support our beneficiaries and our Armed Forces community – that’s amazing.”