Get support
If you need help:
We provide lifelong support to serving and ex-serving personnel and their families.
8am to 8pm, 7 days a week
Get involved
To support a veteran:
Your donation helps us to provide lifelong support to serving and ex-serving personnel and their families.
£10 could contribute towards an online course, to help a veteran secure a job.
Support us every Month, regularly
About us
Contact
For assistance with, donations or fundraising
For assistance with, Membership queries
Locate your nearest RBL Branch
Originally from Jamaica, Albert Jarrett, 96, signed up to join the RAF in 1942 on the island before travelling to the UK in 1943.
Part of the Royal British Legion's family of charities, the National Memorial Arboretum is the UK's year-round centre of Remembrance.
Our Wales Manifesto 2021 highlights key actions to improve the welfare and services of the Armed Forces community in Wales.
The Premier League has been supporting the Royal British Legion since 2012 and has so far raised more than £4 million pounds for the charity.
In August 2018, Army Cadet Maddie Hempell joined over 1,000 Legion members for the Great Pilgrimage 90 in Ypres.
We support the teaching of Remembrance across the UK and have designed a range of free teaching resources for Key Stages 1- 4.
Join RBL's charity walk or trek events and help us provide financial, social, and emotional support to veterans, serving personnel, and their families.
Volunteering Roles in Derbyshire, Leicestershire & Rutland
Volunteering Roles in Ireland (NI & ROI)
Michael Tibbs, 98, joined the Royal Navy at the age of 18 after the outbreak of the Second World War, following in the footsteps of his father who was a Naval Chaplain.
Finding civilian employment as a partner, spouse, or child of a service person can present its own challenges. Our guidance will help you to explore available opportunities.
Liam Young had always wanted to join the Army. Read his story on rebuilding his life after Service.
RBL would like to thank our friends from the world of the arts and entertainment who have recently given up their time to help us support the Armed Forces community.
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.
Find guidance on connecting with community networks tailored specifically for women who are currently or have served in HM Armed Forces.