RBL came in and listened, supported and helped us come back together as a family.
I love being a member. I feel like part of the family and I've made so many new friends.
RBL means everything to me, that I can be there to help Service men and women.
If you need help...
8am to 8pm, 7 days a week
Find your closest RBL location
For supporters...
For assistance with, donations or fundraising
For members...
For help with, Membership queries
Please use this form to contact our PR Officer, Ali Graves, based at the Royal British Legion's head office in London.
There are many ways you can give to the Royal British Legion. From a one-off donation or giving a gift in memory - use the supporter care form to submit your donation.
Army veteran Dan Darkes will take on the grueling 156 mile Marathon des Sables in the Sahara desert in April 2020 to raise money for the Legion.
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.
The Remembrance Glade offers a tranquil space for people to contemplate what Remembrance means to them and to remember those that have served and sacrificed.
Cpl Apassara Wichaisri, a military nurse working in the NHS on her experience working with citically ill Covid-19 patients.
After VE Day many Britons began to think about rebuilding their lives, but prior to VJ Day thousands remained prisoners of war in the Far East.
Aged 17 when the Falklands War broke out, John Sheppard recalls his time as a young chef on board MSV Stena Seaspread during the conflict.
RBL has helped an RAF veteran from Yorkshire to secure £9000 in unpaid benefits, rescuing him from a life of food banks and queuing for handouts.
The Royal British Legion has been a campaigning force since 1921. Just as we did in the aftermath of the First World War, we continue to speak up for those who have given service to our Armed Forces.
The Centre for Blast Injury Studies at Imperial College London was established in 2011 to further the research into the difficulties surrounding blast injury.
A team of veterans are walking from Windsor castle to Edinburgh castle in just 10 days to raise money for the Armed Forces community.
Leon served in the Army for four-and-a-half years, but when he left service, he was unable to find a job and ended up homeless until the Legion stepped in.
Originally from Jamaica, Albert Jarrett, 96, signed up to join the RAF in 1942 on the island before travelling to the UK in 1943.
The Legion can help serving personnel with career advice and support before they join, during service and after leaving the Armed Forces.
The Legion has welcomed a grant of £250,000 from the Armed Forces Covenant Fund Trust to help support care home residents.