Fashion, pageantry and elite turf battles – Everything you need to know ahead of Royal Ascot

Horse Racing
Royal Ascot

Royal Ascot gets underway on Tuesday, 16 June, launching five days of elite flat racing, summer fashion, and traditional pageantry.

Founded by Queen Anne in 1711, this Berkshire institution remains the absolute pinnacle of the British summer social calendar.

For those looking to navigate the upcoming action, here is everything you need to know about the 35-race spectacular.

1. The Royal history

The event owes its existence to Queen Anne, who discovered the ideal stretch of turf while riding near Windsor Castle over three centuries ago.

The inaugural race took place in August 1711, with a prize of 100 guineas. Since then, the connection between the British monarchy and the racecourse has remained unbroken.

Every afternoon begins with the iconic Royal Procession at 2:00 pm, where King Charles III and Queen Camilla arrive down the straight mile in horse-drawn landaus, continuing a tradition established by King George IV in 1825.

2. The Group 1 showpieces

The meeting is an unparalleled sporting crucible, staging eight elite Group 1 contests across the five days.

The action begins with a triple-header on opening day, featuring the straight-mile Queen Anne Stakes, the blistering King Charles III Stakes for absolute sprinters, and the St James’s Palace Stakes for the leading three-year-old Classic colts.

Wednesday turns the spotlight onto the 10-furlong Prince of Wales’s Stakes, widely regarded as the highest-rated race of the entire week.

Thursday belongs entirely to the stayers in the historic Ascot Gold Cup, a gruelling two-and-a-half-mile test of pure stamina.

Friday hosts a double bill of the Commonwealth Cup and the Coronation Stakes, before Saturday brings the curtain down with the prestigious Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes.

Also read: Four British-trained horses to watch in the 2026 flat season

3. What to expect on course

Spectators can expect a unique blend of high society and competitive sports, with crowd sizes projected to reach around 270,000 visitors across the week. Attending requires strict adherence to a legendary dress code, which varies by enclosure.

The Royal Enclosure demands black or grey morning dress with a waistcoat and top hat for gentlemen, alongside formal daywear and a substantial hat for ladies.

The Queen Anne Enclosure maintains a smart standard of suits and ties, while the Village and Windsor enclosures offer a slightly more relaxed atmosphere. With the Berkshire weather set to be fair, racegoers should expect fast racing on good-to-firm ground.

4. Navigating the betting markets

Royal Ascot presents some of the most complex and competitive betting heats of the global racing calendar. Punters must choose between short-priced stable stars in the elite condition races and wide-open, 30-runner stampedes like Wednesday’s Royal Hunt Cup.

Early market focus centres on opening day, where Charlie Appleby holds a formidable hand in the Queen Anne Stakes with Lockinge winner Notable Speech.

In the sprinting division, the market features a fascinating clash between the local hope Night Raider and Joshua Parr’s star Australian raider Overpass in the King Charles III Stakes.

Wednesday’s showpiece is shaping up to be a tactical match race, with the formidable Diz currently heading the market as favourite against the course-loving Ombudsman.

5. Legends of the turf

The turf at Ascot has been graced by the greatest thoroughbreds in history. The unbeatable Frankel produced one of the track’s most breathtaking performances when destroying the 2012 Queen Anne Stakes field by eleven lengths.

Stamina legends have also defined the meeting, none more so than Yeats, who recorded an unprecedented four consecutive Gold Cup victories between 2006 and 2009 for trainer Aidan O’Brien.

In modern sprinting lore, the likes of the American superstar Lady Aurelia and Australia’s Nature Strip have left indelible marks on the Berkshire turf, proving that Royal Ascot remains the ultimate global shop window for racing excellence.

Read next: Five JP McManus-owned horses Harry Cobden will be looking forward to riding next season

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