The Queen’s coffin will then return to the carriage and at 12.15pm. will leave the Abbey and proceed to Whitehall, led by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and then NHS staff. Again, we don’t yet know to what extent the public will be able to cover this part of the route. The carriage will turn left under the Arch of Horse Guards, cross Horse Guards Parade and continue down The Mall, providing one of the best opportunities to see the coffin. The cortege will pass in front of Buckingham Palace, looping south of the Queen Victoria Memorial before processing up Constitution Hill to Wellington Arch at Hyde Park Corner. This final section could give mourners in Green Park a view of the coffin, which will arrive at Wellington Arch at 1pm. At this point he will be transferred to a hearse and begin the journey to Windsor. The hearse will travel west along South Carriage Drive past Hyde Park, then turn south at the Royal Albert Hall and proceed down Queen’s Gate through Kensington. It will head west towards Cromwell Street (the A4) past the Natural History Museum, over the Hammersmith Flyover and along the A4 through Chiswick and Brentford. The hearse will join the A30 at Hounslow and proceed towards Staines-Upon-Thames. It will then drive north-west on the A308, pass Runnymede towards Old Windsor, turn onto Albert Road and arrive at Shaw Farm Gate in Windsor at 15:06. The hearse will slowly make its way up the Long Walk, providing one of the best opportunities to see the coffin up close. It will then enter Windsor Castle, the point at which the late Queen’s body passes from private public view forever.
Below is a list of the confirmed order of key procedures for the day.

6.30am: Lying in state ends and Westminster Hall is closed to the public. 10.44am: the coffin will be loaded into the carriage for the short procession to Westminster Abbey, followed on foot by the King and senior members of the royal family, arriving at 10.52am. 11 am: the funeral begins. 11.55am: towards the end of the service, the Last Post will be played and there will be a national two-minute silence observed in the Abbey and across the country. A lament played by the Queen’s piper will bring the service to an end. Around midday: the coffin will then be placed on the carriage and taken to Wellington Arch in a procession, led by members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, along with NHS workers, officers from the Police Service of Northern Ireland and the British Armed Forces . 3.06pm: the coffin arrives in Windsor at Shaw Farm Gate, with the hearse driving slowly down the Long Walk where the public are expected to follow the route. 4pm: televised committal ceremony at St George’s Chapel, Windsor, at the end of which the Lord Chamberlain will break his staff of office over the coffin and lower it into the royal vault, out of sight. 7.30pm: Private burial at the King George VI Memorial, the tiny space where Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin will be reunited with Prince Philip’s and they will be laid to rest.

Can I attend the funeral from the US?

The funeral of the late Queen will take place at 3 A.M. PT or 6 a.m. ET in the US. The telecast will be broadcast on NBC New Now, CNN, ABC, Fox News and other major news outlets. If you don’t have access to these channels, you can watch the funeral for free through a trial offer from streaming services Paramount+ and FuboTV. This article is updated with the latest information.