As the festive season officially kicks into action, the Royal
    Family’s Christmas plans are coming into focus, with a familiar
    blend of ceremony, family gatherings and long-standing tradition.
    While Sandringham remains the emotional heart of royal Christmas,
    celebrations begin in London before the King makes his annual
    journey to Norfolk.

    The first major fixture is the pre-Christmas lunch at Buckingham
    Palace, held shortly before the King departs for Sandringham. The
    event is the one opportunity each year for the extended Royal
    Family to come together under one roof to mark the season. It
    allows extended members of the King’s family who would not normally
    spend Christmas at Sandringham to join the monarch for a festive
    meal. In scale and significance, it is the closest the Windsors
    come to a full family Christmas dinner.

    Once the London gathering has taken place, King Charles is
    expected to travel to Sandringham, continuing a tradition deeply
    associated with his mother. Queen Elizabeth II brought the family
    together there throughout her reign and, despite brief periods when
    Christmas was spent at Windsor, it was the Norfolk estate she most
    closely associated with the season. The King has maintained that
    pattern, reinforcing Sandringham’s role as the setting for the
    monarchy’s most private celebrations.

    christmas planschristmas plansPicture by Stephen Lock /
    i-Images.

    Christmas Eve will again feature a more contemporary addition to
    the royal calendar.
    The Princess of Wales’s televised carol concert, pre-recorded
    last week, will be broadcast on Christmas Eve. Now an established
    fixture, the service reflects Catherine’s emphasis on community,
    compassion and service, offering a quieter, reflective moment
    before Christmas Day itself.

    Christmas plans on December 25th

    Attention then turns back to Sandringham for Christmas Day. The
    Prince and Princess of Wales are expected to attend with their
    three children – Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis
    – joining the King and Queen Camilla for the traditional walk to St
    Mary Magdalene Church. The church service remains one of the few
    occasions when members of the Royal Family are seen together by the
    public during the festive period.

    Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Sarah Ferguson will not be
    present. It remains unclear whether their daughters will
    attend. Princess Beatrice joined the family last year after
    cancelling plans to spend Christmas in Italy due to late-stage
    pregnancy and medical advice not to travel, while Princess Eugenie
    spent the holidays with her husband, Jack Brooksbank, and their two
    sons, August and Ernest.

    christmas plans christmas plans Princess Eugenie and
    Beatrice’s Christmas plans are unclear – Picture by Stephen Lock /
    i-Images.

    There will also be interest in the presence of Princess Anne’s
    children, Zara Tindall and Peter Phillips. Phillips announced his engagement to Harriet
    Sperling earlier this year, and a Sandringham Christmas would mark
    her first festive season as a royal bride-to-be – a small but
    notable moment within the wider family.

    Christmas plans at Sandringham follow a well-worn rhythm. The
    family attends church in the morning at St Mary Magdalene – before
    returning to the house for lunch. Gifts are traditionally exchanged
    on Christmas Eve, a custom introduced by Prince Albert and still
    observed today.

    The afternoon is spent largely out of the public eye, with walks
    on the estate, television and games providing a contrast to the
    formality of the morning. Despite the structure, those close to the
    family have long described the day as one of warmth and
    familiarity, particularly for the younger royals.

    The Princess of Wales meets wellwishers after Christmas Day service at Sandringham.The Princess of Wales meets wellwishers after Christmas Day service at Sandringham.The Princess of Wales’s
    Christmas Plans will follow a well established routine – Picture by
    Stephen Lock / i-Images.The King’s
    Speech

    The celebrations conclude with the King’s Broadcast – the fourth
    of his reign. Recorded in advance, the message has become an
    important marker of Charles’s kingship, offering reflection on the
    year past and a sense of continuity for the year ahead.

    Together, the Christmas plans paint a picture of a period rooted
    firmly in tradition but shaped by a changing family. From the large
    gathering at Buckingham Palace to the more intimate celebrations at
    Sandringham, the season remains one of togetherness, duty and quiet
    ritual at the heart of the monarchy.

    Share.
    Leave A Reply