Coronation flypast will be 10 times smaller than Queen's – but here's how it will look
More than 60 aircraft from all three services of the Armed Forces will take to the skies above London to celebrate King Charles III's coronation.
The six-minute flypast will provide a spectacle in the skies, after the coronation ceremony on Saturday 6 May, as pilots from the Royal Navy, British Army and Royal Air Force fly over Buckingham Palace.
The video above shows all the aircraft which will be taking part in the celebrations, including the Red Arrows and the full Battle of Britain Memorial Flight.
The full flypast for King Charles's coronation will include 68 aircraft, significantly smaller than the Queen's in 1953, which featured 600 RAF and other Commonwealth planes taking to the skies, with a further 300 aircraft lined up for a static display at RAF Odiham in Hampshire.
It was the biggest display of military air power that the United Kingdom has ever seen.
For the coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla, more than 6,000 men and women of the UK Armed Forces are due to take part.
Aircraft from across the Armed Forces have carried out a rehearsal flypast over RAF College Cranwell to practise their formations.