
King Charles and Queen Camilla are expected to attend the wedding of Peter Phillips and Harriet Sperling next week, but they may not be able to stay for long.
While the royal gathering in Gloucestershire is shaping up to be one of the biggest family occasions of the year, Their Majesties have another major commitment on the very same day – one that has been a cornerstone of royal life for generations.
Peter Phillips, the King’s nephew, is due to marry NHS nurse Harriet Sperling at All Saints Church in Kemble on Saturday, 6 June. The ceremony is expected to attract a large contingent of the Royal Family, including Princess Anne, Zara and Mike Tindall, and potentially the Prince and Princess of Wales.
The King and Queen are also expected to attend, underscoring the close relationship between the monarch and his sister’s family.
However, unlike many of the other guests, the King and Queen will likely have one eye on the clock.
Just hours after the wedding ceremony, Their Majesties are due at Epsom Downs Racecourse for one of the most important dates in the royal sporting calendar: the Betfred Derby.
The Jockey Club confirmed this week that the King and Queen will attend Derby Day on 6 June, continuing a royal tradition that stretches back centuries.
As joint Patrons of The Jockey Club, Charles and Camilla occupy a role previously held by Queen Elizabeth II, who served as Patron for 68 years and rarely missed the famous race during her reign.
The timing creates a unique logistical challenge. Kemble, in Gloucestershire, is around 90 miles from Epsom Downs in Surrey, meaning the royal couple will need to leave the wedding celebrations relatively quickly in order to fulfil their Derby commitments.
For most wedding guests, the reception is often where the real celebrations begin. For the King and Queen, however, duty appears likely to call.
The Derby is not simply another engagement in the royal diary. It remains one of the most prestigious horse races in the world and one of the events most closely associated with the monarchy.
Queen Elizabeth II’s devotion to racing was legendary and her attendance at Epsom became one of the defining traditions of her reign. She missed Derby Day only twice before the Covid-19 pandemic – once during a state visit to Sweden in 1956 and again in 1984 while attending D-Day commemorations in France.
Since becoming King, Charles has sought to maintain that connection with the sport. Alongside Queen Camilla, he inherited the late Queen’s racing and breeding operation and has continued to support British racing through both ownership and public appearances.
In 2024, the King attended the Derby Festival to watch his filly Treasure contest the Oaks, and has attended all five days at Royal Ascot each year during his reign.

