Royal Ascot 2025: Day-by-day race list, Gold Cup odds, favourites

Royal Ascot, one of the UK’s premier horse racing events, returns next week with the five-day festival to take place between June 17-21.
Here is everything you need to know.
Jump to:
How to watch | Ladies’ Day
Gold Cup runners list | Gold Cup odds
Who are the Gold Cup favourites?
Which race has the most prize money?
Royal Ascot day-by-day race guide
Note: All times are British Summer Time (BST). All Group 1 races (the biggest at the event) in bold.
Tuesday, Day 1
2.30 p.m. — Queen Anne Stakes
3.05 p.m. — Coventry Stakes
3.40 p.m. — King Charles III Stakes
4.20 p.m. — St. James’s Palace Stakes
5.00 p.m. — Ascot Stakes (Handicap)
5.35 p.m. — Wolferton Stakes (Listed)
6.10 p.m. — Copper Horse Stakes (Handicap)
Wednesday, Day 2
2.30 p.m. — Queen Mary Stakes
3.05 p.m. — Queen’s Vase
3.40 p.m. — Duke of Cambridge Stakes
4.20 p.m. — Prince of Wales’s Stakes
5.00 p.m. — Royal Hunt Cup
5.35 p.m. — Kensington Palace Stakes
6.10 p.m. — Windsor Castle Stakes
Thursday, Day 3 (Ladies’ Day)
2.30 p.m. — Norfolk Stakes
3.05 p.m. — King George V Stakes
3.45 p.m. — Ribblesdale Stakes
4.20 p.m. — Gold Cup
5.00 p.m. — Britannia Stakes
5.35 p.m. — Hampton Court Stakes
6.10 p.m. — Buckingham Palace Stakes
Friday, Day 4
2.30 p.m. — Albany Stakes
3.05 p.m. — Commonwealth Cup
3.40 p.m. — Duke of Edinburgh Stakes
4.20 p.m. — Coronation Stakes
5.00 p.m. — Sandringham Stakes
5.35 p.m. — King Edward VII Stakes
6.10 p.m. — Palace of Holyroodhouse Stakes
Saturday, Day 5
2.30 p.m. — Chesham Stakes
3.05 p.m. — Hardwicke Stakes
3.40 p.m. — Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes
4.20 p.m. — Jersey Stakes
5.00 p.m. — Wokingham Stakes
5.35 p.m. — Golden Gates Stakes
6.10 p.m. — Queen Alexandra Stakes
How to watch
The entire five-day festival will be shown on ITVX, while the majority of action will be shown on ITV1.
What is Ascot known for? And what is ‘Ladies’ Day’?
Formal attire is not a rarity in horse racing, although Royal Ascot may take the title for the event best-known for its fashion. Expect to see men in top hat and tails, and for women to be wearing large, bright hats and fascinators.
Most racecourses feature one “Ladies’ Day” on the calendar, and Ascot host its iconic version on Day 3 of the festival (Thursday). Spectators are urged to let fashion take centre stage for the day, with women encouraged to dress with even more glamour, colour and vibrancy.
Gold Cup full runners list (horse, trainer and jockey)
Note: Jockeys will be announced at a later date.
Absurde, W P Mullins
Al Nayyir, Tom Clover
Burdett Road, James Owen
Coltrane, Andrew Balding
Enemy, Ian Williams
Dubai Future, Saeed bin Suroor
Sweet William, John & Thady Gosden
Trawlerman, John & Thady Gosden
Trueshan, Alan King
Lone Eagle, Ralph Beckett
Yashin, Jessica Harrington
Gregoly, Richard Fahey
Feigning Madness, Richard Hughes
Illinois, A P O’Brien
Jon Bongeehu, A P O’Brien
Divine Comedy, Harry Eustace
Sober, W P Mullins
Seaweed’s Knight, A Fabre
Gold Cup odds
Note: Odds are courtesy of Bet365 and are correct as of June 11. They are subject to change.
Illinois – 11/8
Sweet William – 11/2
Yashin – 16/1
Coltrane – 40/1
Trueshan – 40/1
Burdett Road – 100/1
Candelari – 7/2
Jan Brueghel – 8/1
Absurde – 25/1
Dubai Future – 40/1
Al Nayir – 66/1
Divine Comedy – 100/1
Trawlerman – 4/1
Sevenna’s Knight – 14/1
Wonder Legend – 33/1
Sober – 40/1
Continuous – 66/1
Feigning Madness – 100/1
Who is the favourite for the Gold Cup?
Two-time champion Kyprios (2022 and 2024) retired last month after aggravating an old ringbone lesion, meaning the famous stayer will not compete at this year’s event.
In his place as favourites arrives another horse from Aidan O’Brien’s yard — four-year-old Illinois — who has five wins and four runners-up finishes in his 11 races.
Trawlerman, who finished second behind Kyprios last year, is also among the favourites, as is Francis Graffard’s Candelari, who has won four of his five career starts.
What is the prize money?
The total prize money for the five-day event is £10.05 million, equalling last year’s record.
The Prince of Wales’s Stakes and Queen Elizabeth II’s Stakes are the most financially rewarding races, each boasting £1m across all horses. All Group 1 races will be worth a minimum of £650,000, with all other races awarding at least £110,000 in total.