List of state visits made by Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth II undertook a number of state and official visits over her 70-year reign (1952 to 2022),[1] as well as trips throughout the Commonwealth, making her the most widely travelled head of state in history. She did not require a British passport for travelling overseas, as all British passports were issued in her name.[2]

Overseas trips made by Elizabeth II
  United Kingdom
  10 visits or more
  9 visits
  8 visits
  7 visits
  6 visits
  5 visits
  4 visits
  3 visits
  2 visits
  1 visit
Presentation of a book of the Six Decades of H.M. The Queen's Commonwealth and State Visits, 18 December 2012

Elizabeth II was the sovereign of more than one independent state and represented both Canada and the United Kingdom on state visits, though the former on just two occasions. The relevant governor-general usually carried out state visits on the Queen's behalf.

As Queen of Canada

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Date Country Cities visited Host
17–20 October 1957   United States[3][4][5][6][7] Jamestown, Washington, D.C., New York City President Eisenhower
27 June and 6 July 1959   United States[5][7] Massena,[8] Chicago Vice President Nixon, Governor Stratton

As Queen of the United Kingdom

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Date Country Cities visited Host
29 November 1953   Panama Canal Zone
(part of a wider tour, not a state visit)
Colón Governor John S. Seybold[9]
29–30 November 1953   Panama Panama City President Remón[10]
1 May 1954   Kingdom of Libya Tobruk King Idris[11]
24–26 June 1955   Norway Oslo King Haakon VII
8–10 June 1956   Sweden Stockholm King Gustaf VI Adolf[12]
18–21 February 1957   Portugal Montijo, Setúbal, Lisbon, Queluz,[13] Caldas da Rainha, Nazaré, Alcobaça, Batalha, Vila Franca de Xira[14] President Lopes
8–11 April 1957   France Paris, Lille[15] President Coty
21–23 May 1957   Denmark Copenhagen King Frederick IX
17–20 October 1957   United States[16][17][18] New York City, Washington, D.C., Williamsburg, Virginia President Eisenhower
25–27 March 1958   Netherlands Amsterdam, Delft, Rotterdam, The Hague[19][20][21] Queen Juliana
26 February – 2 March 1961   Kingdom of Nepal Kathmandu, Pokhara King Mahendra
2–6 March 1961   Iran Tehran, Isfahan, Persepolis[22] Shah Mohammad Reza
2–5 May 1961   Italy Rome, Naples, Venice, Florence, Milan, Cagliari, Turin[23][24] President Gronchi
5 May 1961   Vatican City Pope John XXIII
23 November 1961   Liberia Monrovia President Tubman
1–8 February 1965   Ethiopian Empire Addis Ababa, Asmara, Gondar[25] Emperor Haile Selassie
8–12 February 1965   Sudan Khartoum, Al-Ubayyid[26] President Mahi
18–28 May 1965   West Germany Bonn, Königswinter, Koblenz, Kaub, Wiesbaden, Munich, Stuttgart, Marbach, Schwäbisch Hall, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Duisburg, Soest, Gütersloh, Hanover, Hamburg[27][28][29][30][31][32] President Lübke
27 May 1965   West Berlin West Berlin[33] Mayor Brandt
9–13 May 1966   Belgium Brussels, Antwerp[34] King Baudouin
5–11 November 1968   Brazil Recife, Salvador, Brasília, São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro[35] President Costa e Silva
11–18 November 1968   Chile Santiago, Valparaíso, Pucón[36] President Frei
5–10 May 1969   Austria Vienna, Salzburg, Innsbruck President Jonas
18–25 October 1971   Turkey Ankara, İzmir, Istanbul, Kuşadası, Ephesus, Gallipoli[37] President Sunay
10–15 February 1972   Thailand Bangkok King Bhumibol Adulyadej
13–14 March 1972   Maldives Malé, Gan President Nasir
15–19 May 1972   France Paris President Pompidou
17–21 October 1972   Yugoslavia Belgrade, Dubrovnik, Zagreb[38][39][40] President Tito
15–22 March 1974   Indonesia Bali, Jakarta, Magelang, Yogyakarta[41][42] President Suharto
24 February – 1 March 1975   Mexico Mexico City, Cozumel, Oaxaca, Guanajuato, Mérida, Tizimín, Veracruz[43] President Echeverría
7–12 May 1975   Japan Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Ise[44][45][46] Emperor Hirohito
25–28 May 1976   Finland Helsinki, Turku, Jyväskylä President Kekkonen
6–11 July 1976   United States Philadelphia, Washington, New York City, New Haven, Charlottesville, Providence, Boston[47][48] President Ford
8–12 November 1976   Luxembourg Grand Duke Jean
9 February 1977   American Samoa
(part of a wider tour; not a state visit)
Pago Pago[49] Governor Frank E. Barnett
22–26 May 1978   West Germany Bonn, Mainz, Bremen, Bremerhaven, Kiel[50][51] President Scheel
26 May 1978   West Berlin West Berlin[50][51][52] Mayor Stobbe
12–14 February 1979   Kuwait Kuwait City Emir Jaber III
14–17 February 1979   Bahrain Emir Isa
17–20 February 1979   Saudi Arabia Riyadh, Dhahran[53] King Khalid
21–24 February 1979   Qatar Emir Khalifa
24–27 February 1979   United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi, Dubai[53] Sheikh Zayed
28 February – 2 March 1979   Oman Muscat,[54] Nizwa[55] Sultan Qaboos
16 May 1979   Denmark Copenhagen, Aalborg[56] Queen Margrethe II
29 April – 2 May 1980    Switzerland Bern, Basel, Lausanne, Lucerne, Rütli, Montreux, Veytaux (Chillon Castle), Zürich, Geneva (ICRC)[57][58][59] President Chevallaz
14–17 October 1980   Italy Rome, Genoa, Naples, Pompeii, Palermo[60] President Pertini
17 October 1980   Vatican City Pope John Paul II
21–23 October 1980   Tunisia Tunis, Borj El Amri[61] President Bourguiba
25–27 October 1980   Algeria Algiers President Bendjedid
27–30 October 1980   Morocco Rabat, Marrakech, Casablanca[62] King Hassan II
5–8 May 1981   Norway Oslo King Olav V
17–22 February 1983   Mexico[63] Acapulco, Lázaro Cárdenas, Puerto Vallarta, La Paz[64] President de la Madrid
26 February – 6 March 1983   United States San Diego, Palm Springs, Los Angeles, Sierra Madre, Duarte, Santa Barbara, San Francisco, Sacramento, Stanford, Palo Alto, Yosemite, Seattle[65] President Reagan
25–28 May 1983   Sweden Stockholm, Gothenburg[66] King Carl XVI Gustaf
26–30 March 1984   Jordan Amman, Petra, Aqaba[67] King Hussein
25–29 March 1985   Portugal Lisbon, Évora, Porto[68] President Eanes
17–21 February 1986     Nepal Kathmandu King Birendra
12–18 October 1986   People's Republic of China Beijing, Shanghai, Xi'an, Kunming, Guangzhou[69] President Li
26–27 May 1987   West Germany President von Weizsäcker[70]
17–21 October 1988   Spain Madrid, Seville, Barcelona, Majorca[71] King Juan Carlos I
25–27 June 1990   Iceland Reykjavík President Vigdís
23 November 1990   Germany Bonn, Weeze President von Weizsäcker[72]
14–26 May 1991   United States Washington, Arlington, Baltimore, Tampa, Miami, Austin, San Antonio, Dallas, Houston[73] President George H. W. Bush
9–12 June 1992   France Paris, Blois, Bordeaux[74] President Mitterrand
19–23 October 1992   Germany Bonn, Berlin, Leipzig, Dresden[75] President von Weizsäcker
4–7 May 1993   Hungary Budapest, Kecskemét, Bugac[76] President Göncz
7 August 1993   Belgium Brussels (for King Baudouin's funeral) Albert, the Prince of Liège[77]
6 May 1994   France Calais President Mitterrand[78]
17–20 October 1994   Russia Moscow, St. Petersburg[79] President Yeltsin
21 October 1994   Finland
(official visit; not state visit)
Helsinki[80] President Ahtisaari
25–27 March 1996   Poland Warsaw, Kraków President Kwaśniewski
27–29 March 1996   Czech Republic Prague, Brno[81] President Havel
28 October – 1 November 1996   Thailand Bangkok, Ayutthaya[82] King Bhumibol Adulyadej
11 November 1998   Belgium Ypres[83] King Albert II[84]
19–22 April 1999   South Korea Seoul, Andong[85] President Kim Dae-jung
16–19 October 2000   Italy Rome, Milan[86] President Ciampi
17 October 2000   Vatican City Pope John Paul II
30 May – 1 June 2001   Norway Oslo[87] King Harald V
5–7 April 2004   France Paris, Toulouse[88] President Chirac
2–4 November 2004   Germany Berlin, Potsdam,[89] Düsseldorf[90] President Köhler
16–17 October 2006   Lithuania Vilnius[91] President Adamkus
18–19 October 2006   Latvia Riga[91] President Vike-Freiberga
19–20 October 2006   Estonia Tallinn[91] President Ilves
5 February 2007   Netherlands The Hague, Amsterdam[92] Queen Beatrix
3–8 May 2007   United States Washington, Richmond, Jamestown, Williamsburg, Lexington, Louisville, Greenbelt[93] President George W. Bush
11–12 July 2007   Belgium Brussels, Ypres, Laeken,[94] Wavre[95] King Albert II
13–16 May 2008   Turkey Ankara, Istanbul, Bursa[37] President Gül
21–22 October 2008   Slovenia Ljubljana, Kranj[96] President Türk
23–24 October 2008   Slovakia Bratislava, Starý Smokovec, Hrebienok, Poprad[97] President Gašparovič
24–25 November 2010   United Arab Emirates Abu Dhabi Sheikh Khalifa
25–28 November 2010   Oman Muscat Sultan Qaboos
17–20 May 2011   Ireland Dublin, Kildare, Cashel, Cork[98] President McAleese
3 April 2014   Italy Rome President Napolitano
3 April 2014   Vatican City Pope Francis
5–7 June 2014   France President Hollande[1]
23–26 June 2015   Germany[99] Berlin, Frankfurt, Celle[100] President Gauck

See also

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References

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  2. ^ "Passports". Official website of the royal family. 15 January 2016. Archived from the original on 29 September 2022. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
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  5. ^ a b Metheral, Ken (19 June 1959), "Canada Queen's Role Underlined", Montreal Gazette, archived from the original on 20 September 2022, retrieved 13 August 2012
  6. ^ Bousfield, Arthur; Toffoli, Garry (2002). Fifty Years the Queen: A Tribute to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on Her Golden Jubilee. Toronto: Dundurn Press. p. 16. ISBN 9781554881635. Archived from the original on 22 February 2024. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  7. ^ a b Tidridge, Nathan (2011), Canada's Constitutional Monarchy: An Introduction to Our Form of Government, Toronto: Dundurn Press, p. 49, ISBN 9781459700840, archived from the original on 22 February 2024, retrieved 21 September 2016
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