Further Information

Below you will find videos from 2021.

International Dressage

2022 schedule available here.
If you have any queries, please contact nicolac@hpower.co.uk

The full list of dressage entries for the 2022 FEI World Cup Dressage competition can be found here:  CDI_master_list

International Show Jumping

2022 schedule available here.
If you have any queries, please contact pennyh@hpower.co.uk

The full list of jumping entries for the 2022 Show can be found here.  CSI_masterlist

International Driving

2022 schedule available here.  

If you have any queries, please contact hollyf@hpower.co.uk

The full list of driving entries for the 2022 Show can be found here.  CAI master list

New Showing Series

We have been working with the British Show Pony Society (BSPS), the British Show Horse Association (BSHA) and the Association of Show and Agricultural Organisations (ASAO), to produce a new Showing Series for 2023 that consists of 20 different classes which cover everything from Hacks and Riding Horses to Coloured Ponies and Cobs.

For queries relating to Pony Classes please contact the BSPS directly: info@bsps.com

For queries relating to the Rising Star series please contact the BSHA directly: admin@britishshowhorse.org

If you are a show organiser interested in hosting 2024 qualifiers please contact the ASAO directly: info@asao.co.uk

DateShow NameClasses
30-Apr-23CHAPS UK (south East Regional Show)BSPS
01-May-23Puddledub Spring ShowsBSPS / BSHA
13-May-23Nottinghamshire County ShowBSPS / BSHA
14-May-23South Suffolk ShowBSPS / BSHA
20-May-23Dumfries and Galloway Horse ShowBSPS / BSHA
20-May-23 - 21-May-23Royal Welsh Agricultural Society - Smallholding & Countryside FestivalBSHA
27-May-23Heathfield Agricultural ShowBSPS
27-May-23Northumberland County ShowBSPS / BSHA
27-May-23 - 28-May-23Hertfordshire County ShowBSPS / BSHA
28-May-23UK Ponies & Horses LimitedBSPS / BSHA
29-May-23The Cheshire Horse ShowBSPS / BSHA
31-May-23 - 01-Jun-23The Suffolk ShowBSHA
04-Jun-23Rutland County ShowBSPS / BSHA
10-Jun-23Cumberland ShowBSPS
09-Jun-23 - 11-Jun-23South of England ShowBSPS / BSHA
25-Jun-23Malton ShowBSPS / BSHA
01-Jul-23Hanbury Countryside ShowBSHA
08-Jul-23Lawford Park Show @The Tendring Hundred FC ShowBSHA
08-Jul-23Liskeard ShowBSPS / BSHA
08 -Jul-23 - 09-Jul-23Bridgend Country ShowBSPS / BSHA
09-Jul-23Ashby ShowBSPS / BSHA
09-Jul-23BSPS Scotttish BranchBSPS
09-Jul-23Norfolk Show Jumping ClubBSPS / BSHA
15-Jul-23 - 16-Jul-23Great Eccleston Agricultural ShowBSPS / BSHA
17-Jul-23Stithians ShowBSHA
25-Jul-23Ryedale ShowBSPS / BSHA
29-Jul-23 - 30-Jul-23Durham County ShowBSPS / BSHA
02-Aug-23North Devon ShowBSHA
03-Aug-23Burwarton ShowBSPS / BSHA
04-Aug-23 - 05-Aug-23Perth ShowBSPS
05-Aug-23Blakesley ShowBSPS / BSHA
05-Aug-23Cardigan County Agricultural ShowBSHA
05-Aug-23Garstang ShowBSPS / BSHA
12-Aug-23Llanedi Agricultural ShowBSHA
18-Aug-23Dunster ShowBSPS / BSHA
26-Aug-23Bellingham ShowBSPS / BSHA
02-Sep-23Alresford Agricultural ShowBSPS / BSHA
02-Sep-23The Orsett ShowBSHA
02-Sep-23 - 03-Sep-23Dorset County ShowBSHA
09-Sep-23Penistone Agricultural Society ShowBSPS / BSHA
09-Sep-23Romsey ShowBSPS
13-Sep-23 - 14-Sep-23Westmorland County ShowBSPS / BSHA
23-Sep-23Stokesley ShowBSPS / BSHA
30-Sep-23Gransden ShowBSHA
Prospect Farm ShowBSPS / BSHA

Don’t forget we also host The BSPS Heritage Supreme Championship as well as The SSADL’s In-Hand and Ridden Championships.

By Carole Mortimer

It is June 1907 in West London. Carriages, motor coaches and pedestrians, all heading toward Olympia Way, crowd Hammersmith Road and Kensington High Street. Every ten minutes a train disgorges more excited passengers at the nearby Kensington Station. Outside the large exhibition venue of Olympia there is a queue of well-dressed ladies and gentlemen and their excited families. The first International Horse Show to be held in London has opened its doors to the public.

Once inside The Great Hall visitors gasp at the flamboyant floral decorations. Large arrangements festoon the chandeliers and displays of trees, palms and potted hydrangeas adorn the balconies. There are even trees and banks of flowers in the arena. In the Royal box an elderly King Edward VII accompanied by Queen Alexandra, smokes a large cigar. His heir, George, Duke of York and his wife Princess Mary and their young children Mary and Henry, Duke of Gloucester have arrived by open-topped carriage to accompany the King and Queen. In the arena the horses of the magnificently polished four-in-hand carriages stand patiently as judges in morning dress discuss the merits of the coaches and the expertise of their top-hatted drivers. Later in the day the crowd gasp at the skill and daring of Gentlemen Officers, many from France, Italy and Belgium and even Russia, as they and their horses tackle the ‘jumping course’. The course that consists of flimsy upright rails, sleepers, picket fences, walls and gates even includes a large turf bank. But the real excitement comes at the end of the day when these dashing officers and British hunting heroes and their brave horses will take on the ‘high jump’. The show closes at 11pm and all the way home wide-eyed spectators re-live the extraordinary events of the day.

The original idea for the show is attributed to a Mr Reginald Gardiner Heaton, a horse breeder from Chatteris in Cambridgeshire. Early in 1906 Mr Gardiner Heaton Esq. invited friends to dinner with the intention of persuading them to organise an international show on similar lines to those in New York, Paris and Brussels. The dinner produces a successful conclusion and the board of his new company of which Reginald Heaton became the Managing Director, a post he held for over 25 years, immediately set to work.

The great sporting peer and patron, Lord Lonsdale, President of the National Sporting Club of Britain and nick-named ‘The Yellow Earl’ after the colour of his livery, was asked and agreed to be the Show’s first President. The roll of Directors so elegantly listed in early programmes included many prominent and wealthy, sporting and aristocratic patrons. No less than 10 Dukes, 11 Marquis’, 54 Earls, 25 Viscounts, 80 Lords, and 28 comparatively ordinary Sirs were made honorary Vice-Presidents.

Demand for the tickets for that first Show exceeded all expectations. According to a feature in the 1934 edition of ‘The Horse’ magazine, some sold to ‘eager visitors for as much as £5.00’ – the equivalent of around £415 today! The same feature also records that ‘boxes were in keen demand at 100 guineas and over’, not far short of around £7,000 at today’s prices. The seemingly lavish budget showed that up to £4,000, the equivalent of roughly £335,000, was spent on decorations, the cost of flowers alone around £1,000 (about £83,000).

Olympia in June became the place to be and the International Horse Show established itself as one of the social events of the annual calendar. ‘In those great and far-off days almost everyone was horse-minded so it was hardly surprising that great success became the under-taking,’ wrote Geoffrey DS Bennett in Horse & Hound in 1954.

Over 500 horses including many from the Continent were entered. Even wealthy sporting American patrons brought their horses over from the United States. The catalogue detailed all classes, entries and prizes and gave a full list of each day’s musical performance.

The schedule of 149 classes included classes for ‘qualified hunters’ and ‘hacks in regular use’. Trotters and roadsters, Shetland ponies – ‘to be driven by ladies or boys under 16 years of age’, carriages, young saddle horses, officer’s charges, trade turnouts and draught horses also featured over the 10 days as well as classes for hunter, polo and hackney stallions. Jumping ‘over the course’ and the ‘high jump’ were included and each day ended with the spectacle of a jumping class. The 12 classes were ‘Open to the World’ and the few rules stipulated that riders were dressed either in ‘uniform or hunting costume’.

For several years the show at Olympia enjoyed much success and social esteem. It was closed down during The First World War and between the World Wars suffered from economic instability and, as the horse became more widely replaced by the combustion engine, a decline in attendances.

In 1939 the last International Horse Show was held at Olympia although was then resurrected in 1947 at White City. However in December 1972, the excitement of a horse show returned to London when Reginald Heaton and Raymond Brooks-Ward decided to bring a horse show back to Olympia. Olympia – The London International Horse Show has since become a highlight of the equestrian calendar.

Media Accreditation for The London International Horse Show 2022 is now open. Please click here to apply.

If you have any queries about Media Accreditation, please email elizabethb@hpower.co.uk

Purchasing Photographs

Images of the International and Show Jumping classes are available for purchase here.

Images of the displays, Shetland Pony Grand National, Kennel Club Dog Agility and Showing classes are available to purchase from Real Time Imaging.

Bringing Cameras

We ask that camera lenses do not exceed 200mm as this can obscure the view of other audience members. Video recording and/or flash photography is strictly prohibited whilst performances are on; this is for the safety of horses and riders.

Live streaming through Facebook LIVE or any other platform is strictly prohibited due to broadcast rights of the Show.

Applications for volunteering at The London International Horse Show 2022 are now closed.

If you have applied to volunteer, we will be in touch with you soon.

If you have any queries, please email volunteer@hpower.co.uk and we’ll be in touch.

Thanks for your interest in The London International Horse Show at ExCeL.

This year’s Show Charity

This year we are proud to partner with Ebony Horse Club as our official Show charity for 2022. 50p from each ticket sold for the Thursday Afternoon Charity Performance will go to the Charity, and ticket buyers are also able to donate when they buy their tickets.

Based in Brixton, South London, Ebony Horse Club’s mission is to use horses to raise the education, life skills, wellbeing and aspirations of young people from disadvantaged communities within Lambeth. Through their youth workers, volunteers and supporters, the Club can introduce fantastic opportunities to young people, including days out at top equestrian venues, educational visits to high profile companies, workshops and training sessions, or just the chance to spend a relaxing day in the countryside. As well as riding and horsemanship, the Club focuses on giving its members occasion to further develop key life skills such as communication, empathy and responsibility in a safe and enjoyable environment.

If you are unable to make it to The London International Horse Show for the Christmas 2022 event,  there are a number of ways to catch up with the action.


The BBC plan to broadcast the following classes and performances from The London International Horse Show on BBC 2 and across its digital platforms.

  • The Lemieux Puissance on the evening of Thursday 15th December (online) 9.15pm
  • The FEI Dressage World CupTM (Freestyle to Music) supported by Horse & Hound on the evening of Friday 16th December (online) 7.45pm
  • The Longines FEI World CupTM Jumping on the afternoon of Sunday 18th December on BBC Two 12.30pm
  • The whole of the Monday 19th Evening Performance, including The Turkish Airlines London Grand Prix Monday 19th December 6.30pm (online)

 

 

FEI TV is a pay-to-view service and you can watch the FEI World CupTM classes (Dressage, Jumping and Driving) live.  For further information visit feitv.org

handc-sponsor-crop

Horse & Country is the leading international sports network for the passionate and active equestrian community.  Horse & Country’s worldwide subscription service H&C+ allows online streaming service (which can be accessed here.) of live sport, training and advice, entertainment and more!

Viewers will be able to watch comprehensive coverage of much of the action from the London International Horse Show 2022.

In the UK H&C coverage will include

  • The Voltaire Design U25 British Championship
  • Dressage Unwrapped
  • The FEI Dressage World Cup (Short Grand Prix)
  • Extreme Driving supported by Karen and Hugh Scott-Barrett
  • The FEI Driving World Cup
  • The Champagne Taittinger Ivy Stakes
  • The Christmas Pudding Speed Stakes
  • The SSADL Grand Final
  • The GS Equestrian Pony Club Mini-Major
  • The Snowflake Stakes
  • The Longines Christmas Cracker
  • The Voltaire Design Mini Stakes
  • The Santa Stakes
  • The Fancy Dress Relay
  • The BSPS Ridden Mountain and Moorland Championship sponsored by LeMieux
  • The LeMieux Six Bar
  • The Mistletoe Speed Stakes
  • The Devil’s Horsemen
  • Shetland Pony Grand National
  • Le Régiment de Cavalerie de la Garde
  • The Kennel Club classes (inc. Semi Finals, Finals and Grand Prix)

Viewers can watch both live and on-demand via an H&C+ membership or by choosing to ‘Pay-Per-View’ with H&C’s new à la carte option, H&C+ Freestyle – more details available to view here. Annual membership is available for just £59.99/year (also available in monthly installments at £6.99/month), with a 12 month contract. A one-off event pass with H&C+ Freestyle is available for purchase for just £14.99.

Please note: Availability of coverage may vary by viewer territory. Please check the Horse & Country website for availability, before purchase.

The Show offers its own Video on Demand Service. You can pay to watch online previously held classes. The classes from the 2019 Show are available here.

The Show offers its own Video on Demand Service.  You can pay to watch online previously held classes – just click on the year below:

View 2019 Show VODs
View 2018 Show VODs
View 2017 Show VODs
View 2016 Show VODs

If you want to keep any particular class forever then our Video Download Service is the one for you. The classes from the 2018 show are available here.  Please note that none of the FEI World CupTM classes are available as the rights to these belong to the FEI.