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King Charles inaugurated the King Charles III England Coast Path at the Seven Sisters cliffs in East Sussex on March 19, 2026, as Natural England formally launched what it says is the world’s longest managed coastal walking route.
The continuous route measures about 2,689 miles and links existing trails with more than 1,000 miles of newly created paths and numerous upgrades — resurfaced tracks, boardwalks, bridges and removed stiles — to improve access, including for people with reduced mobility.
The Seven Sisters site was also designated a new 1,500-hectare national nature reserve, the 13th addition to the King’s Series of reserves as the programme moves toward a 25-reserve target by 2028.
The route relies on the 2009 Marine and Coastal Access Act and includes a legal “roll-back” provision allowing the path to be moved inland as the coastline erodes.
Natural England and project leads say roughly 80% of the route is currently open, with remaining sections closed or delayed by landowner objections, coastal erosion and local access issues such as a suspended ferry; officials aim to finish much of the work later in 2026.
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The Standard NewsKing opens longest managed coastal walking route in the world
Environment | The GuardianKing opens world’s longest managed coastal walk – but much of it is still closed off







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