Prime Minister Christopher Luxon had a private audience with King Charles at Windsor Castle, April 2025.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon had a private audience with King Charles at Windsor Castle, April 2025.
Photo: Supplied

The Prime Minister has had a private audience with the King.

Christopher Luxon met the monarch at Windsor Castle, about 40km west of central London.

Luxon landed in the United Kingdom on Sunday and is meeting with British officials before heading to Türkiye later in the week.

He is due to meet with UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on Tuesday and has signalled the pair will discuss trade and security, amid ongoing geopolitical tensions.

“New Zealand is a champion for free trade, and I look forward to talking to Sir Keir Starmer about what our countries can do together to support the rules-based trading system,” Luxon said ahead of the trip.

“The UK is also important to New Zealand’s prosperity. Our exports there grew by more than 20 percent in 2024 and are still growing.”

RNZ understands the conversation will focus on broad commercial talks about deepening existing relationships, rather than in-depth trade deal discussions.

Luxon is also expected to speak with business people who attended the government’s Infrastructure Investment Summit in Auckland last month.

Additionally, the visit is an opportunity to reaffirm New Zealand’s defence and security partnership with the UK.

The coalition government recently released its long-awaited Defence Capability Plan, setting out a spending blueprint for the next 15 years.

The government will invest $12 billion over the next four years for a “modern, combat-capable” defence force.

The plan will lift New Zealand’s defence spending from just over 1 percent of GDP to more than 2 percent in the next eight years.

The figure is the lowest threshold the United States approves of from its allies.

The UK announced its own lift in defence spending earlier this year, also reported as a signal to the US.

The visit coincides with the government’s announcement that it will extend its military assistance in support of Ukraine’s self-defence until December 2026.

NZDF personnel have been on the ground in Europe working with like-minded partner countries for the past three years.

The joint-operation has trained more than 53,000 Ukrainian Armed Forces personnel so far.

Earlier this month, the UK announced it would put a further £350m (NZ$780m) towards supporting Ukraine.

Luxon will visit Istanbul and travel to Gallipoli for Anzac Day later in the week.

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