This is the moment a runaway horse collides with a black cab in London after being spooked by a bus.

The taxi driver posted the footage on social media from his dashcam and said the horse hit his vehicle at around 8.30am on Monday morning in Lupus St in Pimlico.

The clip, posted on X, shows the horse continuing along the road with a second horse seen following it.

They were two of three military horses that bolted through central London just months after a similar incident.

Six horses under the control of five soldiers had been out on a routine exercise on Monday when the lead horse, which was being led rather than ridden, was scared by a vehicle.

Two horses then lost their riders from the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment with the three riderless horses charging from Seville Street to South Eaton Place.

One was collected at South Eaton Place but the other two continued to Vauxhall Bridge via Belgrave Road before being stopped.

The animals were seen being stroked and calmed by Army troops on Vauxhall Bridge at around 9.30am as traffic passed by.

A police officer told The Telegraph: “Two horses lost their riders and went on a run. We are now waiting for horse boxes to take them away. There were no injuries.”

An Army rider calms one of the horses down after it went on the run

An Army rider calms one of the horses down after it went on the run

Two marked police vehicles were parked next to the horses on the pavement. A large white horse van then appeared, and traffic was brought to a halt.

A member of the public called out: “Did they get loose again?” A police officer responded: “Yeah.”

The horses were collected and returned to Hyde Park Barracks by 9.55am. One horse suffered minor injuries as a result of the incident. None of the horses were involved in the previous bolting incident in April.

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: “We’re aware that a number of horses were loose in central London, and worked with the Army to locate them.

“We’re pleased to confirm that all of the horses have been accounted for. We are continuing to liaise with the Army.”

One of the horses is helped into a horse box following its escape

It comes after Household Cavalry horses rampaged through central London on April 24 after being spooked by noisy construction work, leaving four people injured.

The animals threw their riders, Lifeguards and Blues and Royals servicemen, while they were leaving Hyde Park Barracks during rehearsal preparations for the King’s birthday parade in June.

Two of the horses, one covered in blood, then charged at pace through busy streets around Tower Bridge and the Strand for five miles until eventually being stopped in Limehouse, east London.

An Army spokesperson: “We can confirm that whilst exercising this morning, three horses from the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment became loose from their riders. They were swiftly and safely recovered.

“One horse received minor injuries, but no further treatment is required and there were no injuries to the soldiers involved”.

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