Relatives of the British victims of the Tunisian terror attack will today hear the conclusions of the inquest into the deaths.

The coroner, Judge Nicholas Loraine-Smith, will deliver his findings at the Royal Courts of Justice in London.

The families are expected to be in court to hear the final conclusion.

Thirty British holidaymakers were killed in the attack, which took place in the popular seaside resort of Sousse.

Image: Billy and Lisa Graham, from Bankfoot near Perth in Scotland, were among the 30 Britons killed at the popular resort of Port el Kantaoui in Sousse, Tunisia Image: Claire Windass, 54, was among those who died in the attack on 26 June, 2015 Image: Former Birmingham City footballer Denis Thwaites, 70, and his wife Elaine, 69, who lived in Blackpool Image: Scott Chalkley, from Derby Image: Jim and Ann McQuire, aged 66 and 63, from Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire Image: Stuart Cullen, 52, from Lowestoft in Suffolk Image: Victim Sue Davey (second left) 43, from Staffordshire, with her children Image: Bruce Wilkinson, a 72-year-old grandfather from Goole, East Yorkshire Image: Student Joel Richards (C), his uncle Adrian Evans (R) and his grandfather Charles 'Patrick' Evans Image: Fashion blogger Carly Lovett, 24, from Gainsborough in Lincolnshire Image: Lisa Burbidge, 66, a grandmother-of-four from Whickham, Gateshead Image: Trudy Jones, a divorced single mother-of-four from Gwent, South Wales, Image: Ray and Angela Fisher, from Leicester Image: Chris Dyer, 32, an engineer who practised jiu-jitsu, from Watford Image: Christopher Bell, 59, and his 54-year-old wife Sharon, from Leeds Image: Philip Heathcote Image: Retired printer John Stocker, 74, and his wife, 63-year-old Janet Image: Retired scientist David Thompson Image: Plumber John Welch and his partner Eileen Swannock Image: Stephen Mellor, a 59-year-old engineer from East Cornwall Image: John Stollery, 58, a social worker from Nottinghamshire /

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It was the biggest loss of British life in a terror attack since the London bombings in 2005.

Islamist gunman Seifeddine Rezgui carried out the massacre at the five-star Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel on 26 June 2015, before he was shot dead by local police.

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CCTV pictures and video filmed from mobile phones captured him walking through the resort, randomly shooting guests.

The inquest was shown a computer simulation of the route he took, plotting the exact points each of the victims was killed.

It has been a difficult time for all the families.

They had wanted the coroner to consider a "neglect" conclusion, after they claimed the tour operator TUI had failed to protect the guests adequately.

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Their legal team argued TUI had not taken the terror threat seriously enough.

But the coroner indicated he did not believe neglect played a part in the deaths.

At the time there were concerns about the terror risk in Tunisia, given that three months earlier gunmen had killed 22 people in the Bardo Museum in Tunis, the country's capital.

Just one day before the Sousse resort attack, a Foreign Office meeting concluded they might need to consider again whether the recent attacks should mean the threat level be raised from green to amber.

Tunisia beach attack footage played at inquest

Over the past three weeks, the inquest has heard evidence from a number of witnesses who were at the resort during the attack.

They spoke about the moments they saw the gunman walking along the beach reloading his automatic rifle before taking aim at tourists.

Tunisian authorities have still to find the driver of a vehicle which dropped him in a side road close to the hotel.

The coroner is expected to deliver his findings and conclusions at 10am.