Chakrabarti studied English and French at Exeter College, Oxford, from 1984 to 1988, including a year in France.[4] Of her time at Oxford, Chakrabarti said, "I loved my time there. There weren't – then – many people from my background at university. But that didn't stop my experience from being overwhelmingly good."[5]
In 1997 she became one of the BBC's community affairs correspondents, covering the Stephen Lawrence inquest and subsequent public inquiry. She also covered home affairs including the Damilola Taylor murder trial and Health.
As a political correspondent at Westminster from 1999 she appeared on both television and radio, reporting on political stories for BBC1, BBC2, the BBC News Channel, BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 5 Live. During this time Chakrabarti covered three UK general elections, several changes of party leaders, with other notable stories including the Cash for Honours affair and MPs' expenses. Occasionally she presented real-time audience reactions to debates.
In 2010 she became an education correspondent and covered changes to university tuition fees, the introduction of free schools, growth in academies and changes to exams and the curriculum.
She has reported on social matters, with stories relating to adoption, poverty, and social mobility in the UK. She reported from a ship in the Mediterranean on the European migrant crisis in 2016 and 2017. During 2017 and 2018, she reported three times on the Rohingya crisis from Bangladesh and Myanmar, and anchored the BBC's coverage of the 70th anniversary of the partition of India and Pakistan in 2017. She was part of the studio team for the 2019 UK general election, and the 2020 US presidential election. She was also one of the presenters of the BBC's news coverage of COVID-19 during the lockdowns of 2020 and 2021.
In March 2022 Chakrabarti was the main BBC presenter in Lviv in western Ukraine, anchoring the news bulletins 10 days after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. In April 2022 she anchored the BBC's coverage of the French presidential election from Paris.
She has also presented on BBC World and Radio 4's The World Tonight.
Author
Chakrabarti's first novel, Finding Belle, was published in May 2025 by HarperCollins.[6]
Awards and honours
Chakrabarti was named an honorary fellow of Exeter College, Oxford in 2018. She was also made an honorary doctor of letters by York St John University in 2018, and became the chancellor of York St John University in 2019[7] and an honorary fellow of University College, London in 2019. She is also an honorary fellow of the University of East London.[citation needed]
In December 2022 Chakrabarti was a member of the team for Exeter College, Oxford, which reached the semi-final in BBC Two's Christmas University Challenge.[8][9]
Chakrabarti is a patron of Pan Intercultural Arts, a UK charity that uses the arts to empower marginalised young people and unlock their potential.[16] She is also a patron of the Oxford University Media Society, and became a trustee for the Keats Shelley Memorial Association in 2021. She was a judge for the David Cohen Prize for Literature 2021[17] and chaired the panel of judges choosing the Costa Book of the Year 2021.[18]
↑Chamberlain, Daphne (3 August 2019). "A reminder of how we all got here"(PDF). The Archer. East Finchley. Retrieved 26 February 2025. Also present were Cllrs Alison Moore and Arjun Mittra, and the BBC's Reeta Chakrabarti, who lives locally.