The group were all arrested at a demonstration in London on July 19 allegedly showing their support for Palestine Action.
The Metropolitan Police said they were all charged by post.
It includes Della Wolf, 70 and from Oxford, Amanda Caroline Griffin, 70 and of Wallingford, April Elizabeth Jones, 47 and of Oxford, 72-year-old Marie Walsh from Didcot and 77-year-old Virginia Herbert, from Wallingford were all charged on September 1.
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Michael Sackur, 27 and from nearby Reading in Berkshire, has also been charged.
They are due to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on October 27 and 28 accused of a terrorism offence by showing support for a banned group.
Detective Chief Superintendent Helen Flanagan from the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command said: “We are quickly and efficiently investigating those arrested for showing support towards Palestine Action and working closely with our colleagues in the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), we anticipate further charging decisions through this week and beyond.
“We fully recognise people’s right to demonstrate peacefully, and thousands continue to protest in support of Palestine without breaking counter-terrorism laws.
“I would therefore urge anyone considering coming out and showing support to Palestine Action to reconsider, otherwise you will very likely be arrested, investigated, and we’ll work with the CPS to bring about prosecutions.
“For those people now charged, if convicted, they are facing potentially serious consequences that could impact on their careers and their ability to travel overseas.”
Metropolitan Police officers remove a person from a protest in Parliament Square, central London in support of Palestine Action (Image: PA/Yui Mok) Last week, the Met charged 73-year-old Susan Spencer-Longhurst, of Oxford, Andrea Huwes, 69 and from Wantage, for their alleged support of Palestine Action.
Michael Adams, 69 and from Buckinghamshire, and Helen Palmer, 70 from Wokingham, were also among those charged in the Thames Valley region.
All those charged were initially arrested in central London on either Saturday, July 5 or Saturday, July 12.
Palestine Action had called on supporters to take part in mass protests in a bid to overwhelm the justice system and make prosecuting all the demonstrators impossible.
But last month, Metropolitan Police Commander Dominic Murphy said the plan was “completely misguided”.
Palestine Action was proscribed after the group claimed responsibility for damage to jets at RAF Brize Norton and was also linked to allegations of a serious assault on staff and police officers at a business premises in south Gloucestershire.
Since then, hundreds of people have been arrested for showing support for the group.
Palestine Action’s co-founder Huda Ammori is taking legal action against the Home Office over the decision to ban the group, with the full legal challenge due to be heard in November.