There's almost no difference in the written language in newspaper stories or nonfiction books.
There are some differences in small details like the spelling of a few words.
The pronunciation is a little different, particularly in some of the vowel sounds--I'm not sure a beginner would even hear them. For example, if someone speaking "BBC English" says the word "short," to U.S. ears it sounds almost like the word "shoat."
An American named Noah Webster published a dictionary in the 1800s. If it weren't for that, and the existence of national boundaries, we would just consider U.S. and British English to be "regional dialects."
The differences do not impede understanding.