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  2. Why did Harry and Meghan leave the Royal Family and where do they get their money? The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are not funded by the Royal Family and have various commercial deals.

    • King Charles III
    • Camilla, Queen Consort
    • Prince William and Catherine, Prince and Princess of Wales
    • Prince Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex
    • Prince Andrew
    • Prince Edward and Sophie, Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh
    • Princess Anne
    • Prince Richard and Birgitte, Duke and Duchess of Gloucester
    • Prince Edward, Duke of Kent
    • Princess Alexandra

    Monarch Total payments: £612m Total engagements (2002-22): 10,934 Yearly average:521 As king, Charles, 74, is responsible for paying other working royals from the private privy purse income he receives from the Duchy of Lancaster. The annual payment from the sovereign grant from the Treasury – currently £86.3m– also pays for other costs of the work...

    Queen Consort Total payments: unknown Total engagements (2005-22): 3,886 Yearly average:216 Camilla became an official working member of the royal family when she married Charles in 2005 in a relatively low-key civil ceremony at the Guildhall in Windsor. The cost of Camilla’s official duties and charitable work, as well as her personal staff and he...

    Succession: heir to the throne Total payments: unknown William’s total engagements (2006-22): 2,038 Yearly average: 120 Catherine’s total engagements (2011-22): 1,169 Yearly average:97 Prince William, 40, and his wife, Catherine, 41, share three homes: Amner Hall, on the king’s private Norfolk estate, Sandringham; Adelaide Cottage, near Windsor Cas...

    Succession: 5th in line Total payments: unknown Harry’s total engagements (2006-19): 1,190 Yearly average: 85 Meghan’s total engagements (2018-19): 179 Yearly average:90 Before his exit from the royal family in 2020, Prince Harry’s upkeep and his official duties were – like his brother – funded by his father, Charles, from the profits of the Duchy ...

    Succession: 8th in line Total payments: £12.9m Total engagements (2002-19): 7,849 Yearly average:436 Andrew, 63, the disgraced brother of the king, has lived a luxurious lifestyle, but precisely how he has funded it remains something of a mystery. One visible source of income was official payments he had received since 1978 for his royal engagement...

    Succession: 13th in line Total payments: £6.5m Edward’s total engagements (2002-22): 7,363 Yearly average: 351 Sophie’s total engagements (2002-22): 4,463 Yearly average:213 The king’s youngest sibling, Prince Edward, 59, lives with his wife, Sophie, 58, in Bagshot Park, a 21-hectare estate near Windsor, on another lease bought from the crown estat...

    Succession: 16th in line Total payments: £16.6m Total engagements (2002-22): 11,088 Yearly average:528 Often described as one of the hardest-working royals, Anne, 72, has put in more than 11,000 official appearances over the last two decades – more than any other living royal. She has received official payments since 1971, after she took up the rol...

    Succession: 30th in line Total payments: £12m Richard’s total engagements (2002-22): 4,986 Yearly average: 237 Birgitte’s total engagements (2002-22): 2,660 Yearly average:127 Some may be surprised that a royal who is first cousin once removed of King Charles has received the equivalent – in today’s money – of £12m in payments for royal engagements...

    Succession: 40th in line Total official payments: £18m Total engagements (2002-22): 3,963 Yearly average:189 The Duke of Kent, 87, has been a working royal since 1961. Until 2021, he was perhaps best known for handing out the Wimbledon winners’ trophies as the president of the Lawn Tennis Association. His long stint has earned him the equivalent of...

    Succession: 56th in line Total payments: £17.2m Total engagements (2002-22): 1926 Yearly average:91 Princess Alexandra, a first cousin once removed of the king, trained as a nurse at Great Ormond Street hospital but became a working royal soon after Elizabeth II’s reign began in 1955. Now 86, she was, in previous decades, one of the more active wor...

  3. Jan 19, 2020 · Getty Images. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex will no longer use their HRH titles and will not receive public funds for royal duties, Buckingham Palace has announced. Here we answer some of...

  4. Jan 20, 2020 · Getty Images. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are stepping back from royal duties and will divide their time between the UK and North America, Buckingham Palace has announced. They will no...

  5. But while Harry and Meghan were granted the titles of Duke and Duchess of Sussex on the day of their wedding in May 2018, they didn’t start receiving this publicly funded allowance from...

  6. Jun 24, 2021 · 24 June 2021. By Alex Therrien,BBC News. PA Media. The Prince of Wales continued to support the Duke and Duchess of Sussex with a "substantial sum" in the months after they stood down as...

  7. Jun 24, 2021 · Meghan and Prince Harry, the Duchess and Duke of Sussex, seen at Windsor Castle in Britain in 2019. (Reuters) LONDON — Prince Charles continued to financially support the Duke and Duchess...

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