King Charles cuts off Prince Andrew's £1m a year personal allowance
by Antony Clements-Thrower · Manchester Evening NewsThe King has cut off Prince Andrew's £1m a year personal allowance. The disgraced Duke of York will also not have his private security paid for, reports say.
King Charles and Prince Andrew have been at loggerheads for months as the monarch wanted his younger brother to leave 30-room Royal Lodge home in Windsor, after previously asking him to move into Frogmore Cottage.
After months of infighting behind the scenes, the King has now made a decisive move, according to a new book. The Keeper of the Privy Purse has now been ordered to sever the disgraced Duke of York's annual personal allowance, said to be worth £1million a year, The Express reports.
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A source said "The duke is no longer a financial burden on the King," according to a new biography by royal write Robert Hardman.
Earlier this year it was reported Charles reportedly warned Andrew of serious consequences if he failed to leave Royal Lodge. The 64-year-old's persistent refusal to take up the new property after previous requests is reported to have annoyed Charles.
A royal source told the Times in the summer: "The King's kindness is not without limit and there is a very good option for Andrew to move into Frogmore Cottage, recently vacated by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, which also has the benefit of being within the Windsor Castle security cordon hence reducing the need for alternative round-the-clock security for Royal Lodge."
One acquaintance of the Duke of York told the newspaper that he is likely to "dig in" if the stand-off continues, and that he had already enjoyed a "stay of execution" in light of Sarah Ferguson and the King's own recent illnesses.
Buckingham Palace and Prince Andrew have been approached for comment by the Mirror.
The move comes after the king and queen returned from a successful tour of Australia. The royals wrote on X: "As our visits to Australia and Samoa come to a close, my wife and I would like to thank both nations for the warmest of welcomes and for the countless fond memories we will carry in our hearts for many years to come.
"Even when we are far apart in distance, the many close connections that unite us across the globe and through our Commonwealth family have been renewed, and will remain as profound as they are enduring."