How does the prince pay? The mystery of Andrew's income
The Guardian
|October 25, 2025
It is one of the mysteries of the modern monarchy - and it's an issue under more scrutiny than ever before. How on earth does Prince Andrew fund his lifestyle?
This is a man who has lived a life of luxury for decades, been an outcast for years because of his association with Jeffrey Epstein, yet has no visible means of financial support.
Even King Charles is said to be unsure about some of the sources of his brother's income, particularly how he finds the significant sums of money needed to afford the upkeep of his home, the 30-room Royal Lodge.
The disgraced prince has been able to keep his financial affairs from the public for years through a mixture of the traditional secrecy that envelops the Windsors and the confidentiality of his dealings with wealthy, mainly foreign, people.
But the public furore over his alleged abuse of Virginia Giuffre may make it more difficult for him to justify the grandeur in which he has been living and to maintain the veil around his financial affairs.
The outrage has punctured the usually suffocating consensus within Westminster in which politicians refrain from publicly criticising the royal family. Keir Starmer has said he favoured proper scrutiny of the prince's housing arrangements at Royal Lodge, and a committee of senior MPs has now requested more details. Among those speaking out this week was Robert Jenrick, the Tory shadow justice secretary, who said: "It's about time Prince Andrew took himself off to live in private and make his own way in life. He has disgraced himself, he has embarrassed the royal family time and again. The public are sick of him."
Andrew's only current source of income is the pension he gets from his days in the navy between 1979 and 2001. This is said to amount to £20,000 a year - hardly enough to buy the lodge in Switzerland that he acquired in 2014 for a reported £18m, nor to finance the maintenance of the Royal Lodge, the Georgian mansion which sits in 40 hectares (98 acres) of secluded grounds in Windsor Great Park.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 25, 2025-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Guardian
The Guardian
Hopes of deal rise as doctors' strike ends
Resident doctors say they will approach talks with Wes Streeting with a “can-do spirit” to avoid further strikes in the new year, as their five-day industrial action ends this morning.
2 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Desire for an away victory
While it took longer than expected on the fifth day in Adelaide, eventually it was done.
3 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
All over in 11 days England's careless machine collapses like a castle of dust
Ashes are gone again and the reckoning is coming for a regime that lost not just quickly, but sloppily, refusing to adhere to cricket's basics
6 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Army site to take asylum seekers in new year
The Home Office plans to send the first group of asylum seekers to a military site in East Sussex in the new year, the Guardian understands.
2 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Scrutiny on McCullum but ECB eager to avoid clearout
The England and Wales Cricket Board is eager to avoid a mass clearout of England’s senior leadership in the wake of another humiliating away Ashes series defeat.
2 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Ineos has received up to £70m of UK state aid in four years
Chemical companies owned by the billionaire Jim Ratcliffe had already been granted as much as £70m in UK state aid in the four years before last week's £50m government bailout for its Grangemouth plant in Scotland.
1 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Emissions This was the year many firms rejected net zero
After Donald Trump returned to the White House with a rallying cry to the fossil fuel industry to “drill baby, drill”, a backlash against net zero appears to be gathering momentum.
3 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
The silencing of the lambs
New Forest reels from carcasses case with animal cruelty rising
4 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Confident Hearts show steel to see off Rangers
The telling moment was not Stuart Findlay’s header to open the scoring.
3 mins
December 22, 2025
The Guardian
Van Graan uses shock and awe move in rout
Bath returned to the summit of the Prem, ruthlessly exposing the gulf between top and bottomat Kingston Park.
2 mins
December 22, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

