William's Duchy of Cornwall is no better than a 'medieval slush fund' (2024)

The Prince of Wales is to spend £3 million on affordable housing at Newquay on land controlled by his Duchy of Cornwall.

This sounds impressive - but less so when you read the small print.

Only 40 per cent of the proposed development will actually be classed as affordable. One hundred per cent of the rental income will go into William's coffers.

The unvarnished reality is that the Duchy, which William has inherited now that he has succeeded his father as Prince of Wales, is a hard-nosed business that seeks to maximise its profits.

William, Prince of Wales and Duke of Cornwall pictured on Duchy land on Dartmoor, Devon, last year. He was there to announce plans to regenerate and expand an area of woodland by 2040

Despite its name, the Duchy of Cornwall holds most of its land in the neighbouring county, Devon

The Duchy even owns the Oval cricket ground in south London, where Surrey play. Former England cricket captain Alastair Cook is pictured walking off at the end of the fifth test against India in 2018 having recently announced his retirement

It provides William with a regular income estimated at £24m.

Of course any investment in affordable housing is welcome but let us not be fooled by the idea that this is unbridled generosity. It isn't.

When, last November,a cheeky 11-year-old askedPrince William what was in his bank account, the heir to the throne feigned a sort of jocular ignorance.

A wise move.

‘Too much to count,’ might be one answer.One billion pounds is another.

That’s the answer according to the calculations of the Sunday Times, which compiles an annual Rich List.

It is all rather opaque – deliberately so, no doubt.

For example, we don’t know how much has been passed to William in the way of money, art works or property by his wealthy relatives, including his late mother and the late Queen Mother.

Uniquely, royal wills remain secret.

We do know about William’s main source of annual income: the £24 million or so he now receives from his semi-feudal ownership of the Duchy of Cornwall, a sprawling estate of landholdings, businesses and properties.

The title is misleading as the bulk of the land it controls is in neighbouring county Devon, along with 160 miles of coastline plus residential and commercial properties galore across the country.

The tentacles of the Duchy stretch as far as Kent and include the Oval cricket ground in London.

It has become a formidable money-making machine.

Previously owned and controlled by his father as Prince of Wales, the Duchy of Cornwall is particularly interesting, not least in the light it sheds on how the royals first got rich – then stayed rich.

An often neglected point about the British Royal Family is that by 1760, as George III came to the throne, they were effectively bankrupt.

That’s why the King did a deal with Parliament to hand over Crown lands to the state in return for an annual maintenance grant known as a civil list. The lands in question are today managed by the misleadingly named Crown Estate - misleading because they now belong to us, not the Royal Family.

Parliament, meanwhile, would pick up the bill for costs previously falling to the monarch, such as for the army and the civil service.

The royals certainly did hand over a great deal of land - but this included neither the Duchy of Cornwall nor the Duchy of Lancaster (the companion land and business holding,which is now controlled by William’s father, the King.)

Why was the transfer never made? Only because wild tracts of south west England and the Bowland Forest were essentially worthless back in 1760.

The Monarchy was close to bankrupt when George III came to the throne in 1760. He gave his land to the state in return for an annual income - but held on to the Duchies of Cornwall and Lancaster, then seen as worthless

The Duchy of Cornwall claims ownership over the Scilly Isles, where the Royal Family goes on holiday. Charles, Diana, William and Harry are pictured there in 1989

The Duke and duch*ess of Cambridge leave the Scilly Isle of Tresco on Pegasus in September 2016

The Scillies are famed for their sheltered weather and subtropical vegetation, such as that in the Abbey Gardens on Tresco

The Duchy of Lancaster was passed by the late Queen Elizabeth to her son Charles. The Whitewell Estate is in the Forest of Bowland in north Lancashire

It has proved a costly oversight for the tax payer - and increasingly so as the years pass and modern property values inflate Prince William's profits.

Not that modernity and the Duchy of Cornwall - which dates from 1337 when Edward III was on the throne go - hand-in-hand.

Some of its rules still have a feudal taste.

Take, for example, the dubious and little-known practice called Prince's Consent whereby the Prince of Wales receives notification in advance of intended legislation.

Well before MPs get a chance to examine certain proposed new laws, a Prince of Wales can argue for exemptions should the laws affect his private interests.

We know a little about this because, during a House of Lords debate in October 2021, Lord Berkeley asked for details of the issues on which the Consent of the Prince of Wales had been requested.

There was a long and somewhat surprising list, including provisions to give direction to waste carriers and those concerning the way that smoke control areas were to work.

On other occasions, Consent has been sought from the prince for Bills such as the Redress for Survivors (Historical Child Abuse in Care) Scotland Act 2021 and the Parking (Code of Conduct) Act 2018.

Why, we do not know.

However, the fact that consent had been requested and then recorded means, in practice, that the exemptions are available to the Prince of Wales.

Another exemption can be found in Section 14 of the Nuclear Explosions (Prohibition and Inspections) Act 1998.

This means that William can get out his chemistry set and cause a nuclear explosion safe if the knowledge that he won't be prosecuted.

This is absurd, perhaps, but other exemptions are rather more sinister.

The Leasehold Reform Act 1967 exempts the Duchy of Cornwall from its provisions meaning that William's tenants are unable to buy their properties in perpetuity.

Most other people in the country can. Just not William's tenants.

They do not even have a right to secure a lease extension.

Leasehold arrangements - under which a landlord owns the 'freehold' and a resident can only buy a form of ownership, a 'lease' for a number of years - are hugely controversial and undergoing important changes.

Once again, however, it seems the Duchy will be exempt from parts ofthe relevant legislation, in this case the new Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill currently winding its way through parliament.

One Duchy resident, Jane Giddins, has called this 'naked feudalism'.

The leases themselves are often abnormally short, perhaps 21 years, loading the dice still more heavily against the tenant.

In one case, the Duchy allowed someone to fund and build a house on Duchy land, but demanded they sign a short lease enabling the transfer of the building to the Duchy after the death of the leaseholder - without compensation.

The Mail On Sunday reported that local people were asked to apply to live in a bungalow on a short, two-year lease. Yet the same building was offered with a much fuller ten-year lease to the doubtless more affluent readers of Country Life magazine.

Meanwhile, rent increases, particularly on the Scilly Isles - which are claimed by the Duchy - have been rising steeply beyond inflation. This is fine for wealthy incomers wanting holiday homes, not so fine for the native population who have been there generations.

We can be in no doubt about Prince William's personal involvement, by the way.

The latest Duchy report notes that 'the Dukes of Cornwall have traditionally managed their own estates, and today the new Duke of Cornwall will carry the custom forward by actively leading the Duchy and chairing the Prince’s Council.'

The Prince's Council is the hands-on management committee of the Duchy.

The senior officer is the new Lord Warden of the Stanneries, Hugo van Vredenburch C, FAC, IC, Rem, RC, CPDC, NZTF. His background is in investments and a new Investment Committee has recently been established to maximise income for William.

It is questionable how familiar the elevated Lord Warden is with the day-to-day challenges of the ordinary people who comprise the 600 or so Duchy tenants.

One aspect which will certainly be of interest to him and the Prince relates to those who live in the Duchy but subsequently die without leaving a will or any obvious relatives.

Under an antiquated provision called Bona Vacantia, which dates back centuries, the estates of such individuals are captured by the Duchy.

In 2022, this amounted to the tidy sum of £293,000. A further £811,000 is being held in case of future claims, and is no doubt earning useful interest at the bank.

The Duchy has long said that this income is used for charitable purposes, after generous processing costs have been deducted of course, but recent revelations have shown that money from this source is in fact being used to improve Duchy properties, so pushing up potential rental income for William.

The latest Duchy report shows £109,000 was made in charitable donations in 2022, which seems modest when the overall profit is north of £20million.

The Duchies of Cornwall and Lancaster are significant to the royals - and should be significant to us to. Not just because they were acquired in doubtful circ*mstances and not just because they are exploited with acumen.

They are important because they sum up the ‘heads I win, tails you lose’ approach to finance that sees the Windsors' income balloon even while the rest of the economy flatlines.

The Royal Family, and especially King Charles, insists that this sprawling assemblage of land is a ‘private estate’. And that questionable assertion is used to avoid public scrutiny.

As they are judged to be private concerns, we have little means to establish the facts about the business conducted by the Duchies or the profits that they generate.

Yet, at the same time, the royals insist that, unlike every other private estate, no corporation or capital gains tax is payable.

In fact, when he was Prince of Wales (and owner of the Duchy of Cornwall), Charles tried to claim everything he could as a business expense so as to minimise tax.

He included all 28 of his personal staff - butlers, valets, gardeners and the like - and costs related to Camilla's Wiltshire home long before they were married. He even tried to claim his polo pony bills.

You might think this had little to do with the operation of the Duchy.

The claim that these are private estates might seem to be undermined by the fact thatthe Duchies are regulated by the Treasury under an 1838 Act.

There is a requirement to produce an annual report for Parliament - which doesn't sound so very private to me.

In my view, all profits from the Duchies should be paid over to Parliament as are the profits from the Crown Estate.

For William to keep the £20 million plus that comes from the Duchy of Cornwall is daylight robbery.

So far, King Charles has been adamant that profits from the Duchy would end up in only his pocket.

Can we expect anything different from William?

Charles says he wants to modernise the monarchy, and William has if anything been even more robust on this point.

But modernising has to mean more than simply reducing the numbers on the Buckingham Palace balcony.

Prince Wales during a recent visit to the Red Cross headquarters in London. Will he be a modernising prince?

Writer and former MP Norman Baker believes Prince William should hand the Duchy of Cornwall to the public

To be at all meaningful, modernisation has to mean, among other things, the end of medieval slush funds.

William is not King, but he can lead the way by publicly accepting that the Duchy should be a public asset, not a private one, and oversee its integration into the public Crown Estate.

So is he going to be a truly reforming prince? On current evidence, I doubt it.

  • Norman Baker is author of ...And What Do You Do? What the Royal Family Don't Want You to Know, published by Biteback
William's Duchy of Cornwall is no better than a 'medieval slush fund' (2024)

FAQs

Who actually owns the Duchy of Cornwall? ›

The eldest son of the reigning British monarch obtains possession of the duchy and the title of Duke of Cornwall at birth or when his parent succeeds to the throne, but may not sell assets for personal benefit and has limited rights and income while a minor. The current duke is Prince William.

What happens to the Duchy of Cornwall if the monarchy is abolished? ›

What would happen to the Duchy of Cornwall if the monarchy was abolished? Interestingly, current legislation stipulates that if there is no Duke of Cornwall then the Duchy reverts to the monarch, and the money that the monarch receives from the UK Treasury is reduced by the amount of the Duchy's income as a result.

How much is the Duchy of Cornwall worth? ›

The Duchy's assets reportedly jumped from £93 million to £1.2 billion in 2022, and King Charles's take home was £23 million in 2021/22. He used this money to fund his fancy life—and provided for several other members of the British royal family. William will likely do the same now that the Duchy is in his hands!

Does Prince William now own the Duchy of Cornwall? ›

The Duchy of Cornwall is a private estate, established in 1337 by Edward III to provide independence to his son and heir, Prince Edward. In 1969, Charles was 21 when he became entitled to the full income of the Duchy and took over its management. Now, William has taken over the estate from his father.

Does Prince Charles pay tax on Duchy of Cornwall? ›

2.2 The Prince of Wales voluntarily pays income tax on Duchy of Cornwall income not used for official purposes, on the same basis as the previous Prince of Wales.

Does the Duchy of Sussex have an income? ›

Do The Duke and duch*ess of Sussex earn income? No, under the current structure and financing arrangements, they are prohibited from earning any income in any form.

How many Brits want to abolish monarchy? ›

A survey by the National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) shows public support for the monarchy has fallen to a historic low. A total of 45% of respondents said either it should be abolished, was not at all important or not very important.

Why is the Duchy of Cornwall so rich? ›

The Duke of Cornwall was essentially given governance over the sprawling district. Income is generated from residential and commercial rents paid to the Duke.

Who would get the crown estate if the monarchy was abolished? ›

Technically the crown estate is owned by the royal family. If the monarchy was abolished peacefully, they'd either get to keep their estate, or the state would buy it from them. If it was abolished by force, they'd get nothing, and would be lucky to keep their lives.

How much does Prince William make a year? ›

Prince William has received a whopping $7.5 million in private income this year according to the Duchy of Cornwall's 2023 annual report. He had become the 25th Duke of Cornwall after the death of Queen Elizabeth II and subsequent accession to the throne by King Charles III, his father.

How much will William make from the Duchy of Cornwall? ›

Nowadays one of his main sources of income is via the Duchy of Cornwall, which made profits of $26 million in 2020 and $24 million in 2021. According to Bloomberg, William will now earn $24 million a year from the Duchy of Cornwall. Related: How Long Was Elizabeth Queen?

How much tax is paid by the Duchy of Cornwall? ›

The Duke is currently taxed at 45% marginal income tax rate, and pays tax on his income from the Duchy as agreed within the Memorandum of Understanding with HMRC renewed as recently as March 2013.

Does Harry get a Duchy? ›

Harry remains a prince and is fifth in line to the throne. The couple kept their Duke and duch*ess of Sussex titles, but are no longer addressed as his or her royal highness (HRH). Harry also gave up his military titles.

What did William inherit from Diana? ›

Prince William inherited a huge amount of cash from his mother, the late Princess Diana when she died. The late Princess of Wales left £12,966,022 for both her sons, Princes Harry and William but was reduced to £8,502,330 after death duties.

What is Prince William's net worth? ›

Charles' eldest son, Prince William, now has the Duchy of Cornwall—a large, lucrative estate—in his possession, along with $1.2 billion in net assets that include the Oval cricket ground in London, Charles' former residence at Highgrove House, and the Isles of Scilly, according to Forbes.

Where does the money from the Duchy of Cornwall come from? ›

The Duke of Cornwall was essentially given governance over the sprawling district. Income is generated from residential and commercial rents paid to the Duke.

How did the royals get the Duchy of Cornwall? ›

In 1300, Richard's son died without an heir. The Duchy lands were largely forgotten as part of the Crown Estate for nearly 40 years until Edward III re-created the Duchy of Cornwall from these lands as a gift for his son, the Black Prince, by charter in 1337.

Can the Duchy of Cornwall be sold? ›

The Duchy of Cornwall was created by King Edward III for his son in a charter, or legal declaration of rights, which asserted that each future Duke of Cornwall would be the eldest son of the monarch and male heir to the throne, and would enjoy income from the duchy estates but would not be able to sell its assets.

Where do William and Kate get their money? ›

The remaining $8.9 million went to Charles' children with his late wife Princess Diana—Prince William and Prince Harry—as well as non-official purchases and a royal savings account. William and Kate's income also include money from Sovereign Grant, a taxpayer fund paid each year to the British royal family.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rev. Leonie Wyman

Last Updated:

Views: 5263

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rev. Leonie Wyman

Birthday: 1993-07-01

Address: Suite 763 6272 Lang Bypass, New Xochitlport, VT 72704-3308

Phone: +22014484519944

Job: Banking Officer

Hobby: Sailing, Gaming, Basketball, Calligraphy, Mycology, Astronomy, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Rev. Leonie Wyman, I am a colorful, tasty, splendid, fair, witty, gorgeous, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.