Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are reportedly seething after the royal family took another brutal step toward wiping away their old life inside the monarchy.
Their former Windsor home, Frogmore Cottage, is now set to be stripped of the lavish renovations the Sussexes made before they abandoned royal duty and launched their new life in California.
The move is more than a renovation project. It looks like a royal reset.
According to sources close to the couple who spoke to The Royalist, Harry and Meghan are furious that the Crown Estate plans to reverse the roughly $3 million makeover they once poured into the property. The home, once given to them by Queen Elizabeth II as a wedding gift, is reportedly being converted back into staff apartments.
In other words, the Sussex chapter at Frogmore is being scrubbed away brick by brick.
The cottage was renovated before Archie’s birth in 2019, when Harry and Meghan were still supposed to be full-time working royals. British taxpayers originally covered the huge bill because Frogmore was meant to be their official residence.
But after the couple quit royal life, fled to North America, and began cashing in on their royal grievances, they repaid the money.
That apparently was not enough to save the home.
Frogmore has reportedly sat empty since 2023, when Harry and Meghan were formally evicted after years of public attacks on the royal family through interviews, Netflix specials, and Harry’s explosive memoir.
Royal commentator Tom Sykes said the couple likely could have kept the cottage if they had not spent years “chucking rocks at the institution.”
That may be the most devastating part for the Sussexes.
Frogmore was not just a house. It was their last real foothold inside the royal world they walked away from, then repeatedly criticized from their mansion in Montecito.
Now, that foothold is gone.
Sources close to Harry and Meghan reportedly believe Queen Elizabeth would never have allowed the eviction while she was alive, claiming King Charles waited until after her death to force Harry out of the Windsor property.
Sykes said they may be right, arguing that the late queen hated confrontation and likely would not have wanted that particular family battle.
But he also said Harry was “incredibly naive” if he thought the palace would not strike back once the queen was gone.
And strike back it did.
To critics, the message from the palace could not be clearer: you cannot trash the family, profit from the crown, and still expect to keep a royal bolthole near Windsor Castle.
For Harry and Meghan, Frogmore’s fate is another humiliating reminder that royal privilege has limits.
They left the palace behind.
Now the palace is making sure there is almost nothing left of them behind.
