In a development that has stunned royal watchers and reignited debates over family loyalty, financial stewardship, and the enduring legacy of Princess Diana, Prince William and the Spencer family have jointly announced the temporary freeze of approximately $14 million in inheritance funds originally bequeathed to Prince Harry from his mother’s estate. The announcement, delivered through a carefully worded joint statement from Kensington Palace and representatives of Earl Spencer (Diana’s brother Charles), emphasizes that this action is not punitive but a strict enforcement of the terms laid out in Diana’s 1993 will and subsequent trust arrangements.

The funds in question—part of the residuary estate from Princess Diana’s £21 million fortune (after inheritance tax, approximately £13-17 million split equally between her sons)—were placed in a discretionary trust following her tragic death in 1997. Diana’s will originally stipulated that her sons would access their full shares at age 25, with income available earlier at the trustees’ discretion. However, in a lesser-known variance approved by the courts in the late 1990s (often referred to as “The Arrangement”), the distribution age was extended to 30 to allow for better long-term management and protection of the assets. By the time Harry turned 30 in 2014, his share—bolstered by savvy investments—had grown significantly, with estimates placing it around $10-14 million in today’s terms (accounting for inflation, growth, and currency fluctuations).

Harry received his full entitlement years ago, using portions to fund his post-royal life in California, as he confirmed in his 2021 Oprah interview: “I’ve got what my mum left me and without that, we wouldn’t have been able to do this.” Yet, recent legal reviews—prompted by ongoing family tensions—have uncovered a rarely discussed conditional clause embedded in the trust deed and Diana’s accompanying “Letter of Wishes.”