As Meghan Markle continues building her lifestyle brand, As Ever, into something with real commercial weight, attention has quietly shifted to what a potential UK launch might mean for the relationships she left behind, and whether the British royal family would view it as an intrusion or simply as business.
The answer, at least according to one former palace insider, may be less dramatic than the headlines suggest.
A delicate overlap with Highgrove
The concern that has circulated in recent months centers on King Charles and his long-established Highgrove brand, a collection of organic and artisan products tied closely to the monarch’s decades-long commitment to sustainable farming and conservation. The brand is not merely a commercial venture. It is deeply connected to charitable work and the kind of legacy-building that defines how Charles has chosen to use his platform.
Earlier reports suggested that Prince Harry had been quietly urging Markle to be mindful of that overlap, aware that in royal circles, anything perceived as encroaching on Highgrove’s commercial space carries meaning beyond profit margins. The fear was that a competing line of artisan preserves and lifestyle goods, bearing the unmistakable Markle name and global following, could draw attention and revenue away from causes the King holds close.
It was a sensitive calculation, balancing Markle’s right to build her own business against the unspoken codes that still govern how the Sussexes are perceived within the institution they stepped away from in 2020.
What a former butler now says
A former royal butler has offered a notably more relaxed reading of the situation. Speaking publicly about the prospect of As Ever products landing on British shelves, the insider suggested that King Charles would have no meaningful objection to Markle selling her goods in the UK. The two brands, while superficially similar in their artisan positioning, occupy different enough spaces that direct competition seems unlikely.
The former butler went further, floating the idea that Markle might consider sending a few jars of her products to the palace as a gesture of goodwill. It was offered somewhat lightly, but the underlying point carried weight. A small, personal gesture of that kind could serve as an informal olive branch, a way of signaling that the Sussex brand expansion is not an act of provocation but simply the next chapter in a life being built on different terms.
Reading between the lines
What makes this moment interesting is not the jam. It is what the jam represents. Every move Meghan Markle makes in the public eye still gets filtered through the lens of her departure from royal life, her relationship with the press and her standing with a family that has remained largely silent on the matter.
A UK launch of As Ever would be her most direct commercial footprint on British soil since she and Harry relocated to California. Whether it is received as a power move or a peace offering may depend entirely on how it is packaged, literally and figuratively.
For now, the palace has said nothing. And sometimes, in royal terms, silence is the most encouraging thing of all.

