Prince Harry is quietly working toward something he has not had in years — a genuine reconciliation with his father, King Charles III. According to royal observers, Harry is hoping to receive an invitation to Sandringham this summer during a planned trip to the United Kingdom, a visit that could serve as a meaningful step toward repairing one of the most publicly fractured relationships in the royal family’s recent history. But the path back is narrow, and the complications are mounting.
At the center of the concern is Meghan Markle. While Harry’s desire to rebuild bridges with his family appears genuine, his wife’s business ambitions may be moving on a timeline that does not align with the sensitivities of a royal reunion. That tension is now drawing attention from those who follow the monarchy closely.
The As Ever problem
Royal writer Richard Palmer has raised a specific concern about the timing of Meghan’s lifestyle brand, As Ever, and its potential U.K. launch. If the Duchess of Sussex were to use a visit to Britain as an opportunity to promote the brand publicly, it could put King Charles in an uncomfortable position. The monarch would risk appearing as though he is lending the prestige of the Crown to a commercial venture, something the palace would be unlikely to sanction and even less likely to welcome.
Palmer noted that the King would not want to be seen as providing a backdrop or implied endorsement for a product launch, no matter how indirect. The optics, he suggested, would need to be managed with great care. Timing, in this case, is everything.
Trust at the heart of it
Beyond the business concerns, Palmer pointed to something deeper that continues to shadow any prospect of a Sussex return to the royal fold. The relationship between Harry and Charles has never fully recovered from the fallout of Harry and Meghan’s public statements and interviews, which aired grievances that many inside the palace found deeply damaging.
Palmer described the current state of affairs as one defined by ongoing tension and significant trust issues on both sides. While there are signs of communication between the Sussexes’ team and Buckingham Palace, that contact has not yet translated into the kind of warmth that would make a summer visit feel natural or straightforward.
What Charles might actually want
Despite those complications, Palmer believes the King himself may be genuinely eager for a reunion, particularly one that involves Harry and Meghan’s children. He pointed to a moment during the Trooping the Colour celebrations for Queen Elizabeth’s Platinum Jubilee as evidence that Charles has not been untouched by the distance between him and his grandchildren. That visit, brief as it was, appeared to mean something to the King on a personal level that goes beyond the politics of the rift.
Palmer suggested that a stay at a royal residence could make sense logistically and emotionally if the goal is truly to rebuild the relationship rather than to perform reconciliation for public consumption. The key, he argued, is that any visit must be seen as a private family matter rather than a managed media moment.
The line between family and brand
That distinction may be the hardest one for the Sussexes to navigate. Since stepping back from royal duties, Harry and Meghan have built careers that are inseparable from their public profiles. Every appearance, every launch and every statement carries weight that a more private family simply would not have to contend with.
For Harry’s reconciliation hopes to move forward, those two worlds, the personal and the commercial, may need to be kept further apart than they have been. Whether Meghan is willing or able to draw that line remains the open question at the heart of a very carefully watched summer.

