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According to information obtained by the Daily Mail, King Charles is unlikely to ever reconcile with his brother, Prince Andrew, due to Andrew’s involvement in the Jeffrey Epstein sex scandal.
Speculation arose earlier this week when it was revealed that Prince Edward had quietly visited Andrew, who has been staying in seclusion at the Sandringham estate. This visit hinted at a possible softening of the royal family’s stance towards Andrew.
Adding to this speculation, it was reported that their sister, Princess Anne, had also recently reached out to Andrew, expressing concern for his well-being following his recent legal troubles.
However, royal insiders have been quick to dismiss the possibility of King Charles taking a similar approach. They firmly stated that there is “no chance whatsoever” of Charles mending fences with Andrew.
The estrangement between the 77-year-old King and his younger brother has been stark, persisting long before Andrew’s February arrest on charges related to his association with the convicted sex offender Epstein.
And there are numerous reasons why it is set to continue – ranging from the very personal to the matters of state, it’s said.
A source close to the royal family told the Daily Mail: ‘The hard reality is that the King may never speak to Andrew again.’
The source explained: ‘It would take an enormous shift in the King’s thinking for them even to be in the same room.
Andrew and Charles pictured in September 16, 2025 in London, at Katharine Duchess of Kent’s funeral
‘The fact that Edward has now visited Andrew and that Anne has spoken to him too might appear to suggest that Charles might be contemplating some kind of rapprochement – but that’s completely wrong.
‘They were never close as brothers in the first place, with tensions between them which long predate the Epstein scandal.
‘While in the context of the Epstein case the King feels that he was lied to and that’s not easy to forgive.
‘And Charles is not just a brother in this situation but also the King – and in that capacity he has to protect the monarchy above all other considerations, even personal ones.’
It is a distinction that goes to the very heart of the crisis – the eternal tension between blood and duty.
And, say those who know the inner workings of the Royal Household, it is a calculation Charles made long ago.
For this is not simply about past scandals or reputational damage, grave though those issues undoubtedly are. Nor is it merely about distancing the monarchy from controversy in the short term.
It is about potentially catastrophic legal peril.
‘With Andrew being arrested and facing possible criminal charges,’ another source explains, ‘the risks are enormous.’
The concern, they say, is far from theoretical. In the febrile climate surrounding Andrew, any fresh development or revived line of inquiry could swiftly become entangled in the legal proceedings.
And therein lies a constitutional nightmare.
‘One must remember,’ the source continues, ‘If Andrew is charged and there were conversations with the King, his lawyers could say they are important and, as a result, try to call Charles to give evidence — which His Majesty cannot do, as the case is brought in his name, Rex v Mountbatten-Windsor. It would collapse.’
It is a chilling prospect. The King — constitutionally unable to appear in court — being drawn, even indirectly, into a criminal case involving his own brother.
And with widespread public opprobrium towards Andrew, were it to appear that the King had somehow aided him avoid prosecution there would almost certainly be uproar.
Prince Edward secretly visited disgraced Andrew in his ‘exile’ on the Sandringham estate. The brothers pictured in 2023
The ramifications for the justice system, let alone the monarchy, would be seismic.
And there is a precedent for this doomsday scenario — one that has not been forgotten in royal circles.
Palace veterans recall only too well the extraordinary intervention of the late Queen during the trial of former butler, Paul Burrell in 2002,when he was accused of stealing hundreds of items from the late Diana, Princess of Wales, following her death.
As his Old Bailey trial commenced, it dramatically emerged that Queen Elizabeth had been told by Burrell he was holding items for safekeeping.
The trial abruptly collapsed.
The implication is clear: even the most seemingly innocuous interaction between monarch and subject can have profound legal consequences.
Charles, ever mindful of history, appears determined not to repeat it – and so the silence continues: no private meetings, nor conversations that could later be scrutinised in a courtroom.
It is, in effect, a quarantine – imposed to defend not against a virus, but legal jeopardy.
There is also the risk of tarnishing the Royal ‘brand’, which Charles has been determined to avoid at all costs.
‘The unequivocal advice he has been given in regard to Andrew is that he is damaging the monarchy,’ the source adds, ‘so the King has to completely disassociate himself both publicly and privately from him.’
It is, those close to the situation suggest, a decision rooted not only in present danger but in decades of strained relations between the two brothers, who were always distant growing up, with more than 11 years separating them.
The toxic mix of disdain and resentment stretches back years – even decades – to a time when Andrew was widely regarded as the late Queen’s favourite, while Charles bore the burden of heir apparent.
There were differences in temperament, outlook, and – crucially – judgement.
‘Edward and Anne are worried,’ one insider confides. ‘They’re family, first and foremost. They don’t want to see him completely cut off.’
Charles, cautious and often introspective, was wary of Andrew’s more cavalier approach to public life. He is said to have harboured serious reservations about his brother’s role as a trade envoy, fearing that the position exposed both Andrew and the monarchy to unnecessary risk.
‘Charles has always been wary of his brother,’ says a former courtier. ‘He didn’t want him to be trade envoy in the first place. He could see the potential for reputational damage.’
That damage, of course, has since been done – and far more catastrophically than Charles could ever have envisaged.
Incredibly, Andrew, meanwhile, believed he should have been next-in-line to the throne, rather than Charles, as his biographer Andrew Lownie has told the Mail.
‘He has a long-standing hatred of his brother Charles, who he sees as weak,’ he said. ‘[Andrew] detested the attention and adulation Charles received as the future king, feeling he was best suited for the role and superior, in general, to the then Prince of Wales.’
The overriding motivation behind Anne and Edward’s ‘welfare checks’ are the fears, whispered in palace corridors, about Andrew’s mental state following his isolation and the toll exacted by years of scandal, scrutiny, and now exile from public life in his Norfolk bolthole.
‘Edward and Anne are worried,’ one insider confides. ‘They’re family, first and foremost. They don’t want to see him completely cut off.’
Some may view Charles’ stance as ruthless; others as a display of the necessary mettle required in his role.
For Charles, the Crown comes first. It always has, and when the time comes for his son to ascend to the throne, the King wants to be sure he’s left the institution in the best possible state.
If that means sacrificing what little personal relationship he had with Andrew, so be it.
Following that discreet contact from the Duke of Edinburgh in person and the Princess Royal (by phone) Charles’s silence has been cast into even sharper relief.
Because while Edward and his wife Sophie quietly visited Andrew at Sandringham and Princess
Anne made her own overtures, insiders insist this is not the beginning of a thaw — but rather the clearest signal yet that Charles has drawn a line in the sand.