Published • loading... • Updated
Sarah Ferguson's Next Home After Royal Lodge Eviction Amid Royal 'Feud' over Housing
Sarah Ferguson must find new housing after a nearly two-decade rent-free stay at Royal Lodge, with a move to Sandringham estate cottage expected soon, Buckingham Palace said.
- On Thursday, Sarah Ferguson, former Duchess of York, will leave Royal Lodge and move to a cottage on the Sandringham estate, ending a nearly two-decade, rent-free stay at the 30-room Windsor property.
- Formal notice has been served to surrender the Royal Lodge lease, and King Charles initiated measures that forced Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson to leave.
- Ferguson's past property sales include a 20 million chalet listed in 2022 and a 4.25 million terraced property, supported by royal gifts from late Queen Elizabeth.
- Insiders quickly denied any offer of Adelaide Cottage, leaving Sarah Ferguson, former Duchess of York, to arrange alternative accommodation after reports she requested it earlier this week.
- Commentators say Ferguson could relocate abroad, possibly to Switzerland after selling her Belgravia property earlier this year, while Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie keep their titles and Sandringham invitations.
Insights by Ground AI
18 Articles
18 Articles
+4 Reposted by 4 other sources
A new start for Sarah Ferguson: Why she consciously goes her own way after the title loss of ex-husband Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.
+2 Reposted by 2 other sources
Eviction concludes fall from grace for Queen’s favourite son
Once a prince with a rent-free lodge in Windsor Park, Andrew prepares to move to windblown Norfolk, out of sight, if not out of mind, for the royal family.
·Sydney, Australia
Read Full ArticleReposted by
One News Page
Sarah Ferguson's next home after Royal Lodge eviction amid royal 'feud' over housing
Sarah Ferguson and Andrew Windsor have been forced to leave their 30-room mansion, Royal Lodge, amid ongoing controversy and speculation is mounting over where the Duchess of York will live next.
·Glasgow, United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources18
Leaning Left6Leaning Right1Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution50% Left
Bias Distribution
- 50% of the sources lean Left
50% Left
L 50%
C 42%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium












