Tuesday, 20 January, 2026
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The surprising message the Royal Family sent makes their 2026 priorities clear

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The King’s Christmas Day speech wasn’t the only message the royals delivered late last year and this one came through loud and clear as soon as I saw them walking to church in Norfolk. This tradition has been kept going for decades now and it gives us an opportunity to see more of the Royal Family out in public than usual.

Even so, I was surprised to spot Princess Eugenie and Princess Beatrice with their husbands alongside the King and Queen. Just days earlier, reports had suggested the sisters wouldn’t have Christmas at Sandringham House and yet, there they were.

Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi (L), Princess Eugenie of York (C) and Princess Beatrice of York leave after attending the Royal Family's traditional Christmas Day service at St Mary Magdalene Church

(Image credit: Photo by Henry NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images)


They could have chosen to spend the festive season with Andrew and Sarah Ferguson at Royal Lodge. It’s thought to have been the last ever Christmas the former couple will have there before moving out. However, Eugenie and Beatrice took their uncle up on his invite and they didn’t shy away from the public either.

Princess Eugenie walked close behind King Charles and Queen Camilla and Beatrice and her husband Edoardo were seen chatting with Zara Tindall and her daughter. The message of family unity from His Majesty and his nieces couldn’t have been clearer.

When it was first announced that Andrew would relinquish using his Duke of York title, reports suggested King Charles wished for Eugenie and Beatrice to be “protected” from their parents’ fall from grace. They have retained their own titles and His Majesty inviting them to Christmas signals that they remain at the heart of his family.

Zara Tindall, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi, Lena Tindall and Princess Beatrice attend the Christmas Morning Service at Sandringham Church on December 25, 2025

(Image credit: Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage via Getty)

I think it’s incredibly interesting that Eugenie and Beatrice accepted the invite for this first Christmas after their father became Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. It shows they’re very much keeping their relationships with the wider family going strong.

However they might feel privately about everything that’s happened with Andrew and Sarah, their choice of Christmas venue could be viewed as public support for the King and the Royal Family heading into 2026.

Beatrice, whose place in the royal line of succession means she’s a Counsellor of State to their uncle, has represented him before. It’s possible that she might continue to do so, and she and Eugenie are likely still going to go to Royal Ascot and other events.

Princess Eugenie and Princess Beatrice attend the Christmas Morning Service at Sandringham Church on December 25, 2025

(Image credit: Photo by Jordan Peck/Getty Images)

Christmas Day was their first big appearance in months and they had the support and company of so many other royals alongside them, no doubt making this slightly easier than it might otherwise have been.

“They did the right thing – showing loyalty to King Charles and to the Crown. It’s easy to say this is a snub [to their parents], but they would say, ‘I’m a royal princess, I’m in line to the throne, I have been invited to attend the King’s Christmas celebrations and you don’t turn down the King’s invitation,'” royal author Robert Jobson recently said of the sisters’ decision.

As Princess Eugenie and Princess Beatrice are both non-working royals the next big family occasion they might attend is Easter at Windsor Castle. Like at Christmas, the royals are seen walking to church and it’ll be interesting to see if they take up this invitation too.

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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