Nearly eight years after their high-profile 2018 royal honeymoon tour, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have returned to Australian soil for a four-day visit that blends charity outreach with paid commercial engagements – and already draws mixed reactions from local communities and lingering questions over public security costs.
The couple, who stepped down as full-time working British royals in early 2020 and relinquished their official HRH titles, touched down at Melbourne’s Tullamarine Airport just after 6:30 a.m. on Tuesday local time, flying commercial on a Qantas jet from their current home in Los Angeles. This marks their first trip to Australia since the 2019 Invictus Games, and a stark contrast to their 2018 tour, which drew massive public crowds and a packed schedule of open royal engagements. This time around, no public meet-and-greet events are on the official agenda.
The couple’s representatives frame the lack of public appearances as an intentional choice to minimize disruption for local communities and host organizations. But the visit’s structure, which pairs non-profit work with for-profit paid appearances, has already sparked scrutiny. The itinerary opens with charity-focused stops: the pair will meet pediatric patients and medical staff at a Melbourne children’s hospital, spend time with Australian military veterans and their families, and connect with survivors of domestic family violence across the three cities they are visiting: Melbourne, Canberra, and Sydney.
Alongside these charitable engagements, however, are two high-ticket paid events that will net the couple personal income – figures that have not been disclosed to the public. Prince Harry is set to deliver a keynote address at the Invictus Psychosocial Safety Summit in Melbourne, where general admission tickets range from AU$1,000 to AU$2,400 per person. A portion of ticket proceeds is earmarked for Australian suicide prevention charity Lifeline, but there has been no confirmation from event organizers whether Harry will receive a speaking fee for his appearance.
For Meghan’s part, she is scheduled to lead an exclusive in-person conversation at a women-only “girls weekend” wellness retreat hosted by the Her Best Life podcast at a five-star Sydney beachside hotel on the Saturday following the official close of the tour. Attendees pay up to AU$3,199 for access, with premium VIP packages offering a group photo opportunity with the duchess. As of the arrival date, the event has not sold out, with organizers still advertising a small number of remaining spots, and no details have been released about Meghan’s compensation for the appearance.
Industry observers also note the trip doubles as an exploratory visit for Meghan’s upcoming lifestyle brand, As Ever. Trademark records from the Australian government’s intellectual property database show the brand registered trademarks for 12 different product categories across the country last year, and the brand has already been heavily featured in a Netflix docuseries produced by the couple’s own production company.
Beyond the commercial aspects of the private visit, one of the biggest unanswered questions centers on who will cover the cost of security. Both Victoria Police and New South Wales Police have confirmed they will deploy additional officers to maintain public safety during the couple’s stay, but neither force has confirmed whether Australian taxpayers will be on the hook for the extra security expenses. “Police routinely assess events and visits and will deploy resources as necessary to ensure community safety,” a Victoria Police spokesperson said, echoing a similar statement from New South Wales Police that emphasized minimizing disruption to local residents.
Security is already a contentious issue for Prince Harry, who is still fifth in line to the British throne. Just last month, he lost a high-profile court appeal in the UK over the decision to downgrade his publicly funded police protection when he is in the country. The Australia trip also marks Harry’s first public appearance since news broke last week that he is being sued for defamation by Sentebale, the African children’s charity he co-founded more than 15 years ago.
Many ordinary Australians have expressed confusion over the purpose of the visit, with no clear public mandate for the couple’s trip as private citizens. Unlike their 2018 tour, which was an official royal visit with widespread public engagement, this low-key, commercial-charity hybrid trip has left many locals questioning what the pair hope to accomplish, and why they have chosen to visit now.
