Meghan Markleis now 'basically the breadwinner' for her family in California, with the couple's money said to be 'tight' after theirNetflix deal endedand Prince Harry's charitable work failed to cover their reported $6 million (£4.4 million) annual outgoings, according toPage Six.
Meghan and Harry left frontline royal life in 2020 and settled in Montecito, an ultra-affluent enclave north of Los Angeles, pitching themselves as financially independent through media, production and philanthropic ventures. Their headline-grabbing agreement with Netflix became a symbol of that break from the Royal Family's funding, but the partnership has now quietly run its course, prompting renewed scrutiny of how the Sussexes are actually bankrolling life in a $15 million (£11 million) mansion.
Meghan is inviting fans back into the world of As Ever 🍊✨ The Duchess of Sussex, 44, offered a fresh glimpse into life at her Montecito home as she picks fruit, arranges flowers and showcases the brand’s jams and marmalades.“What began with fruit from Meghan’s garden,…pic.twitter.com/PUzY3hWDn9
The latest claims centre on the scale of the couple's outgoings. One unnamed insider toldPage Sixthat Markle and Harry need about $6 million a year to stay afloat in the US. Roughly half of that, the source alleged, is swallowed up by private security and mortgage payments on their home, estimated at around $3 million (£2.2 million) annually.
'Money is tight,' the source was quoted as saying, painting a picture far removed from the glossy image of unfettered post-royal freedom. With the Netflix pipeline no longer guaranteed, the tipster suggested it is Meghan's earning power, not Harry's charitable brand, that is propping up their West Coast existence.
Nothing in these financial claims has been independently confirmed; the couple have not disclosed their current income, and no official figures support the $6 million estimate.
Even so, the line that Meghan is now 'basically the breadwinner' taps into a long-running narrative about the Duchess as the driving force behind their commercial decisions. Since stepping back from the Royal Family, she has launched a podcast, pursued high-profile media ventures, and recently been linked to apossible return to acting.
Meghan, heading back to Hollywood, has been bubbling for months. Years before she married into the monarchy, she was best known for her role as Rachel Zane in the legal dramaSuits. Reruns of the series have enjoyed a streaming resurgence, sparking predictable chatter that Meghan could leverage that renewed interest.
Those close to the couple, however, have pushed back on claims that she is actively chasing a comeback on screen. Insiders cited in the same reports insisted she is not plotting a full-blown acting return, despite the appealing symmetry of the story: a former actress, cash allegedly tightening, contemplating a return to the craft that first paid her bills.
At the same time, royal watchers have been quick to connect the money talk with separate rumours that Harry and Meghan may be exploring ways tostep closer to the royal fold again. The couple's Montecito chapter has been defined by a mixture of high-earning media deals and bruising public disclosures about life inside 'the Firm.' If those deals are no longer as lucrative, it inevitably begs the question of what comes next.
Source: International Business Times UK