The late Queen’s corgis have been living at Royal Lodge with Andrew and Sarah Ferguson.

Sandy and Muick
The late Queen’s corgis have been living with Andrew and Sarah (Image: Peter Nicholls – WPA Pool/Getty Images)

Buckingham Palace has revealed what will happen to the late Queen Elizabeth II’s corgis who currently live at Royal Lodge. On Thursday, it was confirmed that Andrew Mountbatten Windsor would not only lose his royal titles, but his Windsor mansion too.

King Charles’ brother has lived in this Royal Family mansion for over two decades, with his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson also living at the 30-room abode since 2008. However, while they co-habited successfully, the eviction from Royal Lodge is now bringing an end to the divorced couple living under the same roof.

Instead, Andrew will be housed at a private property on the King’s Sandringham estate, while Sarah will sort out her own housing arrangements.

This news brought many questions to the surface, including about what would happen to the late Queen’s two corgis Muick and Sandy, who have lived with Andrew and Sarah since Her Majesty’s death in 2022.

It has now been confirmed that while the dogs will be leaving Royal Lodge when Andrew and Sarah do, they will stay “with the family”.

As reported by Hello! magazine, Buckingham Palace said: “The corgis will remain with the family.”

It is not known whether that means they will live with Andrew, 65, or Sarah, 66, or even the divorced couple’s daughters Princess Eugenie, 35, and Princess Beatrice, 37.

Sarah Ferguson

Sarah has shared various updates about caring for Sandy and Muick (Image: Instagram / Sarah Ferguson)

If they are to no longer live with Sarah, it is believed the former duchess would be upset by this, as she has formed a good relationship with the corgis.

Over the last three years, she has shared various photographs of the dogs, and even once revealed that she feels like when they bark, it is the late Queen talking to her.

Speaking at the London Creative Women Platform Forum earlier this year, she said: “I have her (the late Queen’s) dogs, I have her corgis.

“Every morning they come in and go ‘woof woof’ and all that and I’m sure it’s her talking to me.”