A single, quietly delivered demand has reportedly left Buckingham Palace reeling and exposed deep tensions that senior courtiers never anticipated: Meghan Markle is said to have asked that she be granted a formal royal title for her daughter Lilibet — one that would reflect her status as a granddaughter of the King and place her in the line of succession with the same recognition as her cousins.

According to multiple sources with knowledge of private discussions, the request was made through intermediaries during indirect communications between the Sussexes and the Palace in late 2025. The proposal was not for an HRH style (which applies only to children of the sovereign or Prince of Wales) but for a courtesy title or formal acknowledgment of Lilibet’s place in the royal lineage — something traditionally extended to grandchildren of the monarch but never officially conferred on the Sussex children after Harry and Meghan stepped back from royal duties in 2020.

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The request, described by one insider as “perfectly reasonable on paper but politically radioactive,” crossed lines long considered untouchable. “Titles are not negotiable,” the source said. “They are bestowed by the sovereign, not requested by individuals who have publicly distanced themselves from the institution.”

The Palace’s reaction was swift and firm: the idea was rejected outright. King Charles, who has maintained a complicated but non-hostile stance toward his son, is understood to have viewed the demand as incompatible with the couple’s non-working royal status. Granting any title would reopen the 2020 Megxit agreement — under which Harry and Meghan agreed to forgo royal titles for their children in exchange for pursuing private commercial ventures.

The revelation has intensified scrutiny of the Sussexes’ use of royal connections. Since moving to California, Harry and Meghan have continued to use the titles Duke and Duchess of Sussex in commercial branding (including their Netflix series, Archewell Foundation, and Meghan’s lifestyle brand American Riviera Orchard). Critics argue this constitutes “trading on royal status” while publicly criticizing the family and institution.

Meghan’s defenders counter that Lilibet and Archie are entitled to recognition as the King’s grandchildren, regardless of their parents’ choices. “Why should the children be punished for decisions their parents made?” one supporter posted online. “They didn’t choose to leave royal duties.”

The Palace has remained officially silent, but sources say the request has “complicated” behind-the-scenes efforts to improve relations. King Charles, now 77 and managing ongoing cancer treatment, is said to be torn between paternal affection and institutional responsibility. “He wants to see his grandchildren,” a source close to the King told The Times. “But he cannot undermine the monarchy’s rules to accommodate one family’s wishes.”

Public opinion remains deeply divided. A YouGov poll conducted in early January 2026 found 61% of Britons believe Harry and Meghan should lose their titles if they continue commercial use, while 29% feel the children deserve formal recognition. The Sussexes’ supporters have launched counter-campaigns, accusing the Palace of “punishing innocent children.”

As the 2026 royal calendar unfolds, the request — however politely framed — has exposed a fundamental tension: how the monarchy balances tradition, family ties, and public perception in a post-Megxit era.

For now, Lilibet remains Princess Lilibet of Sussex in name only — a title her parents continue to use commercially, but one the Palace refuses to formally endorse. The question lingers: is this about fairness for the children, or leverage in a fractured family feud?