Truth behind Harry’s life in America revealed

Truth behind Harry’s life in America revealed

Six years after moving to the United States, fresh claims suggest Prince Harry is still trying to find his footing as financial pressures and uncertainty around the Sussexes’ future projects continue to build.

Insiders have described the Duke of Sussex as a “glorified house husband,” alleging he is “not really doing anything in America” amid growing questions about his career path and long-term role in California.

Harry, 41, stepped back from royal life in 2020 alongside his wife, Meghan Markle, 44, and their two children, Prince Archie, six, and Princess Lilibet, four.

The family later settled in a large Montecito mansion in California, Meghan’s home state.

Early financial wins, growing strain

The Sussexes initially secured a lucrative five-year deal with Netflix in 2020, followed by the release of Harry’s memoir Spare in 2023, which reportedly earned him around $27 million (about AUD$40 million).

However, sources now claim the couple has struggled to land similarly high-profile projects since then.

According to Page Six, their finances have been “slowly dwindling” following the downgrading of their Netflix deal, announced in August, combined with significant ongoing expenses.

These reportedly include between USD$2 million and $3 million a year (around AUD$3–4 million) for security, monthly repayments on a $10 million mortgage (about AUD$14.5 million), and the costs of maintaining household and professional staff.

Speaking engagements and side ventures

To ease the financial pressure, Harry is said to be pursuing speaking engagements, while Meghan continues to focus on commercial ventures through her lifestyle brand, As Ever, which sells products such as jam and flower sprinkles.

“Harry’s not really doing anything in America,” one source told the outlet.

“I think he’s banking on speaking engagements for income right now.”

The same source suggested that while there has been speculation Harry could start a new business, he and Meghan “don’t have the best track record” in that area.

“He’s (Harry’s) really great at service – look at the success of his Invictus charity. He really should just stick with that,” they said.

Uncertainty around Archewell

Harry remains closely involved with the Invictus Games, which he founded in 2014, but the couple has reportedly spent months reassessing the future of their joint charitable organisation, Archewell Philanthropies.

In December, it was revealed that Archewell had cut three staff members and recorded a drop in revenue alongside rising expenses for 2024.

The Sussexes also lost their 11th publicist, Meredith Maines, who resigned after just a year in the role.

“The big question was, would Archewell close, or would another charity take it over?” a second source told Page Six.

“Harry and Meghan were looking to get a fiscal sponsor, someone to take on the outgoing costs and to keep things cheap. Really, it’s all smoke and mirrors.”

Missing the structure of royal life

While Harry is said to be “content” living in California, sources suggest he remains emotionally conflicted and increasingly nostalgic for the structure of his former royal life.

“I don’t think they leave the house much,” one source said of the Sussexes.

“Meghan does, maybe, but not so much Harry.”

Royal author Christopher Andersen echoed that view, suggesting Harry finds the Hollywood environment more challenging than his wife does.

“He (Harry) has suffered from crippling social anxiety. Meghan embraces that life more,” Andersen told Us Weekly.

Royal historian Marlene Koenig also noted that Harry’s life in Britain once came with far clearer responsibilities.

“He had responsibilities and official events to attend,” Koenig said.

“He’s spending time with his young children and being a hands-on dad. Meghan is the breadwinner.”

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