British monarchy will receive around $118 million in government funding, annual report shows

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"British Royal Household Receives $118 Million in Annual Sovereign Grant Funding"

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The British Royal Household has disclosed its financial report for the year, revealing that the amount allocated from the government, known as the Sovereign Grant, remains unchanged at £86.3 million (approximately $118.50 million). This funding is primarily intended for the maintenance of royal residences and to support official activities carried out by the monarchy. The Sovereign Grant is financed through taxpayer money, with the understanding that the monarch will transfer all profits from the Crown Estate back to the government. The Crown Estate includes significant properties and assets, such as central London real estate and the Ascot Racecourse, in a financial arrangement that has been in place since 1760. The Sovereign Grant serves as an expense account for royal duties, covering travel, staff salaries, and the upkeep of historical sites, although it does not encompass security costs, which are notably high due to the royal family's extensive public engagements.

In the past year, members of the royal family participated in over 1,900 public engagements both domestically and internationally, while the Official Royal Palaces hosted more than 93,000 guests at various events. The current grant consists of a core amount of £51.8 million ($71.1 million) and an additional £34.5 million ($47.4 million) allocated for the refurbishment of Buckingham Palace. This historic palace, a major tourist destination, is undergoing substantial modernization, including upgrades to essential infrastructure. Additionally, the report indicated that the royal family would phase out the use of the royal train and increase its adoption of sustainable aviation fuel. Critics of the funding system, including advocacy group Republic, have voiced concerns over the financial arrangements, arguing for a reevaluation of the Sovereign Grant, which they believe is linked to government profits rather than actual needs. They advocate for greater transparency and accountability regarding the costs associated with the monarchy, suggesting that substantial funds could be better utilized elsewhere in society.

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The British Royal Household released its financial statement on Monday, revealing that the annual lump sum from the government remained at £86.3 million ($118.50 million).

The sum, called the Sovereign Grant, pays for the upkeep of royal palaces and the royals’ official duties and is funded byBritish taxpayer money. In return, the monarch hands over all profits from the Crown Estate — which includes vast swathes of central London property, the Ascot Racecourse and the seabed around England, Wales and Northern Ireland — to the government, in an arrangement dating back to 1760.

The Sovereign Grant functions like an expense account for the monarch and their representatives, covering the costs of their public duties, including travel, staff, and upkeep of historic properties. Notably, it excludes funding for security, which also incurs a high cost given the royals’ numerous public engagements and events.

Royal family members undertook more than “1,900 public engagements in the UK and overseas, while more than 93,000 guests attended 828 events at Official Royal Palaces,” the annual Sovereign Grant Report said.

The total grant of £86.3 million ($118.50 million), which by law remains the same as the three previous financial years, is comprised of a £51.8 million ($71.1 million), core grant and £34.5 million ($47.4 million) to fund the refurbishment of Buckingham Palace.

Buckingham Palace, a top tourist attraction in central London, is undergoing a major modernization project that will see upgrades to electric cabling, pipework, elevators and accessible bathrooms.

The royal family will decommission the royal train “following a thorough review into its use and value for money,” according to the accounts report. The monarchy has been using its own rail travel since Queen Victoria first boarded a specially built carriage from Slough, England, to London Paddington Station in 1842.

The report also said the Royal Household will increase its use of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) and continue the electrification of its fleet of vehicles.

Last year, the Royal Household announced it aimed to transition to an“almost fully electric” fleet of vehicles, without providing a target date. Britain’s PA Media reported that the King’s two Bentleys would be modified to run on biofuel.

The royal family’sthree main sources of incomeare the Sovereign Grant, the Duchy of Lancaster and Duchy of Cornwall estates and their personal property and investments.

The level of funding for the British royal family has long fueled criticism, with one anti-monarchy group calling for the Sovereign Grant to be abolished and for the British public to keep all the profits of the Crown Estate.

“The grant system is mad. Funding goes up not because of any need for extra money, but because the grant is linked to government profits from land managed by the Crown Estate,” Graham Smith, a campaigner for the group Republic, said in a statement earlier this year. “The palace has recycled the excuse of needing the money for refurbishment of Buckingham Palace, an excuse used to double the grant ten years ago.”

“It’s time that half a billion pounds was put to good use, that there was proper accounting for the cost of the monarchy and for that cost to be slashed to just a few million pounds,” Smith added.

The Keeper of the Privy Purse, James Chalmers, said in a statement on Monday as the report was released: “Soft power is hard to measure but its value is, I believe, now firmly understood at home and abroad, as the core themes of the new reign have come into even sharper focus, and the Royal Family have continued in their service to the nation, Realms and Commonwealth.”

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Source: CNN