DividingPrince WilliamandPrince Harry‘s offices was a necessary step moving forward for the royal family.
The move is a natural progression for the royal family, as William will one day become the Prince of Wales – and all that entails as heir to his father,Prince Charles– so William will have very different responsibilities from his younger brother.
“This is a future-proofing exercise,” a member of their team tells PEOPLE in this week’s cover story about dividing the Sussex and Cambridge “courts.”

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While it made sense forPrince William, 36, andPrince Harry, 34, to share one office when they were single men with limited public engagements, their marriages to Kate and Meghan added another element.
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Meghan and Harry recently launched their own Instagram page, while Kensington Palace made changes to focus more on William and Kate’s family. In addition, the royal parents-to-be moved out of London for Frogmore Cottage in Windsor Castle, about 25 miles away.
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Despite the royal brothers’ very different roles, longtime palace staffers had the “homogenous idea” of the two princes working in tandem. However, it’s now clear that with their growing families, a united foursome wasn’t feasible.
“It was only going to work until they married — and it went on a while longer than perhaps was originally thought,” one palace courtier says.
“It’s a shame,” says a household source. “There was power in that unity and great strength in the foursome, but I see why it is happening. There is always that tension: trying to do the PR thing and then realizing that they are just real people. They want their own place and their own things.”
source: people.com