In a move that has sent shockwaves through the House of Windsor and left royal watchers stunned, Prince William has reportedly spearheaded the decision to permanently bar Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie from attending Royal Ascot and other major ceremonial royal events “for the foreseeable future.” The decree, described by insiders as a “cold-blooded calculation to protect the Crown,” comes just weeks after the seismic arrest of their father, Prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, on February 19, 2026, on suspicion of misconduct in public office tied to newly unsealed Jeffrey Epstein-related allegations. The timing and severity of the exclusion have turned a family scandal into what many now call a permanent, unsettling divide — with the York sisters cast out as collateral damage in a high-stakes internal purge.

According to multiple palace sources speaking to The Times and The Daily Mail, the decision was finalized at a private meeting at Kensington Palace attended by William, King Charles III, and Princess Anne. The York princesses — neither of whom are working royals — were informed through official channels that their invitations to Royal Ascot and other high-profile ceremonial events have been withdrawn indefinitely. “This is not a temporary measure,” one senior aide said. “It is a deliberate and permanent boundary. The Palace can no longer tolerate the perception of association with Andrew’s ongoing legal troubles.”

The sisters were reportedly “blindsided” and “devastated” by the news. Beatrice, 37, and Eugenie, 35, have long maintained a low-key but visible presence at Ascot, often seated in the royal enclosure alongside other family members. Their attendance was seen as a way to represent the younger generation of royals while staying out of the spotlight of full-time duties. Now, that symbolic role has been stripped away. Sources say both women view the ban as punishment not for their own actions, but for their continued loyalty to their father — a loyalty that has become politically toxic amid Andrew’s deepening legal jeopardy.

The catalyst is unmistakable: Andrew’s arrest on his 66th birthday sent the monarchy into crisis mode. The charges relate to alleged misconduct during his time as a working royal and his continued association with Epstein after his 2010 disavowal. While Andrew was released on bail pending further investigation, the damage was immediate: renewed calls for his complete removal from the line of succession, forfeiture of Royal Lodge, and any lingering symbolic ties. William, 43, is said to have been “adamant” that the monarchy could no longer afford even the appearance of tolerance. “William sees this as a cancer on the institution,” a Kensington Palace source told The Telegraph. “Beatrice and Eugenie’s continued presence at public events would only prolong the association.”