
Following reports that King Charles III will personally fund his brother’s relocation from Royal Lodge, attention has turned to the symbolic weight of Prince Andrew’s next home. The 65-year-old Duke—now stripped of his “Prince” title—has been ordered to vacate his longtime Windsor residence amid renewed scrutiny over his association with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The decision follows disturbing revelations detailed in the posthumous memoir of Virginia Giuffre, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice. In the book, Giuffre recounts specific alleged sexual encounters with Andrew, claiming she was trafficked by Epstein while still a minor. Although she and Andrew reached an undisclosed out-of-court settlement in 2022, the memoir—published earlier this year before her suicide—reignited public outrage.
On Thursday, October 30, Buckingham Palace released a statement confirming that Andrew would no longer be addressed as “Prince” and had been served an eviction notice from Royal Lodge, where he and his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson have lived since 2004.
“Formal notice has now been served to surrender the lease, and he will move to alternative private accommodation,” the statement read. “These censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he continues to deny the allegations against him.”
It has since been confirmed that King Charles will privately finance Andrew’s move to Sandringham Estate—one of several royal properties owned by the Crown.
A Move Laced with Historical Irony

Royal observers have noted a curious symmetry in the choice of Sandringham. The estate was originally purchased in 1862 for King Edward VII—then Prince of Wales—by Queen Victoria as a wedding gift. Under Edward’s ownership, the property expanded dramatically, both in acreage and reputation.
Known for his charm and indulgent lifestyle, Edward VII was as famous for his renovations to the estate as for his scandalous private life. Despite being married to Princess Alexandra of Denmark, he maintained a string of affairs with actresses and aristocrats. It was said that the lavish gatherings at Sandringham offered him a refuge from the scrutiny of court life—and provided ample opportunity for his romantic escapades.
Given Edward VII’s own notoriety as one of Britain’s most infamous womanizers, many have noted an uncomfortable irony that the disgraced Duke of York will soon take up residence in the same estate.
Scandal and the Fall of “Randy Andy”

Beyond the allegations tied to Epstein, Andrew’s personal reputation has long been the subject of controversy. Royal biographer Andrew Lownie, in his 2025 book Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, described the Duke as a “sex addict,” claiming his research linked Andrew to “between one thousand and two thousand” women over the years.
Lownie alleged that “Randy Andy”—the nickname given to the Duke by the British press in the 1980s—had slept with “more than a dozen women” between his marriage to Sarah Ferguson and their first wedding anniversary.
Now, with his title rescinded, his reputation in tatters, and his royal privileges stripped away, Andrew’s move to Sandringham may serve as both exile and irony—a quiet retreat haunted by echoes of the royal past and the scandals of its former occupants.