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Prince George to be separated from Prince William and Princess Charlotte as royal ban enforced
Home>News>Royal Family
Updated 13:58 10 Jul 2024 GMT+1Published 11:38 10 Jul 2024 GMT+1

Prince George to be separated from Prince William and Princess Charlotte as royal ban enforced

The royal tradition has been in place for decades and affected Prince William when he turned 12

Niamh Spence

Niamh Spence

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Featured Image Credit: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images/Chris Jackson/Getty Images

Topics: Royal Family, Prince George, UK News

Niamh Spence
Niamh Spence

I am a freelance journalist, who writes and contributes to lifestyle and online titles. Previous work includes; The Telegraph, LadBible, Entertainment Daily, BBC, The Mirror, The Metro, Tyla.etc

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@missnspence

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Prince George leads a pretty charmed life, but from next year things could be set to change.

The oldest child of Prince William and Princess Kate, the Prince and Princess of Wales, will turn 12 next year and this could mean his life and routine may look a little different.

If the family follows royal tradition then from July 2025 and his 12th birthday, second in line to the throne Prince George could be forced to travel separately on royal visits and tours.

From July 2025, Prince George could be forced to travel separately. (Chris Jackson/Getty Images)
From July 2025, Prince George could be forced to travel separately. (Chris Jackson/Getty Images)

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He won't just be travelling without his siblings but without his father too, as Prince William is the first in line to the throne and the rules would mean that the two royal members in succession can't be together.

The tradition was put in place in case the worst should happen and a plane crashed, it would mean an heir to the throne is protected and keeps the monarchy stable.

For Prince William, he always travelled with his family including his late mother, father and brother until he turned 12.

King Charles's former pilot, Graham Laurie explained to OK! magazine: "We flew all four: the Prince, the Princess, Prince William and Prince Harry, up until Prince William was 12 years old.

"After that, he had to have a separate aircraft and we could only fly all four together when they were young with the written permission of Her Majesty.

"When William became 12, he would fly normally in a 125 from Northolt and we would fly the 146 out with the other three on."

Whilst it isn't set in stone, the unwritten rule has been in place for decades and it isn't just based on superstition, as in the past members of the royal family have died in plane crashes.

In 1937 Prince Philip's sister Princess Cecilie died in an air accident, in 1942 Queen Elizabeth II's uncle Prince George was killed and in 1972 the late Queen's cousin, Prince William of Gloucester died.

Previously the family has been granted special permission to fly together. (Jonathan Brady - Pool/Getty Images)
Previously the family has been granted special permission to fly together. (Jonathan Brady - Pool/Getty Images)

However the travel arrangements are up to the monarch's discretion so King Charles or Prince William could change them at any point if they wanted to.

In fact, William has previously broken tradition and in 2014 he and wife Kate were granted special permission to fly with their three children together for their Australian tour - even just to make travel simpler than separating them all.

At the time, the royal press office told BBC's Newsround: "They had to ask the Queen for permission, but she said yes.

"While there is no official rule on this, and royal heirs have traveled together in the past, it is something that the Queen has the final say on."

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