After the meeting, an official statement from the Queen confirmed: “The Sussexes will not use their HRH titles as they are no longer working members of the Royal Family.”
As part of the same agreement, the couple also lost access to taxpayer-funded U.K. security after relocating to the United States.

Ongoing Security Battle
Prince Harry has since fought — and recently lost — a High Court challenge to have that security reinstated. However, he has written to Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood, who approved a review of the decision.
The review, being conducted by the Royal and VIP Executive Committee (Ravec), is expected to be finalized “very soon.”
Sources claim the outcome could ultimately determine whether Meghan travels to the U.K. at all.
“She will not step foot in Britain without full protection — police escorts, secured venues, no risks — period,” an insider told Shuter.
An Alternative Offer From King Charles
Despite reports that Meghan prefers a luxury hotel stay spanning four floors, it has also been claimed that King Charles III has offered the Sussexes accommodation at his beloved Highgrove House in the Cotswolds.
According to royal reporter Tom Sykes, the historic estate sits within a “permanent security bubble,” complete with a no-fly zone, armed police, and a steel-lined panic room.
Writing in his The Royalist Substack, Sykes said Highgrove would be an ideal base for the Sussexes, noting that Harry “has made the restoration of armed protection a red line for any full family return to the UK.”