In a moment layered with royal tension, Prince Harry made a rare and fleeting visit to King Charles — their first face-to-face meeting in 19 months.
On Wednesday, September 10, the Duke of Sussex arrived at Clarence House in a black Range Rover shortly after 5:20 p.m. for a private tea with his father. The visit, confirmed by Buckingham Palace, lasted just under an hour. No official photographs were released, and palace officials offered no details about what was discussed behind closed doors.
Harry was later seen leaving the King’s London residence before heading to a reception with the Invictus Games Foundation that evening. When asked about his father during the event, the Duke offered only a brief response: “Yes, he’s great, thank you.” It was his sole public comment on the meeting, leaving royal watchers to speculate about the tone and outcome of the reunion.
The encounter carried weight beyond its brevity. It marked a cautious return to direct communication between father and son after a long stretch of estrangement. No other members of the royal family were believed to be present, underlining how tightly managed and intimate the meeting was.
Earlier that same day, Harry had reportedly made a solitary visit to Windsor before seeing his father. Traveling without Meghan, Archie, or Lilibet, he stopped at St George’s Chapel to quietly pay respects at his grandmother Queen Elizabeth II’s grave.
Though brief, the visit to Clarence House signaled a small but notable step in the ongoing story of reconciliation within the royal family — a meeting that may have lasted less than an hour, but spoke volumes in symbolism.