Entitled Heiresses? Royal Insider Slams Beatrice and Eugenie as ‘Just as Spoiled as Andrew and Fergie’ Amid Shady Ties and Lavish Scandals
In the glittering yet scandal-plagued world of the British royals, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie have long positioned themselves as the “modern” face of monarchy—ambitious career women, devoted mothers, and subtle supporters of the Crown. But a bombshell claim from a palace insider has shattered that image, accusing the York sisters of inheriting their parents’ worst traits: entitlement, extravagance, and a troubling circle of “shady friends.” As the fallout from Prince Andrew’s Epstein saga and Sarah Ferguson’s financial fiascos continues to ripple, this revelation raises uncomfortable questions about whether the next generation of Yorks is doomed to repeat the family’s toxic legacy.
The Insider’s Scathing Verdict: “Rarified Upbringing, Royal Entitlement”
According to a source speaking exclusively to the Daily Mail, Beatrice, 37, and Eugenie, 35, may have grown into “intelligent, polite women” and “great mothers,” but their childhood in the opulent shadow of Royal Lodge instilled a deep-seated sense of privilege. “They grew up in this rarified world where there was always someone to do everything for you,” the insider revealed, painting a picture of two princesses shielded from reality’s sharper edges.
The critique hits hardest at their decision—or lack thereof—to forgo full-time royal duties. While the sisters insist they chose careers over “ribbon-cutting,” the source alleges this was a convenient facade orchestrated by Andrew to secure a princess’s perks without the public scrutiny. “Andrew maintained it was their decision,” the insider noted, echoing claims from Andrew Lownie’s explosive 2025 biography Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, which details how the Duke leveraged his influence to fast-track opportunities for his daughters. From offering patronage to a London business school in exchange for a free MBA spot for Eugenie (a deal the university rejected) to shuttling them on global business jaunts, Andrew ensured his girls reaped the rewards of royalty minus the responsibilities.
This entitlement allegedly manifests in everyday lapses. A infamous 2009 incident underscores the point: Beatrice’s £17,000 BMW was stolen from a Kensington street—keys in the ignition, doors unlocked—while she shopped nearby with her police protection officer. “She was used to her police protection officer looking after such things,” the source quipped, suggesting a princess unaccustomed to mundane precautions.
Shady Connections: Epstein Shadows and Gulf State Goldmines
The most damning accusation? The Yorks’ web of “shady” associates, allegedly woven by Andrew and extended to his daughters. The insider claims the family has “become friends with some shady people” through Andrew’s high-stakes networking in the Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia’s ultra-wealthy elite. Both Beatrice and Eugenie have made high-profile appearances there, introduced by their father to “impeccable contacts” among foreign royals and billionaires—ties that Lownie’s book says have “profited” the entire family.
These connections aren’t just social; they’re financial lifelines. Lownie reveals Andrew’s “entire family is deeply connected to the Middle East,” with Beatrice and Eugenie treated “like dignitaries” in deals spanning Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Libya, and Dubai. A Sunday Times report cited in the book describes a “disgusted” international politician’s wife witnessing lavish gifts from Abu Dhabi’s royals, including “jewels, diamond watches” for Andrew—and even “jewellery worth several thousand pounds” for Beatrice. Buckingham Palace denied knowledge of the haul.
The Epstein specter looms largest. Andrew notoriously invited the convicted sex offender to Beatrice’s lavish 18th birthday bash at Windsor Castle in July 2006—just weeks after an arrest warrant was issued for Epstein on child sex abuse charges. Photos from the Victorian-themed soiree show Epstein in a mock U.S. Navy Seal uniform, schmoozing alongside Ghislaine Maxwell and disgraced mogul Harvey Weinstein. The £400,000 party, attended by 400 guests including Demi Moore and David Frost, has since been dubbed a symbol of Andrew’s catastrophic judgment.
The scandals didn’t stop there. In 2022 High Court documents from a fraud case involving Turkish millionairess Nebahat Isbilen exposed a £750,000 “gift” funneled to Andrew—framed to bankers as funding Beatrice’s wedding, despite arriving seven months early. Andrew’s ex-private secretary, Amanda Thirsk, confirmed it as a “wedding gift” during a bank query, though the duke later repaid it. Isbilen alleged she was duped by advisor Selman Turk into the payment for “passport help.” Eugenie wasn’t spared: Court filings revealed £25,000 routed to her, including a £15,000 “birthday gift” sent five months prematurely. Neither sister is implicated in wrongdoing, but the optics are damning.
A Childhood of Waste: Fergie’s “Medieval Banquets” and Absentee Parenting
Sarah Ferguson, the “wasteful” matriarch, fares no better in Lownie’s exposé. A former staffer described nightly “medieval banquets” at their home: a whole side of beef, leg of lamb, and chicken laid out for Fergie and the girls—only for most to be discarded come morning. “Often there is just her and her girls… most of it is wasted,” the aide lamented, with Fergie and daughters opting for “posh crisps” instead. This extravagance, the book argues, fueled Fergie’s financial woes, bailed out repeatedly by Queen Elizabeth II—including a £500,000 lifeline in 1994.
Parenting was equally hands-off. Divorced in 1996 when the girls were young, Andrew and Fergie leaned on nannies and elite schools like Marlborough (alma mater of Kate Middleton). Lownie claims Fergie “struggled to control” her “lively daughters,” handing them off unless cameras rolled for lucrative Hello! shoots. One parent recalled the Yorks’ rare appearances: “We find it rather odd… perhaps it’s security. And they do both do a lot of travelling.”
Snobbery allegations add fuel: At a charity event, one daughter reportedly vetoed local kids in the royal box, demanding “the sort of people who shop at John Lewis.”
Modern Princesses or Mini-Yorks? Careers, Homes, and Looming Inheritances
Today, Beatrice and Eugenie tout independence. In a 2025 Vogue interview, Eugenie declared: “We want to show people who we are: working, young, royal women… not afraid of putting ourselves out there.” Beatrice echoed: “We’re the first: young women trying to build careers and have personal lives.”
Beatrice runs BY-EQ, an “emotional intelligence” consultancy that turned £274,846 profit in 2024, and launched Purpose Economy Intelligence Ltd. in 2025. She and husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi (whose Banda design firm is worth £1.7m) share a £3.5m Cotswolds farmhouse with daughters Sienna and Athena.
Eugenie co-founded the Anti-Slavery Collective and works at Hauser & Wirth gallery, holding patronages for Tate Modern and others. She and Jack Brooksbank (whose AEB Consultants profits £543k) split time between Kensington Palace’s Ivy Cottage—Harry and Meghan’s old spot, which the insider questions as “commercial rent”—and a £3.6m Portuguese villa. Sons August and Ernest complete the picture.
Yet perks persist: Both stand to inherit from trusts by the Queen Mother and late Queen Elizabeth II, maturing at 40. They’re named in Fergie’s £4.25m London mews sale, and King Charles—despite slimming the monarchy—has a “soft spot” for them, though recent Epstein email leaks (Fergie groveling to the financier) have strained ties.
The York Legacy: Protection or Poison?
Beatrice and Eugenie remain fiercely loyal, drawing “strength” from “Mumsy” Fergie and shielding Andrew post-Epstein. But as Lownie’s book—researched via 3,000 interviews—lays bare a “tale of… entitlement, establishment cover-up and hubris,” friends say they’re “mortified.” Royal expert Ingrid Seward calls it a “horrid time,” warning public solidarity with Andrew would backfire.
Fergie once snapped at press: “Stop bullying the York family.” But with Andrew exiled to Royal Lodge’s shadows and Fergie ditching patronages, can Beatrice and Eugenie escape the “toxic” York brand? Or will their “shady” inheritances—literal and figurative—define them?
The sisters’ story is one of resilience amid ruin, but this insider’s takedown suggests the rot runs deep. As one observer put it: “They were never going to be working royals but have benefitted from their family connection.” In a slimmed-down monarchy, that’s a privilege few can afford.