EXCLUSIVE: While hopes are still high that Prince Harry might repair relations with King Charles during his current UK visit, it is a very different story when it comes to Prince William14:42, 07 Jul 2026Prince Harry might be slowly building bridges with his father, King Charles, but anyone hoping his much-anticipated visit to the UK might signal a truce between the Sussexes and the Prince and Princess of Wales is likely to be disappointed, we’re told.‌Harry’s return this week has dominated headlines for weeks, especially the speculation about whether Meghan and their children, Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, would be joining him. As he embarks on a series of week-long Invictus Games events while flying solo, royal experts believe his presence on home soil will be hugely challenging for the Prince and Princess of Wales.‌It's still not clear whether Harry, 41, will see his dad, King Charles, in person this week. While the pair enjoyed an afternoon tea at Clarence House during Harry's solo trip last September, relations between him and his brother, Prince William, 44, are still decidedly frosty.‌According to royal expert Duncan Larcombe, Harry’s visit is unlikely to put an end to their estrangement. “Harry almost certainly won’t see William and Kate,” says Duncan. “From everything I’m told, William still has absolute contempt for his brother and sees what he has done as the ultimate betrayal – which isn’t surprising when you consider what Harry wrote about in his autobiography Spare.”Harry is in the UK to mark the one-year countdown to the Invictus Games in Birmingham. He launched the sports competition for wounded, injured and sick military service personnel and veterans in 2014.‌As well as a visit to an Invictus Games Foundation event at Chatham House in London, the prince is also scheduled to make an appearance at Birmingham Children’s Hospital ahead of the official launch of the Games in Britain’s second city, which will host the event next summer.Until last week, it was widely reported that Harry would be joined by wife Meghan and their two children, Archie, seven, and Lilibet, five, but they are believed to have stayed put at the family's holiday home in Portugal. Had they come, it would have been the family’s first time on British soil together since they attended Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations in 2022.‌Despite the King, 77, offering to provide them with accommodation at a royal palace, Harry’s request for taxpayer-funded police protection for the duration of their five-day stay was turned down, throwing his plans into last-minute disarray.While Charles might be keen to put past troubles behind them, former BBC royal correspondent Jennie Bond says William hasn’t moved on from his brother’s betrayal – most notably sharing details of private family fallouts in Spare and during his and Meghan’s tell-all interview with US TV host Oprah Winfrey.“Trust is still a major issue for William, who is a very private man,” explains Jennie. “He is also a very protective, loving husband who was enraged by the insults and allegations hurled at Catherine by the Sussexes. I’m not sure he will ever find a way to forgive his brother for that.”‌The Princess of Wales, 44, was at the centre of several of Harry and Meghan’s bombshell disclosures, with Meghan, also 44, claiming to Oprah in 2021 that Kate made her cry during a conversation about a bridesmaid’s dress in the build-up to the Sussexes’ 2018 wedding.Two years later, in Spare, Harry rubbed salt into the wound by disclosing a number of private conversations and alleged arguments between himself and his brother and sister-in-law. For William in particular, Harry and Meghan’s habit of spilling secrets is beyond forgiveness and both Duncan and Jennie believe the Prince and Princess of Wales will be desperate to keep their distance this week.‌“Harry broke the golden rule that you don’t go public with things that are private among the royal family,” says Duncan, while Jennie says the school holidays will give William and Kate a convenient excuse to “take refuge somewhere away from all the hullabaloo”.She adds, “I think William has worked hard at simply putting Harry out of his mind so that he can focus on his family and his job.”Before relations soured, Harry and Kate appeared to have forged a strong bond, with the prince once describing her as “the sister I’ve never had and always wanted”.‌And although the Duke of Sussex spoke of his desire for “reconciliation” during a BBC interview last year, William is yet to extend an olive branch. It is believed they have not spoken since their grandmother Queen Elizabeth II’s funeral in September 2022.Long term, Duncan believes their stand-off could cause huge complications for both brothers when William finally replaces his father as monarch.‌“The problem for William lies in that when he becomes King, he’s going to have to rise above – or be seen to rise above – these sorts of things,” he warns.“The family have done very well at dealing with the Harry and Meghan issue so far – their popularity has soared and their policy of not going tit-for-tat has worked. They’ve risen above the tackiness of it.”Despite the royal family’s ‘keep calm and carry on’ attitude, Duncan says there is a risk the public could tire of William and Harry being permanently at loggerheads. “The rift between the brothers has gone on far too long,” he says. “It is doing damage to the royal family and it will do damage to William as future King.Article continues below“What’s he going to do when he becomes King? Strip his brother of his title? William may have a right to be annoyed with Harry, but that would make him look very petty – and bearing a grudge isn’t a good look for a royal.”