She disappeared from court during the reign of her step-son, King
Æthelstan, but she was prominent and influential during the reign of her two sons and attested many of their charters. In charter S 562, a grant to her by Eadred of land at
Felpham in Sussex issued in 953, she is described as
famula Dei, suggesting that she may have taken religious vows while continuing to live on her own estates. Given that the estate at Felpham had come into the ownership of
Shaftesbury Abbey by the time of the
Domesday Survey in the 1080s,
Susan Kelly suggests Eadgifu may have become an associate of that house. Following the death of her younger son Eadred in 955, she was deprived of her lands (or at least those that has been disputed with Goda) by her eldest grandson, King
Eadwig. This may have been because she took the side of his younger brother,
Edgar, in the succession dispute between their factions. When Edgar succeeded on Eadwig's death in 959 she recovered some lands and received generous gifts from her grandson, but she never returned to her prominent position at court. She is last appears in the historical record as a witness to charter S 745, the
New Minster, Winchester refoundation charter, in 966. She was known as a supporter of reforming churchmen and appears in the hagiographies of
St Dunstan, the
archbishop of Canterbury, and
St Æthelwold, the
bishop of Winchester. She was also a known benefactor of churches, granting the estates at Cooling and Osterland to
Christ Church Canterbury once she regained them in Edgar's reign, and gifting lands to
Abingdon and
Ely abbeys. == Death and burial ==