Since its inception, the Sovereign Grant has often risen each year at a rate higher than the rate of
inflation. About a third of the grant is used to tackle the backlog in property maintenance at the
royal palaces. Following the 2016 review of the percentage of the Crown Estate income used to calculate the grant, it was announced that a temporary increase in the Sovereign Grant would be used to fund a £369 million refurbishment of
Buckingham Palace, subject to parliamentary approval. The trustees recommended that the percentage should rise to 25% for the 10 years during which the work would take place, and that the grant should then be returned to 15% when building work is finished in 2027. This was expected to result in a 66% rise in the grant in 2017–18. The increase in the grant to 25% was approved by Parliament in March 2017. A decrease in the Crown Estate's rental income during the
COVID-19 pandemic led to the first use of the provision that prevents the value of the Sovereign Grant from falling, with the Treasury committing to make up the shortfall. After the accession of
King Charles III in September 2022, the new king approved a Statutory
Order in Council to allow the existing Sovereign Grant provisions to continue throughout his reign. Prior to the Sovereign Grant Act,
primary legislation had been required for the continuance of the Civil List. In January 2023 the
Keeper of the Privy Purse, on behalf of the King, asked the government to reduce the percentage used to calculate the sovereign grant so that the total does not include the income from new
offshore wind power leases, calculated to be worth around £1 billion annually to the Crown Estate. This request was said by the King to be due to his desire that the money could instead be used for the "wider public good". In July 2023, due to the Crown Estate's sale of wind farm leases dramatically increasing the money going to the Treasury, the government announced that the grant would be 12% of the Crown Estate's net profits in the following year, down from 25%, while maintaining the same level of payment in pounds. In July 2024 it was announced that the annual profits from the Crown Estate had risen again due to the proceeds from offshore wind projects, resulting in an annual increase of £45 million to the Sovereign Grant for 2025–26. The Keeper of the Privy Purse said the increase will be used to complete the renovation of Buckingham Palace, and that once this was accomplished: "a reduction in the absolute amount of the sovereign grant will be sought as part of the royal trustees review in 2026–27, through primary legislation". The King and the
Prince of Wales also receive private income through the
Duchy of Lancaster and
Duchy of Cornwall. The Sovereign Grant only accounts for one part of the total cost of running the monarchy. The Sovereign Grant does not cover the costs of police and military security and of armed services ceremonial duties == Notes ==