Harry and Meghan’s ‘self promoting’ Australia tour has mixed reception,
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have been accused of using Australia ‘like an ATM’ on a quasi-royal tour that some Down Under insist is all about ‘making money’ and ‘self-promotion’.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex said they were delighted to be Down Under as they landed early on Tuesday aboard a business class Qantas flight from Los Angeles without Lilibet and Archie.
But amid a row over who is paying for their security, one woman on board with them said in arrivals afterwards: ‘I don’t like her at all. Don’t come to Australia. You don’t belong here. We don’t want you here’.
Today the Sussexes looked thrilled as they received cheers and applause on a visit to a children’s hospital to meet cancer patients.
Meghan then went solo as she served frittata at a homeless shelter. The couple then reunited and went together to the National Veterans Arts Museum for a family craft session.
As they arrived in Melbourne this morning, Harry was asked if he had a message for Australia and said: ‘It’s wonderful. It’s great to be back. Thanks for having us back’.
But it appears not all are pleased to see them for the first time since 2018, when they came on a nine-day official royal tour just after their wedding.
Andrew Bridge said today: ‘I wasn’t aware they were coming at all. They are very much about self-promotion. They would probably be my least favourite royals, let’s put it that way. They need to more for the public and finish this feud with their family, which to be honest is becoming pretty boring’.
Another Melburnian said when asked if he would try to see them: ‘No, only to boo’.
The couple’s itinerary will include charity and business events in Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney. It is not known how much Prince Harry and Meghan are being paid for their commercial events.
A large crowd gathered at the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne for Harry and Meghan’s first official event today. But one parent there told the Daily Mail: ‘I didn’t even know they were coming, so I would wonder why they are actually here’.
Australian business leader Hilary Fordwich declared that ‘hypocritical Harry and Me-again Meghan’ were using their royal links ‘to make money’ for themselves.
She told Sky News that while the couple claim the visit is ‘private’, she believes it is ‘to fund that 16-bedroom house they have in Montecito’.
The four-day trip will also see Harry and Meghan attend an Invictus Australia event in Sydney before Meghan stars at the ‘Her Best Life’ retreat at nearby Coogee Beach.
Tickets for the weekend cost up to $3,199 AUD (£1,400) and including a chance to have a photo with the Duchess and ask her questions at a gala dinner in a 5-star hotel. Meghan’s fee has been described as a ‘fat one’, and is apparently in the region of $250,000.
Harry is the star speaker at the InterEdge Summit in Melbourne on Thursday, where tickets range from £525 to £1,250 with a ‘virtual ticket’ for Harry’s speech costing costing £260 alone.
The couple insist their 2026 trip is ‘privately-funded’ but there is some disquiet because Australian taxpayers are due to foot the bill for some police security. Tens of thousands of people have signed a petition demanding the Sussexes cover all the costs themselves.
One critic accused them of treating Australia ‘like an ATM’ because the country had been ‘good to them’ when they were working royals.
Victorian Opposition Leader Jess Wilson said today: ‘Victoria Police are there to provide security and safety for Victorians. So any suggestion that officers are going to be pulled off duty to provide security and protection for Harry and Meghan’s visit is absolutely unacceptable.’
Libertarian MP David Limbrick added: ‘If people want to spend thousands of dollars on former royals, that’s fine. But Victorian taxpayers should not be on the hook to provide the security of millionaires.’
Harry and Meghan’s last visit to Australia was almost a decade ago, as newlyweds.
The 2026 tour is underway with trips to a children’s hospital to meet cancer patients before Meghan served frittata at a homeless shelter.
A group of about 70 staff, parents and young patients waited in the hospital atrium for the couple, who excitedly met the crowd and then visited the Adolescent Oncology and Rehabilitation ward before taking part in a garden therapy session.
In a series of royal-style events, Meghan then went on a solo visit to a nearby homeless and domestic violence shelter where she served food to residents.
The couple’s itinerary will include charity and business events in Melbourne, Canberra and Sydney.
There will apparently be no walkabouts to meet the public.
But as they landed in the city, Melburnian Andrew Bridge said today that the couple’s trip Down Under was clearly about ‘self-promotion’.
The Sydney Morning Herald said yesterday: ‘Australia was good to Harry and Meghan. Now they want to use us as an ATM’.
After arriving in Australia this morning, the couple spoke to children and posed for photographs outside the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne amid surprise from locals.
One parent, Pina Roberts, told the Daily Mail: ‘I just came here and was like, what is going on?’ Anything that acknowledges us (patients and parents at the hospital) is good thing.
‘But I didn’t even know they were coming, so I would wonder why they are actually here.’
Four-year-old patient Lily held up a hand-drawn sign that said: ‘Welcome Harry and Meghan’. She presented a flower to the duchess as they arrived.
Meghan hugged Lily after being presented with the gifts and told her: ‘Oh my gosh, this is so sweet. I love it.’
After being shown Lily’s sign, Harry said: ‘Nice to meet you, Lily. That’s beautiful. How long did it take?’
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex took part in a garden therapy session with patients at the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne, smelling plants and flowers.
Asked if he would like to take some gumtree home, Harry, wearing a navy jacket, white shirt and metal bracelets, joked: ‘I would, but I think I’d probably get arrested at some point.’
Meghan, wearing a Karen Gee navy sleeveless dress, asked the patients: ‘Do you find that different stories and memories come out that you weren’t expecting?’
The couple visited wards at the hospital and met patients with eating disorders.
Following the Royal Children’s Hospital visit, the Duchess of Sussex visited a women’s refuge in Melbourne.
Meghan donned an apron and served frittata to people at the centre, run by McAuley Community Services for Women, which supports women and children experiencing family violence, homelessness and related challenges.
After serving several people, the duchess asked ‘is anyone else hungry?’, while looking and smiling at the press and other people gathered in the centre.
Meghan then sat down at a table and joined people eating food, telling them: ‘We landed here this morning so my jet lag hasn’t quite hit yet.’
The centre provides round-the-clock crisis accommodation, refuge services and longer-term housing, alongside programmes focused on recovery, wellbeing and independence.
While greeting crowds at the Royal Children’s Hospital, the Duke of Sussex hugged Christina Parkes, who works as an academic at the University of Melbourne.
Ms Parkes, whose 13-year-old daughter Adelaide is a patient at the hospital, said it ‘means an enormous amount’ to have the couple visit Australia.
Speaking before Harry and Meghan arrived, Ms Parkes told the Press Association: ‘I’m absolutely thrilled to see the couple. Harry’s grandmother actually opened the hospital originally, and her portrait and his grandfather’s portrait are in the hallway.’
Asked what she would say to the couple, she said: ‘Welcome to Australia, we hope they enjoy their time here.
‘Thank you for taking the time to visit the hospital and see the work that the doctors and nurses are doing.
‘I cannot overstate how important the work is that they do here at the children’s hospital because my daughter wouldn’t be here without them.’



