Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie have received a fresh update on their future with the royal family amid their parents' inevitable downfall.
King Charles III has made a decision regarding the Princesses of York's royal titles after delivering a final blow to his brother Andrew.
The royal sisters will reportedly retain their titles despite their father's fall from grace. They will keep their honours in line with King George V's Letters Patent of 1917.
Charles will always 'protect' his nieces Beatrice, 37, and Eugenie, 35, who still remain Her Royal Highnesses as granddaughters of the late Queen Elizabeth II.
'The King wouldn't have wanted to sign off on anything that would impact them,' a source told the Daily Mail.
The move was entirely down to the King and his advisors, without pressure from the government or other family members, such as future monarch William.
'The process has been underway for some while but there was a need to get it right in the face of some very big challenges,' a source said.
The sisters will also be warmly welcomed to join the gathering at Sandringham for Christmas and other royal family events if they contnued to suppor the monarchy.
Beatrice is ninth in line to the throne after his father Andrew, who continues to retain his eighth position even after losing all his titles and honours.
She's an adviser for Afiniti, an artificial intelligence software firm, and a co-founder of The Big Change Charitable Trust.
The Princess also has a number of royal patronages, including the Forget Me Not Children's Hospice, the Teenage Cancer Trust and the Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity.
On the other hand, 12th in line to the succession Eugenie is also a patron of several charities, including the Elephant Family, the Teenage Cancer Trust and the European School of Osteopathy.
Ferguson's youngest daughter also co-founded the Anti-Slavery Collective charity. The princess became a mentor for The King's Foundation's 35 under 35 network of changemakers earlier this year and is a director at the contemporary art gallery Hauser & Wirth in London.