Princess Charlotte Steal The Spotlight In LUXURY JEWELLERY COLLECTION From The Queen Elizabeth II
At just 10 years old, Princess Charlotte, the only daughter of the Prince and Princess of Wales, has already built an enviable jewelry collection that would be the pride of any royal.
Estimated to be worth around £92,000, her assortment blends historic heirlooms with charming modern pieces—each one reflecting her lineage, personal style, and the careful guidance of her parents.
Much like her mother, Princess Catherine, and her late grandmother, Princess Diana, Charlotte shows an instinctive flair for balancing the traditions of the monarchy with the approachable touches that make her relatable to the public.
Among the most sentimental items in her possession is a diamond horseshoe brooch, a treasured gift from her late great-grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II.
First worn at the Queen’s State Funeral in September 2022, the piece paid tribute to the monarch’s lifelong devotion to horses. Its history stretches back to Queen Mary in the 1920s before passing to the Queen Mother and eventually to Elizabeth II.
Today, it sits proudly in Charlotte’s collection, worn again at Trooping the Colour as a discreet nod to her heritage. Though valued at around £10,000, its worth to the royal family is immeasurable, carrying memories that span generations.
Her taste for pieces with meaning continues in a charm bracelet that recalls the one worn by Princess Diana—gifted by Prince Charles and decorated with tokens marking special moments. Charlotte’s version, worth about $180, proves that sentiment is not defined by price and that she, like her mother, has a knack for mixing fine jewelry with more affordable treasures.
On Christmas Day 2024, during the family’s traditional walk to church at Sandringham, Charlotte caught attention with a £22 healing necklace from Accessorize, strung with amethyst, rose quartz, and onyx.
Early reports suggested it was a £1,500 ruby design from Aya—the brand founded by Chelsea Davy, Prince Harry’s former girlfriend—but closer inspection confirmed its high street origins. The choice echoed Princess Catherine’s own fondness for the retailer, from which she has worn at least eight pairs of earrings, and underlined Charlotte’s growing confidence in choosing accessible yet stylish accessories.
At King Charles III’s coronation in May 2023, Charlotte and her mother surprised many by wearing matching custom headpieces from Jess Collett in collaboration with Alexander McQueen instead of historic Windsor tiaras.
Charlotte’s silver bullion and crystal design, adorned with three-dimensional leaf embroidery to mimic diamond brilliance, was estimated at $16,000. She paired it with a delicate seed pearl bracelet and a gold clasp complementing her white dress embroidered with floral emblems of the four nations.
The use of pearls—a classic staple of Queen Elizabeth II—gave the ensemble a graceful nod to the late monarch.
Her flair for personalized jewelry was on display at Wimbledon 2024, where she sported a gold bracelet engraved with her name in Arabic and set with a turquoise nozzle amulet long believed to ward off the evil eye. Worth around $132, it reflected a growing royal trend for cultural references and personal inscriptions, popular with Catherine, the Princess of Sussex, and the Princess of Edinburgh alike.
Charlotte has also embraced the lighter side of her generation’s fashion. At Taylor Swift’s The Eras Tour, she wore colorful friendship bracelets beloved by fans worldwide. While their value is purely sentimental, they show that the young princess is as comfortable sharing in popular trends as she is wearing priceless heirlooms.
Looking ahead, her collection is likely to grow dramatically. Princess Catherine’s own jewelry collection, valued at £9.5 million, includes pieces inherited from Diana—among them the iconic Spencer Tiara, which Charlotte is said to hope to wear one day.
Beyond that lies the Windsor vault, a glittering treasure estimated at £82 million containing jewels from Queen Elizabeth II, Queen Mary, and beyond.
For now, Charlotte’s choices remain age-appropriate and personal—a careful curation that bridges her role as a modern young royal with the legacy she will one day inherit.





