Prince William has opened up about the lingering impact of what he calls “the hardest year” of his life — eight months after Princess Kate entered remission from cancer.
For the Prince of Wales, 2024 was a year that changed everything. Within weeks, both his wife, Princess Kate, and his father, King Charles III, were diagnosed with cancer — plunging the royal family into a period of fear, hope, and resilience.
Balancing his duties as heir to the throne with raising Prince George, 12, Princess Charlotte, 10, and Prince Louis, 7, William reflected on those months during a candid conversation with actor Eugene Levy for the Apple TV+ series The Reluctant Traveler, set to premiere October 3.
“I’d say 2024 was the hardest year I’ve ever had,” William admitted. “Life is sent to test us, and being able to overcome that is what makes us who we are.”
Princess Kate announced her remission in January 2025, after months of preventative chemotherapy. The news was met with nationwide relief, but the Princess later revealed that recovery brought its own challenges.
During a royal engagement in July, she said: “Treatment’s done, then it’s like, ‘I can crack on, get back to normal.’ But actually, the phase afterwards is really, really difficult. You have to find your new normal, and it takes time. It’s a rollercoaster.”
King Charles continues to receive outpatient care for his own, undisclosed form of cancer, first diagnosed in February 2024.
As both his wife and father faced illness, William shouldered the weight of family, duty, and public expectation. Eight months after Kate’s remission, the prince confessed that the emotional scars remain.
“Honestly? It’s been dreadful,” he said. “From a personal family point of view, it’s been brutal.”
While he praised Kate and the King for their courage and determination, William acknowledged that the path forward is still uncertain.
Even with the Princess in remission, the royal family remains in a period of quiet recovery — one marked not by ceremony, but by endurance, patience, and love.