Camilla, who turned 77 on Thursday, has a staggering net worth that includes a six-figure inheritance and a luxury home that she uses as a holiday home.
Camilla reportedly boasts a staggering net worth, including a six-figure inheritance and a country mansion.
Camilla, who recently celebrated her 77th birthday, amassed considerable wealth before becoming a senior member of the royal family, with Celebrity Net Worth estimating her net worth at around $5 million (£3.8 million).
The Telegraph reports that this amount includes £500,000 inherited from one of her grandparents, and Camilla also owns a 19th century Grade II listed building in the tiny hamlet of Raebridge, Wiltshire.
She bought Leigh Mill House for £850,000 in 1996 after her divorce from Andrew Parker Bowles, and held her daughter Laura's wedding there in 2006.
Joan Gale, interior design expert at Housetastic, previously told Express.co.uk that Camilla would “feel at home” at Leigh Mill House, saying: “Camilla's home, Leigh Mill House in Wiltshire, is likely to be her favourite residence.”
“This is a home she chose to buy, a place to spend time with her family away from public life, so it's a more personal space and she has more freedom to decorate it to her taste.”
Camilla's main role now is to support King Charles, whom she married in 2005, but according to the Express, when she was younger she worked as a receptionist for a Mayfair-based interiors firm.
But the king's net worth far exceeds hers: his fortune increased by more than £10 million last year, according to The Sunday Times Rich List.
This makes him the 258th richest person in the UK with an estimated total fortune of around £610 million, which also includes a property portfolio inherited from his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II.
The monarch personally owns both Sandringham House in Norfolk and Queen Elizabeth II's beloved Balmoral Estate in Scotland, and his investments also contribute £120 million to his net worth, according to The Sunday Times.
Balmoral Castle was purchased personally by Prince Albert for Queen Victoria, while Sandringham House was inherited by Edward VIII and passed to his brother, George VI, after his abdication.
The king's fortune also includes income from the Duchy of Lancaster, which last year reported a surplus of about £26.2 million available to pay to the monarch. The Duchy's total assets last year were £641.2 million, but the king is not allowed to draw from the duchy's assets or capital.