Prince William makes renewed call for cause inspired by mum Princess Diana


The Prince of Wales launched his Homewards project to prevent homelessness in 2023, taking action at six chosen locations across the UK


Prince William, Prince of Wales listens during his visit to the Apricot Centre, a carbon-negative farm and wellbeing service on June 18, 2026 in Totnes, England© Getty Images
Eleanor Dye
Eleanor DyeOnline Royal Correspondent
2 minutes ago
Share this:

Prince William has made a renewed call for action towards homelessness as he prepares to mark the third anniversary of his Homewards initiative on Tuesday. 

The Prince of Wales, 44, will talk at an event about how homelessness is a "systemic failure" and say that systems can "help prevent it", just as they cause it. 

William has previously said that visiting shelters with his late mother Diana, Princess of Wales, as a child left a deep and lasting impression and inspired his work.

William is expected to say: "Homelessness is not an individual failure; it is a systemic failure. And, if systems help create the problem, then systems can help prevent it.

WATCH: Prince William cites Diana's influence for drive to eradicate homelessness

"By trialling new approaches, Homewards is demonstrating how prevention can be embedded across every part of our society.

"Proving that our true strength emerges not in isolation, but in a shared purpose that makes us greater than the sum of our parts."

Prince William, Prince of Wales looks on during his visit to the Apricot Centre, a carbon-negative farm and wellbeing service on June 18, 2026 in Totnes, England© Getty Images
Prince William is expected to make an impassioned speech on Tuesday

William launched his ambitious five-year Homewards initiative in June 2023 to create a blueprint to end homelessness in all its forms and has taken stock of the progress so far.

Prince William's mission to end homelessness

Diana first took William and his younger brother, Prince Harry, to The Passage in Westminster when he was 11 years old, inspiring a lifelong dedication to the cause. 

Speaking in his 2024 ITV documentary, Prince William: We Can End Homelessness, the future King recalled: "My mother took me to The Passage. She took Harry and I both there. 

Princess Diana with a young Prince Harry and Prince William in school uniform© Tim Graham Photo Library via Get
William was inspired by his mother Princess Diana

"I must have been about 11, I think, probably, at the time. Maybe 10. I’d never been to anything like that before. And I was a bit anxious as to what to expect."

This Christmas, William followed in his mother's footsteps by taking his eldest son, Prince George, 12, to help make Christmas lunch at the Passage.

In a video shared on the Prince and Princess of Wales's official social media accounts, George could be seen wearing an apron, hanging up Christmas decorations and preparing food. 

Prince William and Prince George at Passage© Andrew Parsons / Kensington Pala
Prince George at The Passage

"Proud to join volunteers and staff at The Passage in preparing Christmas lunch – this year with another pair of helping hands," it was captioned. 

What is Prince William's Homewards project? 

In 2023, William launched his Homewards project, which aims to make homelessness "rare, brief and unrepeated".

Six Homewards locations were chosen – Newport, Lambeth, Belfast, Aberdeen, Sheffield and the three neighbouring Dorset towns of Poole, Bournemouth and Christchurch – to deliver bespoke solutions to the homelessness issues in each area.

The Prince of Wales (right) meets delegates during a visit to see Homewards' ground-breaking youth homelessness work at Bournemouth Pier, in Bournemouth, Dorset. The Prince is joining international delegations from Australia, Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands and Finland who have travelled to the UK to see Homewards' work in action. Picture date: Thursday March 19, 2026.© Alamy Stock Photo
The Prince of Wales (right) meets delegates during a visit to see Homewards' ground-breaking youth homelessness work at Bournemouth Pier

During the past three years, Homewards has invested £1.9 million across the six locations through the Homewards Fund, with another £3.5 million leveraged through grants and private philanthropy, organisers have said.

A further £2.3 million worth of surplus goods has been used to furnish Homewards homes, and 250 people have been supported into stable employment. In Aberdeen alone, 31 people are now living in homes created through the programme.

William has travelled to all six of the Homewards locations during the past three years to highlight the aims of his project.

Celebrity supporters include former Lioness Fara Williams, TV presenter Gail Porter, Aston Villa footballer Tyrone Mings, Spice Girl Geri Horner, Opera star Sir Bryn Terfel, and broadcaster Sara Cox.

More Royalty
See more