"Disappointed": Cadbury Loses Royal Warrant Under King Charles III

Chocolate firm Cadbury said on Monday it was "disappointed" after losing its royal warrant for the first time in 170 years following King Charles III's first review of the coveted list since becoming monarch.

Attention World
Attention World Verified Local Voice • 24 May, 2026 Super Admin
Dec 24, 2024 • 1:00 AM  16  0
W
World
NEWS CARD
Logo
"Disappointed": Cadbury Loses Royal Warrant Under King Charles III
“"Disappointed": Cadbury Loses Royal Warrant Under King Charles III”
Favicon
Read more on attentionworlds.com
24 Dec 2024
https://www.attentionworlds.com/disappointed-cadbury-loses-royal-warrant-under-king-charles-iii
Copied
"Disappointed": Cadbury Loses Royal Warrant Under King Charles III

Chocolate firm Cadbury said on Monday it was "disappointed" after losing its royal warrant for the first time in 170 years following King Charles III's first review of the coveted list since becoming monarch.

Campaign group B4Ukraine earlier this year urged the king to remove companies "still operating in Russia" following its invasion of Ukraine.

It singled out Mondelez International which owns Cadbury as well as Bacardi, Nestle and Unilever, the maker of the UK's hate-it-or-love-it breakfast spread, Marmite.

Cadbury was among 100 firms including Unilever missing from a new list of 386 royal warrant holders, although Bacardi and Nestle retained their warrants.

Not all those absent from the latest list, published by the Royal Warrant Holders Association, were necessarily actively removed, and instead may have ceased trading or not applied.

The review of royal warrants follows Charles' accession to the throne in September 2022 on the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth II.

Warrant holders receive "the right to display the appropriate royal arms on their product, packaging, stationery, advertising, premises and vehicles".

It is regarded as a guarantee of quality and can sway some customers to choose a particular firm's goods or services.

Cadbury, which was first awarded a royal warrant by Queen Victoria in 1854, was reportedly a favourite of the late queen.

A spokesperson for Mondelez said Cadbury had been "a part of British life for generations" and remained the "nation's favourite chocolate".

"Whilst we are disappointed to be one of hundreds of other businesses and brands in the UK to not have a new warrant awarded, we are proud to have previously held one, and we fully respect the decision," the spokesperson added.

A Unilever spokesperson said it was proud of the long royal association of its brands, but that the granting of warrants was "a matter for the royal household".

Buckingham Palace does not give reasons or comment on decisions about royal warrants.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

favorite Follow us for the latest updates:

Attention World Verified Local Voice • 24 May, 2026 Super Admin

Digital Archives

Follow Us

home Home amp_stories Web Stories local_fire_department Trending play_circle Videos mark_email_unread Newsletter