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Kate Middleton to go on first trip without Prince William since cancer treatment

WINDSOR, ENGLAND - APRIL 05: Catherine, Princess of Wales attends the 2026 Easter Matins Service at St George's Chapel on April 05, 2026 in Windsor, England. (Photo by Karwai Tang/WireImage)
It’s a major milestone for the future queen after her cancer diagnosis (Picture: WireImage)

The Princess of Wales will resume international travel by undertaking her first overseas royal visit since recovering from cancer.

Kate, who revealed she was in remission at the start of last year, will head to Italy next week on a solo working trip with The Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood.

It is a major milestone for the future queen, marking her first extended official foreign trip in nearly three and a half years.

Aides to the princess said she is ‘very much looking forward’ to getting back to international travel, adding that the visit will be an important moment in the expansion of the Centre for Early Childhood’s work on the global stage.

Kate’s last official overseas visit was to Boston, USA, in December 2022, when she accompanied the Prince of Wales to the Earthshot Prize award ceremony.

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She undertook two brief trips to Marseille, France, for the Rugby World Cup in the autumn of 2023, and went to the Crown Prince of Jordan’s wedding in Amman in June 2023, but these were not considered by her royal household to be official foreign tours.

Kate will learn more about the Reggio Emilia Approach (Picture: MEGA)

The princess will visit the city of Reggio Emilia in northern Italy for two days from May 13 to May 14 to focus on early years child development.

During her stay, Kate will learn more about the Reggio Emilia Approach, an educational philosophy which focuses on the idea that children have the potential for self-development.

She will also highlight the importance of nurturing environments and loving relationships to a child’s development.

A Kensington Palace spokesperson said: ‘The princess is very much looking forward to visiting Italy next week and seeing first-hand how the Reggio Emilia approach creates environments where nature and loving human relationships come together to support children’s development.

‘As the Centre for Early Childhood continues to build its work internationally, this visit is an opportunity to connect the Shaping Us Framework with leading global approaches, and to highlight a shared understanding that it is in these early years, through the natural world and the warmth of human connection, that we begin to lay the foundations for a resilient and healthy future.’

The centre was founded by Kate in 2021 to raise awareness of the importance of early years experiences in shaping society over the long term, and to commission research.

Kate battled an undisclosed type of cancer in 2024 (Picture: PA)

The announcement coincides with a visit by Kate to the University of East London on Wednesday for the launch of the centre’s new resource for people working with babies, young children and their families.

Palace aides said both the publication and the trip signalled a milestone moment for the princess and the centre’s work in the early years, both in the UK and abroad.

In the coming months, the centre will work with early years leaders to embed the understanding into entry-level training and ongoing professional development.

Meanwhile, the Prince of Wales is expected to travel to the US for the Fifa World Cup in July, around the same time as commemorations marking the 250th anniversary of American independence.

It is not yet known whether the princess will join him, but her return to foreign tours will raise hopes that a trip across the Atlantic could happen for the Waleses, following in the footsteps of the King’s high-profile US state visit to see Donald Trump last week.

Kate was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer early in 2024, for which she underwent chemotherapy, and she announced she was in remission 16 months ago in January 2025.

She has gradually returned to royal duties, including supporting the King at state visits to the UK, and last month joined the royal family to mark the 100th anniversary of the late Queen Elizabeth II’s birth, and made a solo appearance at the Cenotaph on Anzac Day.

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