Here’s what’s most relevant right now.
Direct answer
- The latest coverage indicates Pippa Middleton’s footpath dispute in Berkshire progressed to a public inquiry in mid-May 2026, focusing on whether locals’ decades-long use of a lane across Barton Court should be recognised as a public right of way. News outlets reported the inquiry dates around May 13–14, with a decision anticipated in the following weeks.
Context and what to watch
- The core issue is whether a footpath across Pippa and James Matthews’s Barton Court estate near Kintbury should be added to the Definitive Map of public rights of way. Ramblers UK argues it has been used by the public for decades, while the landowners have blocked access or gate the route.
- The inspector’s focus is on historical use (typically a 20-year period) to establish a public right of access, not on privacy or security arguments, which are considered outside the inquiry’s scope for this matter.
Recent developments and where to find updates
- Public inquiries in such cases can issue interim rulings or remarks during hearings; final decisions may come weeks after the hearing concludes. If you’re tracking this closely, check local Berkshire outlets and national tabloids’ royal sections for the inspector’s interim updates and the final determination.
- Local coverage by outlets in Berkshire and national pages have varied in emphasis, with some highlighting residents’ access concerns and others noting privacy and security as tangential to the legal question of public access rights.
Illustrative note
- A typical sequence in these inquiries: (1) the Ramblers petition for a right of way, (2) estate owners contend access is restricted for privacy/security, (3) historical use is examined, (4) the inspector issues a decision. This pattern aligns with the reported Berkshire case.
Would you like me to pull the very latest public-facing statements from the inspector or summarize the key evidence presented at the May hearings? I can also track ongoing updates and provide a concise timeline.