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The Dutch heiress-to-the-throne has announced she has enrolled for a degree at Amsterdam university – and will live with normal students in a houseshare. 

Princess Amalia, 18, has revealed she will be studying for a £3,750 degree in Politics, Psychology, Law and Economics at University of Amsterdam from September. 

During her studies, the Princess will be living in a rented houseshare with her fellow students. 

A post on the royal court’s Instagram account stated that her time at university is considered ‘private.’ 

Princess Amalia, 18, has revealed she will be studying for a £3,750 degree in Politics, Psychology, Law and Economics at University of Amsterdam from September

Princess Amalia, 18, has revealed she will be studying for a £3,750 degree in Politics, Psychology, Law and Economics at University of Amsterdam from September

The statement from the court read: ‘The Princess of Orange will start in September with the bachelor’s degree in Politics, Psychology, Law and Economics (PPLE) at the University of Amsterdam.’

The announcement went on to reveal the Princess applied for the degree and went through the same testing and application process as any other student.  

It also revealed further details about the Princess’s living arrangements. 

‘She will live in Amsterdam in September. The Princess’s study time is considered private.’

During her studies, the Princess will be living in a houseshare with her fellow students and will pay rent from her own pocket. Pictured with her father King Willem-Alexander and her mother Queen Maxima, as well as her sister Alexia, 16 and Ariane, 14 during King's Day celebrations on April 27

During her studies, the Princess will be living in a houseshare with her fellow students and will pay rent from her own pocket. Pictured with her father King Willem-Alexander and her mother Queen Maxima, as well as her sister Alexia, 16 and Ariane, 14 during King’s Day celebrations on April 27 

The course Amalia enrolled for costs £3,762.73 per year for Dutch students and students from the European Union and of the European Economic Area. 

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However, for students from outside these trade zones, the course could cost £11,325.85 per year. 

Amsterdam University is considered to be the 65th best in the world, according to Times Higher Education, and it has welcomed a host of illustrious alumni, including Amalia’s aunt, Princess Mabel of Orange-Nassau, 53. 

Amalia, who turned 18 in December, has been taking on more of a public profile in recent months following her coming of age.

In an interview she gave to mark her 18th birthday, the royal had already revealed she planned on joining university clubs and live in university accommodation with her fellow students rather than more princely dwellings. 

The announcement went on to reveal the Princess applied for the degree and went from the same testing and application process as any other student (pictured in the Hague with her parents in December)

The announcement went on to reveal the Princess applied for the degree and went from the same testing and application process as any other student (pictured in the Hague with her parents in December) 

In an authorised biography released in November last year, the royal admitted she does not feel ready to be Queen yet. 

She said she would ask her Argentine-born mother, Queen Maxima, 50, to step in temporarily if her father, King Willem-Alexander, 54, were to die suddenly.

‘But I said to my father: you just keep on eating healthy and exercising a lot,’ the teenage princess added. 

The biography, simply titled ‘Amalia’, was written with the approval of the Royal Family to mark Amalia’s 18th birthday.

It offered a rare glimpse into the princess’s private life, which has been closely guarded by her parents since Willem-Alexander ascended the throne in 2013. 

For the past year, Amalia enjoyed a gap year after graduating from high school with merit in Spring 2021.

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Very little detail was released about the Princess’s whereabouts, apart from the Palace explaining she was undertaking charity work and internships.

Biographer Claudia de Breij revealed Amalia had a part-time job at a beachside cafe, feels self-conscious when she is recognised by members of the public and would pursue a career as a singer or equestrian if she was not destined to be queen. 

Amalia has admitted she does not feel ready to be Queen and will ask her mother to step up in the event of her father's death

Amalia has admitted she does not feel ready to be Queen and will ask her mother to step up in the event of her father’s death 

The royal said she hopes to join university clubs and live in university accommodation with other students during her studies

The royal said she hopes to join university clubs and live in university accommodation with other students during her studies 

Along with her sisters Princess Alexia, 16, and Princess Ariane, 14, Catharina-Amalia spent the early years of her life at Eikenhorst Villa in Wassenaar, an affluent suburb of The Hague. 

‘We do our best to be really with them – on holidays or weekends or even at breakfast in the mornings,’ Willem-Alexander once said in an interview.

The family enjoyed days out cycling and to the beach, and holidays to Maxima’s home country of Argentina.

However life changed in 2013 when Amalia’s grandmother Queen Beatrix abdicated and Willem-Alexander ascended the throne. The new king and queen moved their daughters into Huis ten Bosch, the royal palace in The Hague.

Nine-year-old Amalia became The Princess of Orange, the title given to the heir to the throne. 

Speaking ahead of his investiture, Willem-Alexander said: ‘Amalia’s title will be made formal when she’s 18 and she enters the State Council. Until then, we will protect her as much as possible.

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