King Charles has been to the White House before, but the internet has decided his latest trip says a lot more than any diplomatic readout ever could. In a viral side-by-side comparison shared after his visit this week, the then-Prince Charles of 1970 appears stiff, unsmiling, and almost painfully formal beside Richard Nixon.
Fast-forward to his meeting with Donald Trump, and the now-King Charles is laughing, visibly at ease, and sitting in an Oval Office so aggressively gold that viewers seemed unsure whether they were looking at a seat of power or a showroom with delusions of grandeur.
Highlights
Viral photos show King Charles far more relaxed in Trump's Oval Office than during his 1970 visit with Nixon.
Trump's gold-heavy Oval Office décor drew sharp mockery online, with commenters calling it "gaudy" and "tacky."
The 2026 visit included Trump placing a hand on Charles's knee during a joke, reportedly a technical breach of royal protocol.
Charles, 76, has visited the White House across six decades, meeting presidents from Nixon to Trump — his 2026 trip being his first as king.
Despite a cancer diagnosis in 2024, Charles kept working throughout treatment and made the historic state visit as his health entered a precautionary phase.
What changed most in the viral comparison wasn't just Charles—it was Trump's gold-heavy room
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Getty ImagesPeople immediately zoomed in on two things. First: Charles himself looked far more relaxed than he did during his first U.S. visit in July 1970. Second: Trump's Oval Office makeover left absolutely no subtlety untroubled.
Back in 1970, Charles was photographed sitting rigidly next to Nixon in a comparatively modest Oval Office with bright yellow chairs and a royal blue carpet. A later 2015 visit to the Obama White House also showed a more traditional room, with vintage furniture and striped wallpaper. By April 28, 2026, though, the setting had changed dramatically.
During the state visit, Charles was photographed laughing while Trump placed a hand on the King's knee during a joke—reportedly a technical breach of royal protocol, but one Charles seemed to shrug off with ease. That image helped push the side-by-side comparison into viral territory because it didn't just show a monarch aging into confidence. It also showed a presidency determined to gild every available surface.
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Getty Images Online reactions were not exactly restrained. One Instagram user wrote, "Oh my gosh, it now looks gaudy and tacky, I didn't realize it looked so bad. Too much is too much." Another added, "That room is so ugly now, it looks like Vegas or HomeGoods."
Other viewers took the joke further. "The King is probably thinking 'I don't have this much gilding in all of the palaces combined,'" one commenter quipped in reaction to the room's heavy gold look. A BuzzFeed reader had perhaps the bleakest summary of all: "They said it couldn't be done - but somehow they made a room more garish than it was in the 1970s."
Online commenters called the state of the Oval Office 'tacky and garish'
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Getty ImagesCharles, 76, has been navigating American presidents for over five decades. He was just 21 on his first White House visit in 1970, and went on to meet Reagan in 1981, return with Princess Diana for a famous 1985 White House dinner, and sit with Obama in 2015.
The 2026 trip was his first as king. That he made it at all carries its own weight: in February 2024, Buckingham Palace announced he had been diagnosed with an unspecified cancer, found incidentally during treatment for a benign enlarged prostate. He kept working throughout, and by late 2025, his treatment was being scaled back into what the Palace called a precautionary phase.