Meghan Markle is ‘most likely’ to give birth on April 28, according to the Office for National Statistics
ROYAL watchers are anxiously waiting for the news Meghan Markle has given birth – with fans expecting the news any day now.
Kensington Palace left us all guessing when they said Baby Sussex would be born in spring 2019 – a three-month window which was never going to satisfy nosy Brits.
The former US actress, 37, gave us a bit more information when she told crowds in Birkenhead, Merseyside, that she was due in “late April or early May”.
That means the tot, who is her first with Prince Harry, 36, is most likely to be born on April 28 – according to the statistics.
The Office for National Statistics track the average number of daily births for each date – using figures spanning more than two decades, from 1995 to 2017.
And April 28 comes out on top for the period Meg has mentioned – with 1,833 births.
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April 30 and 26 – both with 1,815 births – are also hot contenders.
While 1,842 tots tend to be born on May 8, meaning that’s a possibility too – depending on how far Meghan has stretched her definition of “early May”.
We previously revealed how Meghan refuses to wear maternity clothes because she thinks they’re ‘frumpy’, according to a royal fashion expert.