RELATED: Meghan Markle Just Said This Is Her One Regret About Royal Life. Princess Mako and Komuro, both 29, met in 2012 while they were attending International Christian University in Tokyo. He proposed the following year, but they made no plans for a wedding right away, instead continuing a long-distance relationship while Mako received her master’s degree in Art Museum and Gallery Studies from Leicester University in England. They officially announced that they were engaged in 2017.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb RELATED: This Royal Just Turned Down a Massive Annual Allowance. Originally, Mako and Komuro were going to marry in 2018, but some family drama on Komuro’s side delayed the wedding. A scandal came out involving Komuro’s mother and financial issues she had with her former fiancé. As reported by Vanity Fair, the royal family announced that the wedding would be postponed until 2020, and Mako said that “immaturity” was the reason for it. In 2018, U.K.’s The Times reported that the then-empress consort Michiko, Mako’s grandmother, was “leading royal efforts” to stop the engagement from moving forward. For more celebrity news delivered right to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. Mako and Komuro are planning to get married by the end of this year in a small ceremony. According to The Times, they will not have a formal Shinto ceremony, making Mako the first princess in modern times to skip the tradition. The couple also plan to move to the United States, where Komuro hopes to work at a New York law firm. Komuro currently lives in the U.S. and is awaiting the results of the Bar Exam, according to Japanese newspaper The Asahi Shimbun. In Japan, the line of succession is male-only, so Mako would never rule as empress. The current emperor, Naruhito, is Mako’s uncle. Her father, Fumihito, is next in line to the throne as Naruhito only has a daughter. Mako’s 14-year-old brother, Hisahito, is second in line. When a princess marries a commoner, it is imperial law that she has to give up her title. But, in exchange, she can receive a $1.3 million payout from the government, funded by taxpayers. According to The Times, Mako has decided to turn this down. The Asahi Shimbun reports that the payout was established “in order to preserve the dignity of a person who was once a member of the imperial family.” Sources told the newspaper that Mako is declining the money because of public apathy toward herself and Komuro that stemmed from the money issues involving his mother. Plus, the couple should be set financially in their new U.S. life with Komuro working as a lawyer. Mako’s aunt, Sayako Kuroda (previously known as Princess Nori), is another recent princess to give up her title. She married a commoner, Yoshiki Kuroda, in 2005, and received a government payout of over $1 million, according to The Guardian. RELATED: Prince Charles May Force This Couple to Move Out of Their Home, Sources Say.