It emerged in 2022 that the prince and others were taking ANL to court, with some of the allegations dating back decades.
The publisher failed to get the case thrown out in 2023 by arguing the claims had been brought “far too late”.
Lawyers for the claimants successfully argued that new evidence had come to light, and they did not know how information was being covertly acquired at the time.
ANL’s lawyers have staunchly denied the allegations, previously calling the case “without foundation” and an “affront” to hard-working journalists whose reputations had been disparaged.
A spokesperson for ANL has previously said it had “denied under oath that its journalists had commissioned or obtained information derived from phone hacking, phone tapping, bugging, computer or email hacking or burglary to order”.
The statement added: “The stories concerned, many of which were published 20 or more years ago, and not subject to any complaint at the time, were the product of responsible journalism based on legitimate sources”.
This is the latest newspaper publisher against which Harry has brought legal action over information gathering.