Queen Letizia swapped black for beige in one of her staple shoe silhouettes on Tuesday, when she attended World Day for Rare Diseases events at the Palacio de Congresos de Castellon in Castellon de la Plana, Spain. The engagement, organized by the Spanish Federation for Rare Diseases, or FEDER, under the “Porque cada pERsona importa” campaign, brought the royal together with the 2026 Falleras Queens of Castellon, Clara Sanz and Ana Olivas.

CASTELLON DE LA PLANA COMUNIDAD, SPAIN - MARCH 03: Queen Letizia greets the Falleras 2026 Queens of Castellon, Clara Sanz (left) and Ana Olivas (right) on their arrival at the event to mark 'World Day for Rare Diseases', at the Palacio de Congresos de Castellon, on 3 March 2026, in Castellon de la Plana, Valencian Community, Spain. Organised by the Spanish Federation for Rare Diseases (FEDER), the event is part of the campaign 'Porque cada pERsona importa' (Because every person matters), an initiative to ensure equity in access to social and health resources. (Photo By Carme Ripolles/Europa Press via Getty Images)

Queen Letizia greets the Falleras 2026 Queens of Castellon, Clara Sanz (left) and Ana Olivas (right) on their arrival at the event to mark ‘World Day for Rare Diseases’, at the Palacio de Congresos de Castellon, on March 3, in Castellon de la Plana, Valencian Community, Spain.

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For the visit, Letizia wore Magrit’s buckle low-heel pumps in beige, a shape that has been in steady rotation in her wardrobe. The Spanish-made style featured a pointed toe and smooth leather finish, with a rectangular buckle — a signature of royal footwear — set low on the vamp and a covered kitten heel in the same neutral shade.

She paired the pumps with a teal Paul Smith suit: a single-breasted jacket and straight-leg trousers that hit at the ankle and a white Hugo Boss. As for accessories, Queen Letizia kept it minimal with Gold and Roses emerald earrings and a Coreterno ring.

CASTELLON DE LA PLANA COMUNIDAD, SPAIN - MARCH 03: The Falleras 2026 Queens of Castellon, Ana Olivas (l) and Clara Sanz (2l) dance during the arrival of Queen Letizia (4l) at the event to mark 'World Day for Rare Diseases', at the Palacio de Congresos de Castellon, on 3 March 2026, in Castellon de la Plana, Valencian Community, Spain. Organised by the Spanish Federation for Rare Diseases (FEDER), the event is part of the campaign 'Porque cada pERsona importa' (Because every person matters), an initiative that aims to ensure equity in access to social and health resources. (Photo By Carme Ripolles/Europa Press via Getty Images)

The Falleras 2026 Queens of Castellon, Ana Olivas and Clara Sanz dance during the arrival of Queen Letizia at the event to mark ‘World Day for Rare Diseases’, at the Palacio de Congresos de Castellon.

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The beige pair followed several recent outings of the same Magrit silhouette in black.In late January, the queen met with representatives from the Foundation for the Development of Nursing (FUDEN) at La Zarzuela Palace in Madrid, and brought out the same Magrit style in black leather. She wore the buckle pumps with a tweed midi dress cut with a close bodice, defined waistband and a hem that eased out below the knee, woven in black, white and muted pastel threads.

A closer look at Queen Letizia's tan Magrit buckle pumps with a kitten heel. Queen Letizia shoe style, kitten heels, short high heels, royal shoe

A closer look at Queen Letizia’s tan Magrit buckle pumps with a kitten heel.

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She reached for the black style during a November 2025 trip to China as well. At a cultural event in Chengdu honoring Spanish poet Antonio Machado, Letizia matched a pink tweed ensemble with the same pointed-toe, buckle-front kitten heels, keeping close to the traditional royal pump formula while maintaining a modest heel height.

Magrit remains a constant in her footwear lineup. The Spanish label, founded in 1929 in Elda, has supplied everything from baby pink Carlota slingbacks worn to the Spanish Parliament in November 2025 to the black suede boots she used for FundéuRAE’s anniversary in December

The buckle kitten-heel profile itself continues to circulate across royal and designer collections, from Roger Vivier’s Belle Vivier series and Manolo Blahnik’s Maysale styles to similar low-heel pairs worn by Queen Camilla and Kate Middleton.