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Farage bought £1.4m house after undeclared £5m ‘gift’

Alex/Rose Cocker by Alex/Rose Cocker
15 May 2026
in Analysis, UK
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Nigel Farage purchased, in cash, a £1.4m house following an undeclared, untaxed ‘personal gift’ from crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne.

Farage originally claimed that the gift was for ‘security’, after Harborne saw some cruel individual throw a milkshake at the far-right leader. However, on 14 May, he altered this claim. Now, apparently, the £5m was a ‘reward’ for his hard work campaigning for Brexit.

Gee, we wonder what you call a ‘reward’ given to a politician by an interested party, for campaigning for a political case? Oh yes — a ‘donation’ — which Farage failed to declare. As such, he’s now under investigation by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, Daniel Greenberg.

‘The relevant chronology is straightforward’

Regarding the £1.4m house purchase, a Reform UK spokesperson has said:

The relevant chronology is straightforward. The offer and purchase process for the property commenced before the gift.

Mr Farage had already passed proof of funds and the relevant checks before receiving the gift. The purchase was therefore already proceeding independently of it.

That’s terribly convenient, isn’t it. We wonder whether it was always going to be a cash purchase, too? Farage has since put in several planning applications to extend and redevelop his newest property.

In the same month he bought the £1.4m house, the Reform leader also put in applications to redevelop another Kent property … you know, shortly after he got that £5m “security”, we mean reward gift from Harborne.

Later that same year, Farage’s partner, Laure Ferrari, paid £885,000 up front on a Clacton property. You know, Clacton-on-Sea, Farage’s constituency that he never spent any time in.

This attracted media-based allegations of stamp duty avoidance of £44,250 which would have been due if the purchase was in Farage’s name — which he has denied.

Reacting to this week’s revelations, Labour party chair Anna Turley said:

Nigel Farage has repeatedly dodged questions on his multimillion-pound ‘gift’.

Now we can see why – this totally stinks. Farage must urgently come clean with the public as to what this £5m was used for and why he failed to declare it.

Lets take a look at some more ‘relevant chronology’, shall we?

‘The benefits should be registered’

In a 29 April interview with the Telegraph, far-right leader Nigel Farage alleged that his home was targeted by a firebomb attack back in 2025. He also stated that he’s disclosing the information because an unknown party has recently obtained details of his personal finances.

Fortunately for Farage, his security is being financed privately by billionaire Brexiteer Cristopher Harborne. The Thailand-based British billionaire has donated around £12m to Reform — £9mn in 2025 and another £3mn in 2026 — in hard-to-trace cryptocurrencies. Coincidentally, the party leader started shilling for crypto around the same time.

However, that £12m figure doesn’t include a £5m private ‘gift’ that Harborne made directly to Farage. Because the payout took place in 2024, shortly before Farage ended his brief retirement from party politics, he didn’t have to declare the money as a political donation. Likewise, its nature as a gift meant it was completely free of tax.

Or, at least, Farage desperately wanted to believe he didn’t have to declare the ‘gift’. As Sky News’ Beth Rigby pointed out (in an interview with a visibly shaken Farage):

The rules actually say if there is any doubt about the nature of it, the benefits should be registered. And the rules state you must register all current financial interests, any benefits other than earnings received in the 12 months before an election within one month of their election. No. If any doubt, the benefits should be registered.

‘A personal, unconditional gift’

On 13 May, the parliamentary standards commissioner confirmed he was investigating Farage for a potential breach of the members’ code of conduct. Likewise, the second investigation into the undeclared donation by the Electoral Commission is still on the cards, following a Tory complaint.

The stakes are high. Farage risks suspension from the Commons, should the standards investigation find him in serious breach of declaration rules. If that suspension lasts for ten or more days, it may even trigger a recall petition an a by-election in Clacton.

Given the potential consequences (and the compounding factor of the £1.4m house purchase), Reform look distinctly rattled. On 14 May, the day after the investigation was announced, the party “temporarily postponed” Farage’s speech in Sunderland.

A spokesperson for Reform stated that:

Mr Farage’s office is in communications with the parliamentary commissioner for standards. He has always been clear that this was a personal, unconditional gift and no rules were broken. We look forward to this being put to bed once and for all.

The parliamentary standards commissioner’s investigations can vary in both length and complexity. As such, we don’t currently have a timescale for a verdict on the Reform leader’s dodgy dealings.

However, if it does end up coming down to a by-election, we at least know that Farage has several very expensive homes to retire to.

Featured image via the Canary 

Tags: Reform
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Comments 1

  1. Paul F says:
    2 months ago

    I’m not surprised that these regulatory bodies here in the UK have become so useless. The Thames Water fiasco and waste dumping is a case in point.
    It feels like the entire establishment has been captured by blatant crooks and grifters who exploit politics and public services.
    I looked at a the current wages for a job I did twenty years ago and they’ve dropped by £4,000. Other jobs in the NHS have hit a ceiling wages wise. How workers survive nowadays I have no idea.
    I’m really hoping we have industrial action this summer. Mass strikes in protest at austerity and corruption. Let’s get out on the streets and protest such unprecedented inequality. That’s one way to cut Reform and the Labour Right out of the spotlight.

    Reply

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