To avoid the UK's 15% tax on gross betting profits

Betfair to use Gibraltar gambling license

2011-03-14
Reading time 1:01 min

The company's 1,200 UK-based staff will not relocate to Gibraltar, though. Betfair also said it would still pay the British horse racing levy despite moving its licensing abroad.

"Betfair will continue to support British horse racing by committing the same amount of money to the sport that the company has been paying via the statutory levy for the remainder of the 49th Levy Scheme and on the terms set out for the 50th Levy Scheme," it said in its interim management statement. The horse racing levy is charged on those with UK gambling licences.

The company said that while there were clearly tax advantages to the shift, it would also allow it to consolidate its technology platforms.

Betfair will join a host of bookmakers who have shifted offshore to escape the government's gambling levy. Both Ladbrokes and William Hill have situated some of their online operations in Gibraltar, while even the government-owned Tote runs casino and bingo from Alderney, and its poker site from Malta.

Betfair has not officially revealed how much tax it will save, saying in its statement that it will improve its profits by US$ 16 million in 2012, after taking costs into account.

In the three month period covered by the interim statement, Betfair also said that revenues were up 6.2% on the same period a year earlier. Poor weather, which hit the number of race meetings, did hold the company back but it is hoping for a strong fourth quarter, with the Cheltenham Festival, the Grand National and the conclusion to the football season all imminent.

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