Former world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua has formally relocated his tax residence and substantial business empire from the United Kingdom to Dubai, underscoring a broader “capital flight” of wealthy Britons seeking lower‑tax jurisdictions amid rising levies on high‑income earners under the current UK government. [1][2][3] The move highlights how elite athletes and entrepreneurs are increasingly using global mobility and tax‑neutral hubs like the UAE to reshape their economic footprint. [2][4]
Who Anthony Joshua is
Anthony Joshua, 36, is a British‑Nigerian Olympic gold medallist and former unified heavyweight world champion who has transitioned into a high‑profile entrepreneur and investor. [5][3] His companies, including Sparta Promotions Limited and 258 Investments Limited, manage a business empire estimated at around £150 million, built from fight purses, endorsements, and media ventures. [2][6][3]
The Dubai relocation
Corporate filings show Joshua has listed a Dubai address as his country of residence, effectively making him a UAE tax resident rather than a UK one. [1][3][4] This change coincides with his reported £150 million business empire being legally re‑registered under UAE residency rules, even as some British nationals have fled Dubai due to regional tensions and missile strikes linked to the wider US‑Iran conflict. [7][5][4]
Why Dubai and tax savings
Dubai offers a near‑zero personal income tax regime, which is a major draw for high‑net‑worth individuals like Joshua. [2][3] In the UK, his company Sparta Promotions made profits of roughly £20.4 million in 2024 and paid about £6.65 million in corporation tax, while Joshua himself paid well over £10 million in personal tax on dividends and income in recent years. [2][8][3] By shifting residency, analysts estimate he can avoid UK tax liabilities on tens of millions of pounds in future dividend and investment income. [3][4]
Link to “capital flight” in the UK
Joshua’s departure sits within a wider exodus of wealthy Britons, including business owners and investors, who are relocating to tax‑friendly locales such as Dubai, Monaco, and Spain. [3][4] Commentators have tied this trend to UK tax‑hikes and reforms under Chancellor Rachel Reeves, designed to plug a fiscal “black hole” but accused by critics of driving a “millionaire exodus” as the cost of being rich in Britain rises. [3][9]
Pan‑African reading of the move
For a Pan‑African audience, Joshua’s trajectory is doubly symbolic: he is a British‑Nigerian megastar turning his back on a Western tax regime to anchor his life and capital in the global‑South‑linked Gulf, even as the region grapples with geopolitical instability. [2][5] At the same time, the episode underscores how African‑heritage elites—whether in sport, business, or entertainment—often navigate layered identities and jurisdictions to protect and grow wealth, while home countries on the continent still struggle to capture the tax potential of their diaspora. [1][9]
What this means for policy debates
Joshua’s Dubai move sharpens long‑running debates about tax fairness, mobility, and “capital flight” in both the UK and emerging economies. [3][4] It also raises questions for African‑partner governments and regional blocs about how to design tax and investment policies that attract or retain high‑earners and diaspora capital, rather than push them into low‑tax hubs like Dubai or Switzerland. [1][9]
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