
In September 2025, questions arose around a property Nigel Farage owns in Clacton. Specifically, people wanted to know if he paid for the house himself or if his partner did. The reason this was controversial was because Farage could have saved around £44k in stamp duty by putting the house in his partner’s name.
Now, Farage’s partner has refused to answer some simple questions on the topic:
New twist…
Farage’s partner refuses to confirm how she paid for house in his constituency
French publication Le Monde says Laure Ferrari ‘dodged’ question when quizzed over property purchase in Clactonhttps://t.co/6VGvOBsaHl
— Reform Party UK Exposed
(@reformexposed) May 6, 2026
Farage exposed
Reform Party UK Exposed detailed the timeline up until now:
IMPORTANT: [Nigel Farage] said he would buy a house in Clacton a year ago.
He then angrily stated “I’ve just exchanged contracts on a house in Clacton, what more can I do?”.
He then stated his girlfriend Laure Ferrari had bought it.
He then said he had had an expensive weekend taking ‘tax advice’.
He the said Ferrari’s parents had given her the cash to buy it.
It was then shown they didn’t have the means to.
Today she’s refusing to say how it was purchased.
Before commenting, remember – she is not just a member of the public, she’s a political operative and has been a candidate. Shes the partner of Nigel Farage who claims to want to be Prime Minister.
He is involved, so it’s 100% public interest.
Here’s what Farage’s partner Laure Ferarri said when asked if she bought the house with a family inheritance:
Yes and no, that would be a very large inheritance … There’s more than one way to pay for a house.
Well that’s reassuringly vague, isn’t it?
Ferrari added:
I can’t say how much my grandmother gave, that’s my business. The main thing is that I paid all the taxes, there was no tax evasion, and the house is in my name.
The benefit of providing a clear, truthful answer is people stop asking you the same question. Of course, to be able to do that, you have to be able to demonstrate that your answer is actually true.
Alarmingly, the prominent tax expert Dan Neidle claims to know the answer to the question of who paid for what, as Mr Ethical highlighted:
And @DanNeidle claims to know but won’t say “because she’s not a public figure”!
— Mr Ethical
(@nw_nicholas) May 6, 2026
Of course, this argument falls down when you consider the actual issue being discussed – namely that a politician used an everyday citizen to perpetrate tax fraud (allegedly). Neidle seems to think this is a get-out-of-jail free card of some sort; others disagree.
To be completely fair to Neidle – the wettest-looking man in Britain – he has done some good work exposing Reform politicians’ tax affairs:
The deputy leader of Reform UK, Richard Tice, owns a property company – Quidnet REIT.
From 2020 to 2022 it paid Tice and his trust £600k in dividends. Quidnet should have paid £120k of tax on those dividends. It didn’t.
A
with evidence from the company’s own filings: pic.twitter.com/ydZoyLtuSk
— Dan Neidle (@DanNeidle) April 11, 2026
Money men
Speaking of Reform’s financial affairs, Farage is also taking heat for this:
Nigel Farage is facing questions over a £5m gift he received from a billionaire backer before he became an MP@vicderbyshire runs through the timeline#Newsnight pic.twitter.com/w2rkGHTAEC
— BBC Newsnight (@BBCNewsnight) May 5, 2026
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.
Fortunately, the Reform leader had received an untaxed, undeclared ‘gift’ of around £5m for security purposes at the start of 2024. Farage has stated that he’s disclosing the information because an unknown party has recently obtained details of his personal finances.
And this issue isn’t likely to just go away:
Massive problem for Farage
Mandelson was hardly noticed bu focus groups
But a hidden £5million that i instantly cutting through https://t.co/RWLWbL410u
— dave lawrence
(@dave43law) May 6, 2026
Last month, he faced criticism for this:
Is Nigel Farage’s £500k personal crypto deal above board – or a scandal hiding in plain sight?
I debate with his new Bitcoin partner, Kwasi Kwarteng, on Times Radio… pic.twitter.com/NDwDx0zoSx
— Fraser Nelson (@FraserNelson) April 14, 2026
When it comes to money, there are a lot of unanswered questions swirling around Farage. The biggest question of all is can we trust this man with the British economy?
Featured image via The Canary
By Willem Moore
From Canary via This RSS Feed.



(@reformexposed)
(@nw_nicholas)
with evidence from the company’s own filings: 
(@dave43law)