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From London's Tennis Courts to California, Aggressive Taxes Always Disappoint

6 0
24.06.2026

Last week, nearly every elite men's tennis player skipped one of London's marquee tournaments. Only one of the world's top 10 showed up at Queen's Club, the traditional Wimbledon warmup; stars including Alexander Zverev, Daniil Medvedev, Taylor Fritz and Ben Shelton were playing 300 miles away in Halle, Germany. A culprit was likely Britain's tax code, which doesn't stop at taxing prize money earned on British soil.

It also taxes a slice of a player's global endorsement income, prorated by how many days of the year they happen to spend in the UK. Fail to advance far enough in the tournament, and the tax bill on your sponsorship deals can exceed your payout. So, the players who get to choose where they compete are now choosing somewhere else.

"(I)t's not about the money for playing," retired superstar Rafael Nadal once explained. "They take from the sponsors. ... This is very difficult. I am playing in the UK and losing money."

File this story under "how people dodge taxes by leaving." Evidence for the phenomenon was piling up long before California billionaires began their high-profile relocations to Nevada and Florida ahead of a proposed wealth tax on the ballot this November. And it's not the only reason these taxes disappoint.

When Norway raised its top wealth-tax rate by just one percentage point in 2022,........

© Townhall