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Nike paid just £1m in tax after selling £100m of Manchester United replica kits

Taxman misses out on a potential £9.1m from the England football kit makers over five years

Simon Neville
Monday 07 July 2014 08:18 BST
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Robin van Persie celebrates after scoring for Manchester United
Robin van Persie celebrates after scoring for Manchester United (GETTY IMAGES)

Nike paid just £1m to the taxman in the past five years on £100m sales of its Manchester United replica kits, The Independent can reveal.

The company funnelled nearly £40m over the period to its Dutch business despite making most of its money on sales to football fans in the UK, according to accounts filed with Companies House.

The legal loophole saw the total tax bill in the UK for Manchester United Merchandising Ltd, which is jointly run by Nike and the football club, reduced to just £255,000 last year after an £8.3m royalty fee was paid to its Dutch subsidiary. Similar payments have been made for at least the past five years.

It means the taxman missed out on a potential £9.1m over the period from the England football kit makers and leaves Nike the latest in a line of US companies facing scrutiny for their tax affairs in Europe.

Nike could not be reached for comment yesterday, but has said it abides by all tax law in countries in which it operates.

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