Reform UK Proposes £250,000 “Britannia Cards” for Wealthy Migrants

Reform UK's £250,000 “Britannia Card” would restore non-dom perks and funnel visa fees to Britain’s poorest full-time workers.

Reform UK’s £250,000 “Britannia Card” would restore non-dom perks and funnel visa fees to Britain’s poorest full-time workers.


Reform UK has unveiled a policy proposal that would allow wealthy foreigners to purchase 10-year residency permits for £250,000 while maintaining tax exemptions on overseas wealth. The “Britannia Card” represents the party’s direct challenge to Labour’s elimination of non-domiciled tax status, a move that has prompted an exodus of high-net-worth individuals from the UK.

Party leader Nigel Farage positions the card as an economic catalyst that would attract entrepreneurs and job creators back to British shores. The proposal requires that all proceeds from the residency fees flow directly to the country’s lowest-earning 10% of full-time workers rather than general government coffers. Farage believes this redistribution mechanism would “make that gap between being on benefits and going to work bigger” while simultaneously drawing investment capital into the domestic economy.

The policy emerges against a backdrop of mounting concern over wealthy residents departures from the UK. Approximately 10,800 high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) left the country last year, though the Tax Justice Network disputes this figure’s accuracy. The government’s Office for Budget Responsibility projects that 1,000 non-doms will exit Britain in 2025-26 due to recent tax changes, though officials acknowledge this estimate carries substantial uncertainty.

Data from Henley & Partners and New World Wealth project a far more severe exodus, forecasting that a net of 16,500 millionaires will leave the UK in 2025, representing the largest single-year outflow by any country since tracking began a decade ago.

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Finance Minister Rachel Reeves characterizes the Britannia Card as a “tax cut for foreign billionaires,” drawing parallels to former Prime Minister Liz Truss’s controversial mini-Budget. Labour estimates the policy would cost £2.5 billion annually and necessitate tax increases on working families to compensate for lost revenue.

Though Reform UK trails the governing Labour Party in parliamentary seats, the party has polled strongly on populist platforms. Its tax proposals position it in direct opposition to Labour’s efforts to close loopholes for offshore wealth holders.

The Britannia Card proposal fundamentally restructures Britain’s approach to attracting foreign capital by explicitly linking wealthy immigration to domestic wealth redistribution. This mechanism distinguishes Reform’s strategy from traditional tax haven models that typically channel revenues into general government spending rather than targeted transfers to low-income workers.

Reform projects that 6,000 annual Britannia Card purchases would generate £600 payments for 2.5 million Britons. However, analysis from Tax Policy Associates estimates the proposal would cost more than £34 billion over five years, while the Institute for Fiscal Studies describes it as “far from clear” whether the proposals would benefit or harm public finances overall.

Despite public criticism of Reform’s proposal, Bloomberg reports that Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government is quietly considering its own new investor visa targeting wealthy foreigners willing to invest in strategic sectors, including artificial intelligence, clean energy, and life sciences. The potential program would mark a reversal from recent policies that eliminated previous golden visa routes and suggests growing bipartisan recognition that Britain must compete internationally for mobile capital.

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The Britannia Card is the second major residency card proposal to emerge this year, following President Trump’s launch of a $5 million “Trump Card” visa offering wealthy foreigners permanent US residency and citizenship pathways.

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