Updated
Updated · FT Adviser · May 18
UK Tribunal Rules Football Referees Self-Employed After 8-Year Tax Fight
Updated
Updated · FT Adviser · May 18

UK Tribunal Rules Football Referees Self-Employed After 8-Year Tax Fight

1 articles · Updated · FT Adviser · May 18
  • The First-tier Tribunal held that PGMOL match referees were self-employed, allowing appeals against HMRC after the Supreme Court sent the case back for a fresh review.
  • The tribunal found each match created only a narrow, episodic work-for-payment bargain: referees could decline appointments or withdraw without sanction, and PGMOL was not obliged to offer work.
  • PGMOL’s oversight—through appointments, fitness tests, assessments, coaching and discipline—was judged regulatory and developmental rather than managerial, while on-field decisions remained entirely with referees and the FA handled performance discipline.
  • Integration and economic reality also weighed against employment: referees derived professional status from the FA, and officiating was generally secondary to their full-time jobs rather than their main livelihood.
  • The ruling is not binding and HMRC could still appeal, but it adds to wider uncertainty over UK employment-status tax cases after an 8-year dispute.
Why did referees win self-employed status just as a new agency prepares to tackle gig economy exploitation?
With tough new employment laws coming, is the referee ruling a false hope for companies relying on contractors?