Cycle News

Cycle News 2014 Issue 50 December 16

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/434045

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 41 of 251

VOL. 51 ISSUE 50 DECEMBER 16, 2014 P41 MARQUEZ TAX DISPUTE T urning 22 in February, Marc Marquez is finally leaving his family home next month. This normal enough decision has trig- gered a social media storm in Spain. For the double MotoGP Champion is mov- ing to neighboring tax ha- ven Andorra. With earnings now thought to top 10-million Euros a year from Repsol Honda alone, and some- thing similar from sundry sponsors and marketing deals, the reaction con- cerns the loss of taxes to the beleaguered Spanish econ- omy. But the rider insists the move has more to do with escaping the burden of fame than avoid- ing taxes, and hinted that he was committed to pay full Spanish taxes for the next two years, and perhaps for longer. "All the time it is becoming more difficult for me," he told a Spanish TV interviewer. "I under- stand when fans stop me in the street—but when they come to my home, ring the bell and wait for me on the doorstep." Twitterati dubbed him "a trai- tor" and urged his sponsors to withdraw their backing. But "tax- es were not my motivation," he said. "I don't know what will hap- pen in the future, but I will pay next year, and keep paying my taxes," he said. A rider's earning power, he added, was hostage to fortune. "You never know when your ca- reer will end," he said, referring to the eye problem and double vi- sion at the end of 2011 that came close to finishing it for him. The criticism of fans was, said Marquez, "the hardest of my life." Close to tears, he thanked his family for their support. The landlocked Principality of Andorra, straddling the Pyr- enees mountain range dividing Spain from France, is less than 75 miles from his family home in Cervera. It is a popular destina- tion for high-earning sportsmen. Both Espargaro brothers moved there, while Pedrosa and Loren- zo are domiciled in Switzerland, which was also the choice of Casey Stoner. To avoid Spanish tax of around 50 percent of his earnings, Mar- quez would have to spend half the year in Andorra to meet resi- dence requirements, where (af- ter an entrance fee of 50,000 Euros) taxes will be closer to just 10 percent. Valentino Rossi has been through a different kind of taxa- tion hell, after his supposed resi- dence outside Italy was ques- tioned by revenuers in 2007: settled out of court with an undis- closed but substantial payment. New Formula 1 Champion Lewis Hamilton, a resident of Mo- naco, has faced a similar storm in Britain in recent weeks, while Spanish F1 Champion Fernando Alonso returned to Spain from Switzerland as a tax resident in 2011. Michael Scott MotoGP Champion Marc Marquez finds out that it's not cheap being a superstar. PHOTOGRAPHY BY GOLD & GOOSE

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Cycle News 2014 Issue 50 December 16