THE UK's richest plumber has revealed details of his new glitzy life in Spain after fleeing the UK to avoid Labour's tax grab. Charlie Mullins, 72, who sold his company Pimlico Plumber for a staggering £142million, called his life on the Costa del Sol "magnificent". The father-of-four added he relocated and put his £12million UK gaffe up for sale following tax changes announced earlier this year. The tycoon said he was fed up of being "ripped off" and would only consider coming back to his hometown if Nigel Farage's Reform took office.
![[Man in suit standing by a console table with framed photos and a large mirror.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/elitebusinessliveevent-great-back-stage-today-918235122.jpg?strip=all&w=768)
He told the Mail Online: "I'll do anything I can to help get Reform in and Labour out," he said. So much so, he's announced he will be running as councillor for the Reform party in upcoming local elections in South East London. Taking refuge in his four-storey mansion, Charlie and his partner Malek said they now enjoy hosting their friends at their bar and swimming pool. He also likes to keep fit in his very own gym, where he works out with a personal trainer four or five times a week.
![[Charlie Mullins, owner of Pimlico Plumbers, outside the Royal Courts of Justice.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/pimlico-plumbers-owner-charlie-mullins-300655033.jpg?strip=all&w=714)
The plumber, who was previously engaged to 32-year-old singer Raquel Reno, has also splashed the cash on a range of swanky cars including a Bentley, Rolls Royce and Porsche. But for the multi-millionaire, a seven-seater Land Rover is often his go-to as it can better accommodate his extended family of 11 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. It's not just expensive cars he has his sights set on though. Charlie is also keen on expanding his property into the hills above Marbella with a ten-bedroom mansion.
![[Man in suit giving thumbs up next to blue car.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/managing-director-pimlico-plumbers-charlie-599637873.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
For Charlie though, the "wonderful" weather is Spain's biggest appeal as it means he can spend his days eating out in restaurants. This also means socialising is "10 times better than the UK" because "wherever you end up, it's likely you will know someone.". He said: "It's so friendly here, the people are so inviting and there's just more joy about. "I could go out now and just go for breakfast around the cafe and come back at 12 o'clock tonight, that's how friendly it is.".
![[Charlie Mullins, Pimlico Plumber, enjoying a drink at sunset.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/pimlico-plumber-918209220.png?strip=all&w=543)
The 71-year-old, who counts Simon Cowell and Dame Joan Collins as pals, added there wasn't much he missed about the UK. Charlie’s life today couldn’t be further divorced from his “very poor” upbringing in London, growing up between rented accommodation in Camden and the Rockingham council estate, in Elephant and Castle. “I couldn’t wait to get out of the council estate, it was quite rough, absolutely disgusting and had rubbish everywhere,” he says.
![[Charlie Mullins, managing director of Pimlico Plumbers, with antique plumbing fixtures.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/0758ab35-b6c7-4936-80b0-2622d0e43542.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
He recalls regularly being hungry and started doing odd jobs to supplement his factory worker Dad and cleaner mum’s earnings from the age of nine. He says: “I never knew anyone poorer than us but I knew families who were as poor as we were. I remember he said, ‘I will get more money from doing this measly pipe than your dad earns for a week in the factory. “We went without food; never had any holidays; no new clothes, it would always be second-hand clothes; and no luxuries.
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“We wouldn’t go for days without food but there were times when we only ate one meal a day and we only had that because we earned money to buy potatoes.”. Charlie and his two brothers “did everything and anything” to make money - including running errands, cleaning cars, milk runs and wash bag deliveries. He says: “Looking back it was the best thing that ever happened to me. I wouldn’t be where I am today if I hadn’t learned that work ethic.
![[Interior of Charlie Mullins' London home.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/picture-supplied-sunday-times-charlie-928706269.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
“Other people did odd jobs, but mine would be non-stop.". Instead, he was pleased to escape the "doom and gloom" where he felt he was being "ripped off". "Whether it's with shopping or inheritance tax of leaving the UK, they come up with way to make you pay twice," he said. "It's like being in a restaurant, you pay your bill and all of a sudden as you're leaving the waiter says to you you've got to pay again.".
![[Photo of Charlie Mullins, Pimlico Plumber, outside his business.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/pimlico-plumber-918209236.jpg?strip=all&w=720)
Charlie added one of his biggest motivations for leaving was to avoid Chancellor Rachel Reeves' inheritance tax hikes. This has motivated him to completely sell up in the UK as he's "not prepared to pay tax twice" on his assets. In last year's Autumn budget, Reeves announced £40 billion worth of tax hikes. This included a huge change to inheritance tax to close loopholes created by the previous government by bringing pensions into inheritance tax from April 2027.
![[Prince Charles and Charlie Mullins laughing together.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/www-charliemullinsobe-com-gallery-918212866.jpg?strip=all&w=678)
Charlie based his business on “everything that was wrong with the plumbing industry,” which he says “had a very bad name” at the time, and doing the complete opposite. He says: “I always say our success didn’t come from doing anything complicated, it wasn’t that Pimlico Plumbers was so good, it was that all the others were so bad. “People would complain that a plumber didn’t turn up, showed-up in a dirty old van, didn’t clean up after, wasn’t transparent and wouldn’t finish the job.
![[Portrait of Charlie Mullins discussing his financial journey.]](https://www.thesun.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/568150-sun-sun-features-money-906872931.jpg?strip=all&w=960)