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Natwest pledges £20bn for the North of England as banks bet on devolution to drive growth
Business

Natwest pledges £20bn for the North of England as banks bet on devolution to drive growth

by May 18, 2026

NatWest Group has thrown its weight behind the North of England, pledging £20 billion of funding over the next decade in what stands as one of the largest single regional commitments by a UK lender in recent memory, and a calculated bet on Britain’s devolution settlement to deliver returns the centre has so far struggled to produce.

The commitment, unveiled by chief executive Paul Thwaite at today’s Great North Investment Summit in Leeds, will channel capital into housing, transport, energy generation, grid upgrades and climate resilience across the region. Convened by the northern metro mayors and sponsored by NatWest, the summit marks the first formal pitch from The Great North partnership, which aims to add £118 billion to UK plc by unlocking the region’s investment pipeline.

For a bank that has only recently returned to full private ownership, the move signals a clear strategic pivot. Where high street lenders have traditionally followed economic gravity towards London and the South East, NatWest is now wagering that the most established mayoral combined authorities, and the deal flow they convene, offer the best risk-adjusted return on patient capital.

A bet on the regions

The funding will be deployed across four priority areas: housing and the built environment, mobility and transport, energy and power systems, and climate resilience. NatWest says it will deliver this through a mix of direct lending, risk-sharing with delivery partners and the mobilisation of third-party institutional money — a coordinating role the bank believes is increasingly necessary as projects grow in scale and complexity.

The £20 billion pledge builds on the bank’s existing £10 billion national lending ambition to housing associations, and forms part of its wider Growing Together plan to back what it calls “powerful regions”. The framing is deliberate. With Westminster’s fiscal headroom narrowing and the Treasury under pressure to demonstrate that regional transport and infrastructure investment can move the needle on growth, commercial banks are being asked to bridge a widening capital gap.

Thwaite struck a notably operational tone. “This commitment reflects our confidence in the North as a growth engine for the UK,” he said. “We can see the strength of ambition across the region, and the scale of projects coming forward in housing, transport, energy and infrastructure. Our role isn’t just to provide finance, it’s to connect capital with local ambition, working in partnership with combined authorities, business and investment partners to accelerate growth.”

The devolution dividend

Behind the headline figure sits a sharper political argument: that long-term private capital follows clear, stable local accountability. New research published alongside the announcement found that nearly two-thirds of senior business decision-makers (65 per cent) believe handing regional leaders more control over funding and investment decisions would boost investor confidence. The same proportion said they would be more likely to commit capital where funding is stable and long term.

It is a finding likely to be welcomed by the northern mayors, whose Great North partnership has spent the past year arguing that the existing devolution settlement remains too tentative for serious institutional investors. NatWest is now publicly endorsing a phased extension of devolved powers, weighted towards those authorities with proven track records of governance and delivery, a position that places the bank squarely behind the Treasury’s emerging direction of travel.

Chair of The Great North and North East mayor Kim McGuinness called the announcement a vote of confidence in the region’s potential. “Across the North, we have the talent, innovation and ambition to lead the UK’s next era of growth and prosperity,” she said. “NatWest Group’s investment and commitment to the North shows us investors see the huge, untapped potential across the North of England and the massive prize on offer from backing our regions.”

Crowding in private capital

Oliver Holbourn, chief executive of the National Wealth Fund, signalled that the state’s principal investor was ready to work alongside the bank. The fund, which under Holbourn’s leadership is targeting more than £100 billion of clean energy and growth investment across the UK economy, has made former industrial heartlands a strategic priority.

“The National Wealth Fund is committed to driving economic growth as we transition to clean energy, while ensuring we develop the businesses, skills and capabilities that will be crucial to unlocking the future of the UK,” Holbourn said. “NatWest Group’s approach very much aligns with these ambitions and we welcome it.”

The alignment matters. With public money increasingly deployed as catalyst rather than primary funder, the NWF’s role is to de-risk projects sufficiently to attract commercial lenders, exactly the gap NatWest’s £20 billion commitment is designed to fill. The bank says it will also act as a coordinator for institutional and private capital, pooling pipeline projects across regions to improve scale and execution.

Bricks, megawatts and tarmac

The early case studies offer a useful sense of where the money is likely to land. NatWest has already provided a £106 million funding package to North Yorkshire’s Broadacres Housing Association, combining long-term lending with a revolving credit facility and a social loan to underpin the delivery of more than 100 new homes in the year to March 2026, of which around a quarter will be social housing. It builds on the bank’s £1 billion housing sector commitment and comes amid mounting evidence, including the British Business Bank’s £5 billion regional lending milestone, that government-aligned finance is increasingly steering towards housebuilding outside the capital.

In infrastructure, NatWest acted as sole debt advisor and top-tier lender on a £364 million sustainable finance package for Newcastle International Airport, including a £15 million green loan that has financed solar generation and an electric vehicle transition as the airport targets net zero by 2035.

Both deals point to the kind of projects the bank expects to scale: assets with predictable revenue, identifiable decarbonisation profiles and the institutional sponsorship to absorb long-dated capital.

What it means for SMEs

For smaller firms across the North, the construction subcontractors, energy services businesses, fit-out specialists, civil engineering consultancies and the housing-sector supply chain, the read-across is significant. A pipeline at this scale generates work for hundreds of regional SMEs that have historically struggled to access growth finance on the same terms as their London peers. If NatWest delivers, and if combined authorities can convert ambition into shovel-ready projects, the multiplier effect on the northern SME base could be substantial.

The harder question is execution. £20 billion over ten years averages £2 billion a year, meaningful, but not transformational on its own. The real test will be whether NatWest’s commitment crowds in the institutional capital that has so far hesitated, and whether the mayoral authorities can match private appetite with the planning consents, land assembly and skills pipelines required to translate finance into delivery.

Following the summit, the bank says it will continue to work with combined authorities and delivery partners to progress priority schemes and bring forward additional private capital. The North has heard plenty of warm words about its growth potential over the past decade. £20 billion of bank balance sheet is rather harder to dismiss.

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Natwest pledges £20bn for the North of England as banks bet on devolution to drive growth

May 18, 2026
Britain’s property tax burden is now the heaviest of any major economy
Business

Britain’s property tax burden is now the heaviest of any major economy

by May 18, 2026

Britain’s reliance on bricks-and-mortar levies has reached a level unmatched anywhere else in the developed world, leaving businesses shouldering a disproportionate share of the burden and the Exchequer dangerously exposed to any wobble in commercial property values.

The United Kingdom now extracts more from property taxes than any other major economy, with receipts equivalent to 3.7 per cent of the entire economy, according to the annual business rates review published by tax firm Ryan. The figure is well clear of France and Canada, both on 3.4 per cent, with Belgium and Luxembourg trailing on 3.3 per cent, a gap that underlines just how exposed the British system has become to a downturn in commercial real estate.

Taken together, business rates, council tax and transaction levies such as stamp duty are now generating around $136 billion (£108 billion) a year for the Treasury, more than France, Japan or Canada raise, and second only to the United States, where total receipts are nearly seven times larger at $855 billion. The OECD’s most recent Revenue Statistics confirm Britain’s outlier status among advanced economies.

Just under 11 per cent of every pound the Government raises in tax now comes from property — the third highest share among advanced economies, behind only South Korea on 11.8 per cent and the United States on 11.4 per cent. That level of dependence, analysts argue, has begun to crowd out investment in precisely the kind of physical, capital-intensive businesses ministers say they want to attract.

A structural problem, not a valuation quibble

Alex Probyn, practice leader at Ryan, said the combination of stubborn inflation, the end of pandemic-era reliefs and a string of policy tweaks had pushed receipts ever higher, in effect baking the squeeze into the architecture of the tax.

“Business property is carrying a disproportionate share of the overall tax burden, and that is beginning to weigh heavily on investment, particularly in sectors that rely on physical assets and long-term capital,” Probyn said. “Property taxes in the UK are the highest by international standards, and the system is designed in a way that continues to increase the yield over time. That creates a clear tension between the need to raise revenue and the need to support investment. That balance has to be addressed.”

The Government’s revaluation of business rates in England, Wales and Scotland, which came into force this April, is forecast to drag the total rates take up to £37.1 billion in 2026-27, from £33.6 billion the previous year, a leap of £3.5 billion in a single year. Business Matters has already reported on the £1.56 billion rise in rates bills that has rippled through every sector of the economy.

Probyn warns that the Exchequer’s fiscal dependence on these revenues is itself becoming an obstacle to reform. “This is not simply a question of valuation methodology. It is a structural issue,” he said.

Appeals backlog hits 40,000 as SMEs go to the wall

The pressure on businesses has been compounded by a logjam at the valuation office, the HM Revenue & Customs agency responsible for setting rateable values. Nearly 40,000 firms have lodged appeals against their revised bills and are still waiting for a hearing, with the Valuation Office Agency bracing for a further deluge of challenges from hospitality operators hit by punishing increases to their rateable values.

The average wait is now 11 months, during which firms must continue paying the higher rate. Some businesses are waiting up to 18 months for an assessment — a delay that has tipped a number of small companies into closure before their case is even heard. The squeeze helps explain why nearly 5,500 small firms have urged the Chancellor to halt what they describe as an “apocalyptic” revaluation, and why business rates appeals have plummeted overall, with many owners deterred by the cost and complexity of challenging their bills.

Layered on top of all this is the spike in energy costs flowing from the war in Iran, which broke out at the end of February. Three in five companies say the combination has forced them to freeze hiring and investment plans, the precise opposite of the growth story ministers are trying to sell.

The verdict from the high street

For SME owners on Britain’s high streets and industrial estates, the message from the data is unambiguous: the country’s tax system is increasingly tilted against the firms that take on premises, employ staff and pay rates in the local authority where they trade. Until ministers grasp the nettle of structural reform, rather than tinkering with reliefs at the margins, the burden on physical businesses will continue to rise, and so will the risk that the next downturn in property values takes the public finances down with it.

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Britain’s property tax burden is now the heaviest of any major economy

May 18, 2026
JCB succession: Lord Bamford anoints younger son George as heir to £6.5bn digger empire
Business

JCB succession: Lord Bamford anoints younger son George as heir to £6.5bn digger empire

by May 18, 2026

After years of boardroom whispers, palace-intrigue rumours and one alleged attempted coup, the question of who will inherit Britain’s most famous yellow-painted family business has finally been settled, and it is not the son the City had been quietly pencilling in.

Lord Bamford, the 80-year-old chairman of JCB, has confirmed that his younger son George, not his elder son Joseph (known as Jo), will eventually take the wheel of the Staffordshire-headquartered digger maker. The disclosure, made in an interview with the Daily Telegraph, brings to an end one of the longest-running succession sagas in British family enterprise and reshapes the future of a group that turns over £6.5bn, operates 22 factories across four continents and employs 19,000 people worldwide.

“In terms of us remaining a family business, that is very important, and we do have plans,” Lord Bamford said. “I’m very lucky and highly privileged to be in charge of this business at the moment. I don’t intend to be forever. I am 80, for heaven’s sake.” Asked directly who would step into his shoes, he replied: “It will be George.”

From heir apparent to outsider

For the best part of two decades, Westminster watchers and the wider engineering community had assumed Jo Bamford was being groomed to take over. He joined the family firm in 2004, was appointed to the board in 2006 and rose through a succession of senior roles, including head of major contracts, a brief widely read in the industry as a finishing-school posting for a future chairman.

What changed, according to people familiar with the boardroom, was an episode in which Jo is said to have pressed his father to step aside. Lord Bamford, by all accounts, viewed the approach as an attempted coup rather than a constructive nudge. The fallout has been swift and unambiguous: George, the family’s third child, has since been installed as deputy chairman, a clear public signal that the line of succession had quietly been redrawn.

The succession is yet to be formally rubber-stamped at board level, but few in the sector now doubt the trajectory. For a privately held company of JCB’s scale, the choice of chairman is not merely a question of family harmony; it shapes capital allocation, factory footprints, R&D priorities and the firm’s political voice for a generation.

Who is George Bamford?

If Jo was the obvious candidate, George has been the unconventional one. Best known outside engineering circles for the Bamford watch brand, which he founded and which built a cult following customising Rolex, TAG Heuer and other luxury timepieces, he has spent the past two decades building his own commercial reputation in the lifestyle and luxury goods market.

He will retain ownership of the Bamford watch business, but JCB is now becoming his full-time job. Those who have worked with him describe a brand-builder with an instinctive grasp of design and marketing, attributes that may prove useful as the digger maker leans further into electrification, hydrogen power and the premiumisation of construction equipment.

The inheritance-tax backdrop

The Bamford succession is playing out against a tax backdrop that has rattled family businesses across the United Kingdom. From 6 April 2026, the Treasury’s reforms to agricultural and business property reliefs have introduced a £2.5m 100 per cent relief allowance, with qualifying assets above that threshold attracting an effective 20 per cent inheritance tax charge rather than full exemption.

For the United Kingdom’s 5.3 million family firms, the change has been seismic. As the House of Commons Library has set out, the reforms close what ministers regard as a loophole exploited by the ultra-wealthy, but critics argue that they catch ordinary trading businesses in the same net as estate-planning vehicles.

Speaking at a business conference in April, Jo Bamford warned that the new regime could push the family’s empire abroad. “The family tax… is a real problem,” he said. “It could quite easily become an American business. I love being in Britain. But I would say to a political party of any stripe, look, there’s only so much you can ultimately do.” Lord Bamford, a long-time Conservative donor who has also written cheques to Reform UK, has been similarly vocal about Whitehall’s direction of travel, concerns explored in our recent piece on Lord Bamford’s £300m family windfall and the wealth-tax debate.

A sector-wide reckoning

JCB is far from alone. From Dyson to Global Brands, blue-chip family-controlled firms have warned that the new regime could force restructurings, share sales or outright relocations to safeguard jobs and intergenerational ownership. Business Matters has tracked the broader fallout in its analysis of how the £2.5m cap is reshaping family-business planning, with more than half of surveyed firms already pausing investment.

For Lord Bamford, the calculation has long been about more than tax. JCB’s ownership structure, headquartered in Rocester since 1945, is the bedrock on which the company’s long-term capital expenditure programme rests — including the recent decision to double its Texas plant in response to United States tariffs. A clean succession line gives lenders, customers and 19,000 employees a clearer view of the next chapter.

The lessons for other founders

The Bamford story is unusual in scale but not in shape. Even the most polished succession plans can be derailed by sibling rivalry, mismatched ambitions and an incumbent who is reluctant to let go. As Business Matters has previously explored in our five steps to successful business succession planning, early, candid conversations with successors, ideally years before any handover, remain the single biggest predictor of whether a family firm survives the generational baton change.

For Jo Bamford, life outside the JCB chair is unlikely to be quiet. He has built a substantial second career in clean energy, founding the hydrogen fuel firm Ryze Power and stepping in to rescue Northern Ireland’s Wrightbus from collapse. Few City observers expect him to disappear from the FTSE conversation.

For George, the in-tray is daunting but enviable: a globally respected brand, a balance sheet that has weathered tariffs, war in Ukraine and a cooling construction market, and a workforce that has known only one family at the helm. The yellow JCB livery has carried the Bamford name for three generations. On the strength of his father’s words this week, it is on course to do so for a fourth.

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JCB succession: Lord Bamford anoints younger son George as heir to £6.5bn digger empire

May 18, 2026
Britain’s billionaires are voting with their feet – and the rich list proves it
Business

Britain’s billionaires are voting with their feet – and the rich list proves it

by May 18, 2026

For nearly four decades, The Sunday Times Rich List has been the closest thing Britain has to a national league table of money. This year’s edition reads less like a celebration of enterprise and more like a departures board.

Revolut chief executive Nik Storonsky and the publicity-shy quant trader Alex Gerko have broken into the top 10 for the first time. But the headline story, according to the list’s compiler Robert Watts, is not who has arrived, it is who has gone.

As many as one in six of the individuals and families who appeared on the 2024 ranking are missing from this year’s edition, with the compiler warning that the figures lay bare the scale of Britain’s wealth exodus.

“Many foreign billionaires who have been living in the UK have… dropped out because they have moved away,” Mr Watts said.

The top of the table holds, but the cracks are widening

Sanjay and Dheeraj Hinduja, the British-Indian brothers behind the Mumbai-headquartered Hinduja Group, kept top spot with a combined fortune of £38bn. The rest of the podium was likewise unchanged, with the famously secretive property magnates David and Simon Reuben and Ukrainian-born industrialist Sir Leonard Blavatnik both still sitting on fortunes north of £25bn.

The most dramatic faller was Sir James Dyson. The inventor’s eponymous engineering empire was hit hard by Donald Trump’s swingeing tariff regime, and his estimated net worth nearly halved over the year from £20bn to £12bn, enough to send him tumbling from fourth to 13th. It is not the first time Sir James has tangled with policy: he has been one of the most vocal critics of Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax changes, branding them “spiteful” and warning of the consequences for British family businesses.

City money muscles into the top 10

If old money is having a wobble, the new money minted in the City of London is flexing. Mr Storonsky cracked the top 10 in the same year his fintech juggernaut was finally granted a UK banking licence and clinched a $75bn valuation in a November funding round.

A place behind him in eighth sat Mr Gerko, the cerebral force behind XTX Markets, the quantitative trading shop that has quietly become one of the City’s biggest tax payers. His estimated fortune sits north of £16bn.

Both men were born in Russia, and both have renounced their citizenship in protest at Vladimir Putin’s illegal invasion of Ukraine — a reminder that the City’s talent pool is global, and mobile.

A tale of two exoduses

The list’s real story, however, is in the gaps.

For the first two decades of this century, Britain’s super-rich enjoyed a near-uninterrupted bull run. Rich List wealth grew by close to 600 per cent between 2000 and 2022, according to The Sunday Times. That run is now over. The number of sterling billionaires in the UK peaked at 177 in 2022; this year’s tally of 157 was barely up on 2025.

Under the survey’s rules, foreign-born residents who leave automatically fall out of the rankings, while British citizens who emigrate remain. Both groups are now visibly thinning. Mr Watts said he had seen a “sharp rise in the number of British nationals now resident in Dubai, Switzerland and Monaco”, warning the “twin exoduses” represented a worrying development for the British economy and the public finances.

His unease is echoed by international data. The Henley Private Wealth Migration Report has the United Kingdom haemorrhaging high-net-worth residents at a faster clip than any other major economy, with the UAE, Italy and Switzerland the biggest beneficiaries.

“Will more of the wealthy now set up or grow their ventures overseas and in doing so create fewer jobs here?” Mr Watts asked. “How much tax – if any – will Rachel Reeves’ Treasury be able to extract from those affluent Brits who have now left the country?”

The Reeves effect

Critics increasingly point the finger at Whitehall. The Chancellor has been accused of accelerating departures with a string of measures aimed at ultra-high-net-worth residents and their assets.

In her first Budget in October 2024, Ms Reeves pressed ahead with the abolition of the non-domicile tax regime, slapped VAT on private school fees, raised capital gains tax and tightened several inheritance tax carve-outs. Her 2025 intervention added a so-called mansion tax on properties worth more than £2m and further narrowed the inheritance tax net.

Advisers say the cumulative effect has been a stampede. Research from consultancy Chamberlain Walker, cited by Business Matters, suggests around 1,800 non-doms left Britain in the months after April’s tax changes — 50 per cent more than the Treasury had pencilled in.

The casualties include some of the City’s biggest names: former Goldman Sachs International chief Richard Gnodde and steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal, both long-standing Rich List fixtures, have moved on. Only one billionaire is recorded as having moved the other way in the past year — the new US ambassador to the Court of St James’s, Warren Stephens.

What it means for SME Britain

For the small and medium-sized businesses that read this magazine, the implications run deeper than schadenfreude over a few moving vans full of Old Master paintings.

Wealthy entrepreneurs are typically the angel investors, family-office backers and growth-stage cheque writers that smaller firms rely on when banks turn cautious. If they decamp to Dubai or Lugano, that capital tends to follow them. The same goes for the philanthropic giving, board memberships and mentoring that often anchor a city’s business community.

The harder question for the Chancellor, and for the firms that depend on a healthy ecosystem of British-based capital, is whether the additional tax raised from those who stay can outweigh the receipts and investment lost from those who leave. On the evidence of this year’s Rich List, that calculation is starting to look uncomfortable.

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Britain’s billionaires are voting with their feet – and the rich list proves it

May 18, 2026
Barclays crowns Fractile and Isomorphic Labs in inaugural AI 100 as Britain’s tech race intensifies
Business

Barclays crowns Fractile and Isomorphic Labs in inaugural AI 100 as Britain’s tech race intensifies

by May 18, 2026

Britain’s artificial intelligence sector has produced its first heavyweight league table of 2026, with Barclays placing Oxford-founded chip designer Fractile and Google DeepMind spinout Isomorphic Labs at the centre of its new AI 100 ranking, a list that crystallises just how quickly the UK’s AI economy is maturing.

The bank’s Eagle Labs division, the high-street lender’s start-up incubator network, unveiled the inaugural ranking this week to spotlight the country’s fastest-growing AI businesses. Its publication coincides with what is shaping up to be a record year for the sector, with UK AI companies hoovering up £8.3bn of investment in 2025 alone and cementing London’s status as Europe’s most prolific AI capital.

For Britain’s policymakers, under pressure to deliver on the Prime Minister’s pledge to “mainline AI into the veins” of the economy, the league table arrives at a politically charged moment. For investors, it offers a useful shortlist of the companies global capital is now chasing hardest.

Oxford chip pioneer joins the unicorn club

Few names on the ranking have captured boardroom attention quite like Fractile. The Oxford-founded business, set up in 2022 by former university researcher Walter Goodwin, this week banked a $220m (£165m) Series B led by Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund, with Accel and Factorial Funds joining the cheque.

The round vaults Fractile into the so-called unicorn bracket and underlines a belief among Silicon Valley’s most influential investors that the next great AI bottleneck will not be cleverer algorithms, but the eye-watering cost of running them. Mr Goodwin’s firm is racing to build inference chips that promise to slash the price of deploying AI models at commercial scale, a problem that has come to dominate boardroom conversations from Wall Street to Whitehall.

Industry watchers say the deal is one of the clearest signals yet that British deep-tech, long accused of losing its champions to American buyers, can hold its own on global capital markets. It also lands at a moment when Westminster is leaning heavily on the semiconductor sector to underpin its growth narrative, having earlier expanded backing for chip start-ups through the ChipStart programme.

Isomorphic eyes a pharma revolution

If Fractile represents the picks-and-shovels end of the AI gold rush, Isomorphic Labs sits at the other extreme. The London-based drug-discovery business, spun out of Google DeepMind in 2021 under the stewardship of Sir Demis Hassabis, recently sealed a $2.1bn (£1.57bn) funding round, one of the largest AI raises seen in Europe to date.

The company is using machine learning to accelerate the early-stage development of new medicines, an area where pharmaceutical giants have spent years grappling with stubbornly long timelines and ballooning research budgets. Big Pharma is already paying attention: AstraZeneca and Eli Lilly have inked partnerships, and a maiden in-house drug candidate is expected to enter clinical trials before the end of the year.

For an industry where the average new medicine takes more than a decade and over $2bn to bring to market, the prospect of AI compressing that timeline is no longer theoretical. It is precisely the sort of productivity dividend that researchers at HSBC say could deliver a £105bn revenue uplift to Britain’s mid-sized firms by 2030 if AI adoption keeps pace.

A boom under scrutiny

Yet for all the bullish numbers, Britain’s AI investment surge is not without its sceptics. A recent investigation by the Guardian questioned whether several headline-grabbing pledges promoted by ministers — including data-centre commitments linked to Nvidia-backed groups Nscale and CoreWeave, had been overstated.

The newspaper reported that some projects billed as brand-new infrastructure were in reality expansions of existing facilities. The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) rejected the bulk of the claims but conceded it was “not playing an active role in auditing these commitments”.

The episode is symptomatic of a broader credibility test now facing governments worldwide as they trumpet AI as the engine of future growth. The UK has so far announced a £500m Sovereign AI Unit and additional billions of pounds in compute and infrastructure spending, but ministers are increasingly being asked to demonstrate that the eye-catching figures translate into real jobs, factories and tax receipts.

A maturing market

Even so, the trajectory looks unmistakable. With more than £8bn raised across the sector last year, five fresh unicorns minted and at least 67 exits worth a combined £4bn, the British AI ecosystem is no longer trading on potential alone. Smaller players are also benefiting: Eagle Labs’ broader incubator network, which has supported thousands of regional start-ups through schemes such as its £12m regional grant programme, is increasingly being used as a pipeline-builder for the next cohort of AI 100 candidates.

For Barclays itself, the ranking is a useful piece of brand-building among the founders it hopes to bank for years to come. For Britain, it is something rather more consequential, an early glimpse of the companies that may, within a decade, sit alongside the country’s established corporate giants.

As one venture capitalist put it this week: “Five years ago, you’d struggle to name three UK AI businesses worth backing. Today you can’t fit them on a single page.” On the strength of Barclays’ latest list, that problem is unlikely to disappear any time soon.

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Barclays crowns Fractile and Isomorphic Labs in inaugural AI 100 as Britain’s tech race intensifies

May 18, 2026
Bookmakers ready legal challenge as Gambling Commission prepares to wave through affordability checks
Business

Bookmakers ready legal challenge as Gambling Commission prepares to wave through affordability checks

by May 18, 2026

Britain’s biggest bookmakers are squaring up for a High Court fight with the Gambling Commission over a controversial new regime of so-called affordability checks, in a row that threatens to drag the regulator into yet another costly courtroom battle and reopen one of the most contentious debates in UK consumer-facing business.

Industry chiefs say the checks, which would block customers from placing further bets once they cross specific loss thresholds, contain “serious failings” and risk pushing hundreds of thousands of punters into an unregulated black market that is already mushrooming online. With the Gambling Commission expected to decide this week whether to impose the rules unilaterally, the Betting & Gaming Council (BGC) has put the regulator on formal notice that legal action is now firmly on the table.

A flagship reform under fire

Affordability checks – formally known as financial risk assessments (FRAs), sit at the heart of the biggest overhaul of British gambling laws in a generation, introduced under the previous Conservative government in 2023. The intention was straightforward: identify high-spending customers who may be in financial difficulty and intervene before harm escalates. The political promise that accompanied it was equally clear – any such checks would be “frictionless”, invisible to the ordinary punter.

Under the proposed regime, an FRA would be triggered when a customer loses £1,000 or more in 24 hours, or £2,000 over 90 days. Operators that fail to carry out the checks risk regulatory action; customers who refuse to comply face being locked out of their accounts.

The Commission has leant heavily on the results of its pilot, which ran from September 2024 to April 2025 and used around 800,000 historical data points. According to its own published findings, only 3 per cent of gamblers would face an assessment, and 97 per cent of those would be “frictionless” – meaning the customer would not have to lift a finger.

The BGC disputes almost every part of that picture.

“Serious failings” and a 20% problem

In a letter dated 21 April and addressed to the interim chair of the Gambling Commission, seen by The Sunday Times, the BGC set out “grave concerns about the wider ramifications” of the FRA proposals. The trade body argues that once you strip out customers spending less than £200 a year on betting – essentially casual punters who place the occasional flutter, the true proportion of regular customers caught up in checks could be closer to 20 per cent, not 3 per cent.

It also flagged stark inconsistencies in data drawn from the three credit-reference agencies involved in the pilot. In more than half of some cases, the BGC said, a risk flag was raised by only one of the three agencies, a finding that, if accurate, undermines the central claim that the system can reliably distinguish a vulnerable customer from a comfortable one.

Grainne Hurst, BGC chief executive, did not mince her words: “Given the serious concerns raised by operators, there is a real risk that the industry could ultimately be left with little choice but to consider legal challenges if these proposals proceed without further scrutiny.”

The Commission, the BGC told The Sunday Times, has not yet responded to the April letter.

One senior industry source put it more bluntly: “It’s ridiculous that we’ve been forced to consider such a dramatic step. I hope the Gambling Commission and government see sense. They’re blind to the damage these checks could cause.”

The black market gathering pace

The commercial backdrop for the dispute is what makes it a story for British business, not just the gambling lobby. The Commission’s own reforms, first unpacked by Business Matters, have already raised the cost of compliance for licensed operators and tightened the screws on bonusing, customer interaction and product design – a trend examined in more detail in our analysis of the 2026 gambling reforms.

The fear inside the regulated industry is that affordability checks tip an already finely balanced equation in the wrong direction. The BGC estimates that the offshore black market has more than tripled in size since 2022 and that unlicensed operators could be spending £1 billion a year on advertising by 2028, more than the entire regulated UK market combined. The trade body warns that as much as £300 million in tax receipts could be lost as customers migrate to operators that ask no questions and offer no protections.

Critics counter that the industry is talking up the black-market threat to protect incumbents. Either way, as our earlier reporting on the business of British bookmakers made clear, the licensed sector is a meaningful contributor to the Treasury, to racing’s levy and to high-street employment – and few in Whitehall want to be seen handing market share to operators based in jurisdictions Britain does not regulate.

“The evidence so far suggests these proposals are not fit for purpose and risk driving people away from the regulated market towards the growing illegal online black market, where there are no protections and no safeguards,” Hurst said.

A regulator on the back foot

For the Gambling Commission, the prospect of another High Court fight is awkward, to put it mildly. The regulator has been at the centre of an unusually heavy caseload in recent months, including a bruising dispute with Richard Desmond, the billionaire former proprietor of the Daily Express, over the awarding of the multibillion-pound National Lottery contract, and a separate privacy case brought by executives from Entain, the parent company of Ladbrokes and Coral.

It is also rudderless at the top. Andrew Rhodes, the Commission’s chief executive, departed abruptly earlier this month to join Hawkbridge, the new advisory arm of law firm Harris Hagan – a firm that has acted for several of Britain’s largest bookmakers. The optics of the departure are not lost on operators now contemplating litigation.

In a statement, the Commission defended its approach: “A pilot was used to test how frictionless the White Paper policy could be and give us useful findings on how it could be implemented. We have been rigorously assessing that work in detail throughout the pilot, drawing upon a range of evidence and input from pilot participants and advised by NatCen. The proposed approach has been subject to significant scrutiny already and we have published findings during the process.”

What to watch this week

For the SME-heavy supply chain that hangs off Britain’s regulated betting industry, from data providers and payments firms to marketing agencies and the racing sector, this week’s decision matters. A green light without industry buy-in raises the prospect of months of legal uncertainty, suspended investment and contractual disputes. A pause or a redesign would buy time but extend the regulatory grey zone that has already prompted operators to scale back UK exposure.

What is harder to dispute is that the Commission’s room for manoeuvre is shrinking. With High Court action threatened, a chief executive gone and a black market growing in confidence, the regulator’s next move will be watched not just by bookmakers but by every consumer-facing business that depends on a stable, proportionate licensing regime.

Read more:
Bookmakers ready legal challenge as Gambling Commission prepares to wave through affordability checks

May 18, 2026
Britain’s AI boom hits record £8.3bn as London cements European tech crown
Business

Britain’s AI boom hits record £8.3bn as London cements European tech crown

by May 18, 2026

Britain’s artificial intelligence sector pulled in a record £8.3bn of investment last year, as global capital piled into a new generation of British AI companies and London tightened its grip as Europe’s pre-eminent technology hub.

New research from Barclays Eagle Labs found that funding into UK AI businesses surged through 2025 after a sluggish stretch for venture capital markets, fuelled by appetite for firms building everything from the picks-and-shovels infrastructure underpinning generative AI through to specialist legal and financial software.

The numbers underline just how rapidly AI has become one of Britain’s hottest investment narratives, with backers scrambling not to miss the next DeepMind-style breakout. The 2025 total represents a near-trebling on the £2.9bn raised by UK AI firms a year earlier, confirming a step-change in both deal flow and ticket sizes.

London remains squarely at the centre of the action. Almost three quarters of Britain’s AI fintech companies are now headquartered in the capital, according to the report, reflecting the city’s deep pool of engineering talent, financial expertise and proximity to global capital.

Much of the cash has flowed towards businesses thought capable of supplying the plumbing behind the AI boom, the compute power, software platforms and data architecture required to train and run large language models, rather than consumer-facing chatbots and apps. For investors hunting the next category-defining business, Britain increasingly looks like one of the few places outside Silicon Valley credibly producing AI firms with global ambitions.

Crucially, nearly half of all UK AI funding rounds last year came from first-time raises, suggesting a fresh cohort of start-ups is entering the market even as the contest for engineers and capital intensifies.

The Barclays Eagle Labs AI 100 cohort, its annual ranking of Britain’s fastest-growing AI businesses, has collectively raised £11.3bn, generates £734m in annual revenue and now employs more than 8,500 people. Software companies dominate the list, mirroring investor appetite for businesses able to monetise AI tools at speed as corporates rush to bolt automation and generative AI into day-to-day operations.

Abdul Qureshi, head of Barclays Business Banking, said: “The UK has no shortage of world-class AI innovation. The challenge is turning those breakthroughs into sustainable global businesses.”

The funding surge mirrors AI’s growing weight in wider markets. Nvidia briefly became the world’s most valuable listed company earlier this year as investors backed the firms supplying the silicon behind frontier models, while Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet continue to pour tens of billions into global data centre capacity, including Microsoft’s own £22bn commitment to a UK AI supercomputer build-out. London-listed asset managers and pension funds are coming under mounting pressure to ensure they are not bystanders to the trend.

Westminster, for its part, has moved aggressively to brand Britain as a destination for AI capital. The government’s AI Opportunities Action Plan, launched last year and updated in 2026, sits alongside a new Sovereign AI Unit charged with backing home-grown firms and preventing prized intellectual property from drifting overseas before it can scale.

Yet for all London’s dominance, the story is not solely a capital one. The North West’s AI ecosystem has expanded faster than London’s since 2019, the report notes, albeit from a far smaller base, as clusters built around advanced manufacturing and industrial AI begin to take root outside the M25. For SME founders weighing where to plant their flag, that quiet regional rebalancing may prove as significant as the headline £8.3bn.

Read more:
Britain’s AI boom hits record £8.3bn as London cements European tech crown

May 18, 2026
Treasury wobble: Reeves poised to ditch autumn budget fuel duty hike as fairfueluk pressure tells
Business

Treasury wobble: Reeves poised to ditch autumn budget fuel duty hike as fairfueluk pressure tells

by May 18, 2026

For the umpteenth time in 16 years of campaigning, the Westminster fuel-tax script appears to be writing itself again.

According to Treasury sources briefing the FairFuelUK campaign, Chancellor Rachel Reeves is preparing to drop the planned fuel duty rise from her Autumn Budget, though insiders caution that any reprieve is unlikely to survive beyond the March 2027 Financial Statement.

The retreat, if confirmed at the despatch box, will be the latest chapter in a saga that has become a fixture of every fiscal event since George Osborne first froze the duty in 2011. It will also be a notable, if temporary, win for Britain’s 5.5 million small businesses, many of whom now describe forecourt costs as the single biggest unhedgeable line in their operating budgets.

A £3bn pump tax raid since the Iran crisis began

Since hostilities flared in the Gulf, drivers have paid an estimated £3 billion more to fill up, while the Treasury has banked close to an additional £500 million in VAT receipts off the back of higher pump prices alone. Oil majors, predictably, have reported bumper margins. The motorist, equally predictably, has been left to foot the bill.

That contrast – soaring corporate profits set against a stagnating consumer economy – is what has put fuel duty firmly back on Reeves’s desk. As Business Matters reported last month, the Middle East flare-up has dragged headline inflation back to 3.3 per cent, hitting transport-heavy SMEs hardest of all.

71,000 emails, 148,000 signatures and counting

FairFuelUK says more than 71,000 of its supporters have now emailed their MPs urging the Chancellor to abandon the Budget hike. A separate petition, which has gathered more than 148,000 signatures, will be hand-delivered to the Treasury in the coming weeks. The campaign is calling not only for the freeze to be extended but for an immediate cut in fuel duty, in line with measures taken by more than 40 other countries.

The lobbying push echoes the cross-party effort earlier this year, when MPs delivered an earlier tranche of FairFuelUK signatures to Downing Street. That campaign cited Centre for Economics and Business Research analysis suggesting any short-term Treasury bounce from raising duty would be wiped out by a collapse of more than 60 per cent in fuel-tax income within five years as drivers cut mileage and shift to EVs.

“Cut all fuel taxes now,” says Cox

Howard Cox, founder of FairFuelUK, was characteristically blunt. “This clueless, bankrupting net-zero-driven Government remains stuck in a state of torpor, keeping the UK economy virtually stagnant,” he said. “Time and again, over 16 years of campaigning, we have shown that lower fill-up costs deliver more tax to the Treasury by boosting other revenue streams. The current cost of petrol, particularly diesel, is crippling motorists’ and small businesses’ ability to spend in the economy. When will these ignorant Treasury politicians understand that more money in people’s pockets drives growth? For goodness’ sake, cut all fuel taxes now.”

His frustration is shared in the haulage yards, trades vans and rural high-street economies that keep much of the SME sector ticking. Diesel, the lifeblood of British logistics, remains stubbornly above £1.55 a litre in many regions, and as Business Matters has previously documented, small employers lack both the financial resilience and the pricing power of their corporate counterparts to absorb or pass on the cost.

The international comparison: Britain stands almost alone

What is striking about Cox’s argument is not the rhetoric but the international evidence behind it. The International Energy Agency’s 2026 Energy Crisis Policy Response Tracker lists more than 40 countries that have actively cut, suspended or capped fuel taxes since the Iran conflict began. Britain is conspicuously not on the list.

Among the most striking moves logged by the IEA as of late April:

Germany has cut petrol and diesel duty by roughly 14–17 euro cents a litre.
Spain has slashed fuel VAT from 21 to 10 per cent and suspended its hydrocarbon excise duty.
Poland has cut fuel VAT from 23 to 8 per cent and reduced excise duty to the EU minimum.
Ireland has trimmed excise on petrol and diesel by €0.15–0.20 a litre, plus related levies.
India has taken excise duties on petrol and diesel close to zero in some categories.
Canada has suspended its federal fuel excise tax.
Australia, Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia, South Africa, Sweden and Türkiye have all implemented some form of fuel-tax or duty relief.
Emerging markets including Argentina, Brazil, Cambodia, Ghana, Kenya, Lao PDR, Namibia, the Philippines, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Vietnam and Zambia have followed suit, often with measures targeted at hauliers and small operators.

By contrast, the UK has so far stuck rigidly to the 5p Spring 2022 cut and a series of frozen rates, an approach that according to Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts is already pencilled in to deliver a £2.2 billion uplift in fuel duty receipts in 2027–28 once the 5p cut is fully unwound and RPI indexation resumes.

What it means for SMEs

For business owners, the politics matter less than the planning. A scrapped Autumn hike will provide short-term breathing room for fleet operators, tradespeople and rural businesses heading into the winter, but the OBR’s own numbers make clear that the reckoning has merely been postponed. Any operator modelling 2027 cash flow would be wise to assume duty rates will rise sharply once the temporary cut expires and indexation kicks back in.

The deeper question for the SME community is whether the Chancellor is prepared to follow the IEA-tracked majority and use fuel taxation as an active lever to support growth, or whether she will continue to treat the duty as a guaranteed revenue stream to be quietly squeezed. On the evidence of 16 years of campaigning, FairFuelUK is bracing for the latter – even as it prepares to claim a tactical victory in the Autumn.

For now, Britain’s van drivers, hauliers and white-van entrepreneurs can breathe a cautious sigh of relief. The bigger fight, as ever, is in the spring.

Read more:
Treasury wobble: Reeves poised to ditch autumn budget fuel duty hike as fairfueluk pressure tells

May 18, 2026
Victor Daniel Silva: Building a Life on the Gulf Coast
Business

Victor Daniel Silva: Building a Life on the Gulf Coast

by May 16, 2026

Before the sun rises over the Louisiana Gulf Coast, Victor Daniel Silva is already awake. The routine is quiet and steady. Coffee. Gear check. Then the water.

“It’s the same rhythm I grew up with,” he says. “You learn early that the ocean doesn’t wait for you.”

Now in his early 40s, Victor is a commercial fisherman known for consistency and skill. In an industry where conditions change fast, that kind of reliability matters. It’s helped him build a strong reputation in shrimping and crabbing along the Gulf.

But his story didn’t start in Louisiana.

Early Life in Beaufort, North Carolina

Victor was born in Beaufort, North Carolina, a small coastal town where fishing is a way of life. His father, Daniel Silva Sr., worked as a commercial fisherman and introduced Victor to the trade at a young age.

“I was just a kid sitting on the boat, trying to stay out of the way,” Victor recalls. “But I was watching everything.”

Those early mornings left a lasting impression. The sound of the engine. The feel of the salt air. The patience it took to wait for a catch.

At Beaufort High School, Victor wasn’t focused on academics. His strength was hands-on work. While others planned to leave town, he felt pulled toward the water.

“Fishing just made sense to me,” he says. “It wasn’t something I had to think about. I understood it.”

His father taught him more than just technique. He taught him how to read tides, repair nets, and stay calm when conditions turned rough.

“Patience is everything out here,” Victor says. “If you rush, the ocean will remind you real quick who’s in charge.”

Carrying on a Family Legacy

Victor worked side by side with his father for years. Their communication was simple. Often just a look or a short phrase.

After his father passed away, Victor made a choice. He would continue the work.

“You don’t walk away from something like that,” he says. “It’s part of who you are.”

He kept using many of the same tools and methods his father taught him. Even today, some of his gear has been passed down.

“I still start my mornings the same way we used to,” he adds. “It keeps him with me.”

This sense of continuity has shaped Victor’s approach to the business. He values tradition, but he also understands the need to adapt.

Why He Moved to Louisiana for Opportunity

In his late 20s, Victor made a major move. He left North Carolina and relocated to coastal Louisiana.

The decision was driven by opportunity. The Gulf Coast offered strong shrimping and crabbing markets, along with a tight-knit fishing community.

“I wanted to go where the work was steady,” he explains. “Louisiana had that.”

The transition wasn’t easy at first. New waters require new knowledge. Tides, weather patterns, and local systems all differ.

“You have to learn fast,” Victor says. “The water here has its own rules.”

Over time, he adapted. He built relationships with other fishermen and gained a deeper understanding of the Gulf.

That effort paid off. Today, he is known as a dependable and skilled operator in his field.

Daily Life as a Commercial Fisherman

Victor’s work is physically demanding. Days often start before dawn and can stretch long depending on the catch.

Still, he doesn’t complain.

“This is what I signed up for,” he says. “It’s hard work, but it’s honest.”

When he’s not on the water, he’s still working. Equipment needs repair. Nets need mending. Boats need maintenance.

“It doesn’t stop when you dock,” he explains. “That’s just part of the job.”

But there is also balance. Victor values his downtime and the slower pace of coastal life.

“You have to make time to step back,” he says. “Otherwise, the work will take everything.”

A Strong Partnership at Home

At the center of Victor’s life is his wife, Marisol. Her passion for cooking complements his work perfectly.

“She takes what I bring in and turns it into something special,” Victor says.

Marisol is known for her Creole garlic butter shrimp served over grits. The dish uses fresh shrimp straight from Victor’s boat.

“It’s simple ingredients, but it’s all about how you put it together,” Victor explains.

Their home has become a gathering place. Friends and neighbors often stop by, drawn by both the food and the atmosphere.

“You’ll smell it before you even get to the door,” he says with a laugh.

What Makes Victor Silva a Leader in His Industry

Victor doesn’t describe himself as a leader. But others in the fishing community see it differently.

His strength comes from consistency. He shows up. He does the work. He shares knowledge when needed.

“In this business, people notice who they can count on,” he says. “That matters more than anything.”

He also respects the industry. Fishing is unpredictable, and success depends on experience and discipline.

“You don’t control the outcome,” Victor says. “You just control how prepared you are.”

That mindset has helped him build trust over time.

A Life Built on Purpose and Routine

Victor’s life is not flashy. It doesn’t need to be.

He finds satisfaction in the routine. The early mornings. The steady work. The quiet evenings at home.

“At the end of the day, I know I did something real,” he says. “That’s enough for me.”

From Beaufort to Louisiana, his path has been shaped by family, hard work, and a deep respect for the water.

And every morning, before the sun rises, it starts all over again.

Read more:
Victor Daniel Silva: Building a Life on the Gulf Coast

May 16, 2026
Luminette Glasses vs Traditional Light Therapy Lamps: Which Works Better?
Business

Luminette Glasses vs Traditional Light Therapy Lamps: Which Works Better?

by May 16, 2026

There’s a moment most people who research light therapy eventually hit: you’ve decided the science is real, you’re ready to try it – and then you realize you have to choose between two completely different product formats that nobody bothered to explain in the same place.

On one side: light therapy lamps. Bulky-ish white boxes that sit on your desk and blast bright light at your face while you eat breakfast or work. Decades of clinical evidence. Cost: $40 to $150. On the other: Luminette glasses. A wearable device you wear like a visor during your morning, developed by a Belgian medical tech company with university-backed research. Cost: $200+.

The question isn’t which one looks more impressive. It’s which one actually works – and works for you, specifically, given your routine, your symptoms, and how seriously you’re going to commit to using it.

Here’s the honest comparison.

How Light Therapy Works (and Why the Device Type Matters)

Both formats are trying to do the same thing: deliver therapeutic light to the photoreceptors in your eyes that regulate your circadian rhythm.

Those receptors – intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells, or ipRGCs – are most responsive to light in the blue-green spectrum around 480 nm. When they receive a sufficient dose at the right time of day (morning, within an hour or two of waking), they send a signal to the suprachiasmatic nucleus – the brain’s master clock – that initiates the hormonal cascade associated with wakefulness: cortisol rises, melatonin suppresses, body temperature starts climbing.

The biological target is the same for both devices. But how they deliver light to that target differs considerably, and those differences have real consequences for effectiveness, convenience, and who each device actually suits.

Traditional Light Therapy Lamps: What You’re Working With

A standard light therapy lamp is a flat panel or box housing fluorescent or LED elements, typically rated at 10,000 lux at a specific working distance (usually 20–30 cm from your face).

The 10,000 lux figure became the clinical standard based on early SAD research from the 1980s and 90s. Studies found that this intensity, delivered over 20–30 minutes in the morning, produced significant antidepressant effects in SAD patients – effects comparable in magnitude to antidepressant medication in several trials, with faster onset.

That evidence base is genuinely strong. Light therapy boxes have been studied for longer than almost any other non-pharmacological psychiatric intervention, and the data consistently holds up.

In practice, using a lamp looks like this: You sit at a fixed location – usually a desk or kitchen table – with the lamp positioned at roughly eye level, 20–30 cm away. You don’t stare directly at it; you look in its general direction while doing something else. The key constraint is that you need to stay roughly in position for the full session. If you get up to refill your coffee and spend three minutes in the kitchen, that time doesn’t count.

What works well:

Simple, no learning curve
Cheaper entry point ($40–$150 for quality models)
Established clinical evidence base
Effective for most people if used consistently

What doesn’t:

You have to stop and sit for it
Positioning matters – too far away, too off-angle, and the dose drops significantly
Not portable for travel use
Takes up desk or counter space

Luminette Glasses: A Different Approach to the Same Problem

Luminette takes the light therapy intervention and reengineers its delivery method. Instead of a fixed panel, you wear the device – a lightweight visor that positions LED light sources above your line of vision, directing diffuse light slightly downward into your upper visual field.

That angle is intentional. Your ipRGCs are not uniformly distributed across your retina. The cells are most concentrated in the inferior retinal region – which, anatomically, receives light from above your eye line. Natural sunlight enters the eye from above. Luminette’s design matches that geometry rather than throwing light frontally from desk level.

The trade-off: because the device sits close to your eyes and targets the most responsive region, it can deliver a therapeutic dose at 1,500 lux rather than 10,000 lux. The lower intensity number looks like a weakness until you understand why it isn’t – the effective dose reaching the relevant receptors is comparable to what a lamp delivers at its rated intensity.

Lucimed, the Belgian company behind Luminette, conducted their efficacy studies in collaboration with the Sleep and Chronobiology Unit at the University of Liège – one of Europe’s leading circadian research centers. The published results supported equivalent therapeutic outcomes to standard box therapy.

In practice, using Luminette glasses looks like this: You put them on when you wake up, press the button to select your intensity (500, 1,000, or 1,500 lux), and go about your morning. Breakfast, stretching, reading, answering emails – the device works while you move. Sessions are the same 20–30 minutes. The difference is that those 20–30 minutes accumulate naturally rather than requiring dedicated stationary time.

What works well:

Hands-free, mobile use during normal morning activities
Correct retinal angle for light delivery
Portable – works on planes, in hotels, during travel
No dedicated space or setup required

What doesn’t:

Higher price point ($200–$240)
Some people find wearing something on their face mildly uncomfortable at first
Fit varies with prescription glasses – works for most, imperfect for some frames
Less extensive historical evidence base than lamps (though specific clinical studies exist)

Head-to-Head: The Factors That Actually Matter

Effectiveness at treating SAD

On pure efficacy, properly used lamps and properly used Luminette glasses produce comparable outcomes. Both have clinical evidence behind them. The critical qualifier is “properly used” – which brings in consistency, and consistency brings in the format comparison.

If you will genuinely sit in front of a lamp for 20–30 minutes every morning without interruption, a quality lamp will work just as well as Luminette glasses. Many people do exactly this and manage their SAD effectively for years.

The problem is that a significant portion of people who buy light therapy lamps use them inconsistently. They work well for two weeks, then a busy morning breaks the routine, then another, and gradually the lamp migrates to a shelf. The wearable format of Luminette glasses removes the “I don’t have 20 uninterrupted minutes to just sit there” barrier – which for many people is the real obstacle.

Edge: Luminette glasses for people with chaotic mornings. Tie for people who can maintain a structured sitting routine.

Effectiveness for jet lag and shift work

This isn’t close. A lamp is not practical for travel use. You can’t pack a light therapy box in a carry-on and use it in a hotel room at the circadian time your protocol requires. You technically could, but almost nobody does.

Luminette glasses are designed to be used on planes, in airports, in hotel rooms, at any time zone. The Luminette Drive app includes specific jet lag protocols based on your departure city, destination, and flight schedule. This use case is where the glasses format has a decisive advantage – not in effectiveness per session, but in whether you actually use it when you need it most.

Edge: Luminette glasses, unambiguously.

Cost

Lamps win on upfront cost. A solid 10,000 lux lamp from Carex, Verilux, or Lumie runs $40–$100. Luminette 3 costs $200–$240.

Over time, both are low-maintenance purchases with no consumable costs. The question is whether the format premium is justified by the outcome for you specifically. If a lamp works with your routine and you stick to it, you paid $60 and solved your problem. If you buy the lamp and use it twice before it ends up in a cabinet, you paid $60 and solved nothing.

Edge: Lamps for upfront cost. Luminette glasses if the format actually changes your usage consistency.

Portability

No contest. Luminette glasses fit in a jacket pocket. A lamp does not.

Edge: Luminette glasses.

Comfort and ease of use

This one is genuinely personal. Some people find wearing anything on their face for 30 minutes each morning irritating – the glasses are light at 55g, but they’re still there. Others find staring in the general direction of a bright panel mildly oppressive after a while.

First-time light therapy users sometimes find the lamp format more approachable because it’s passive – you just sit near it. The glasses require you to actively put something on, which for some people is one friction point too many in the early morning.

Edge: Subjective. Try each format before committing if you have any doubt.

Light angle and delivery quality

The design of Luminette glasses – delivering light from above the line of vision – is theoretically more aligned with the natural stimulus your ipRGCs evolved to respond to. Whether this translates into measurably better outcomes compared to a well-positioned lamp is not definitively established in head-to-head clinical trials.

What is established is that lamp users need to pay attention to positioning (distance, angle, eye level) in a way that Luminette users don’t. The glasses solve a compliance variable by design.

Edge: Luminette glasses on delivery consistency. Lamps require more careful setup.

The Decision Framework: Which One Should You Get?

Get a light therapy lamp if:

You’re new to light therapy and want to test whether it helps you before spending $200+
You have a consistent morning routine with a fixed breakfast or work location
Budget is a meaningful constraint
You don’t travel frequently enough for portability to matter
You don’t mind sitting still for 20–30 minutes each morning

Get Luminette glasses if:

You travel regularly across time zones and want to manage jet lag actively
Your mornings are variable and you struggle to carve out stationary time
You’ve already tried a lamp and found the format hard to maintain consistently
You’re managing a diagnosed circadian disorder or severe SAD and want the most practical daily-use solution
You work rotating or night shifts and need something that functions in different settings

A Note on “Which Has Better Science”

The framing of “lamps have more research behind them” is technically accurate but somewhat misleading. Light therapy boxes have decades of studies because they were the only practical light therapy format for decades. Luminette glasses have fewer total studies because wearable light therapy is newer.

The mechanism is the same. The target receptor is the same. The dose parameters that matter (intensity at the retina, spectral composition, timing, duration) are consistent between formats. The University of Liège research on Luminette’s format used rigorous methodology and produced results consistent with the broader light therapy literature.

Choosing a lamp over Luminette glasses because “it has more studies” is roughly equivalent to preferring a wired landline over a mobile phone because wired telephony has more historical documentation. The underlying technology is validated; the delivery mechanism is what differs.

Final Verdict

Traditional light therapy lamps are excellent, underrated, and underused. If you commit to using one daily, they work – and the barrier to entry is low enough that almost anyone curious about light therapy should try one first.

Luminette glasses solve a different problem: not “does light therapy work?” but “how do I actually fit light therapy into a real morning?” For people whose answer to that question involves a lot of movement, travel, or variable schedules, they’re worth the price premium. The clinical backing is real, the design rationale is sound, and the device itself is the best wearable version of this intervention currently available.

The worst outcome is buying neither because the comparison felt too complicated. Both formats work. Pick the one that fits your life, use it every morning at the same time, and give it three weeks before drawing conclusions.

Read more:
Luminette Glasses vs Traditional Light Therapy Lamps: Which Works Better?

May 16, 2026
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