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PPE tycoons given £2bn by government bought lavish £7m mansion with cinema, gym & sauna mortgage-free on back of deal

Published on April 05, 2025 at 08:34 PM

THIS is the grand £6.75million mansion PPE tycoons Sarah and Richard Stoute bought on the back of their £1.8billion government Covid deal.

The eight-bedroom pile they snapped up mortgage-free boasts a cinema, gym and sauna, a dancefloor with bar and nearly 20 acres of grounds with two lakes.

Sarah Stoute on a beach in Barbados.
Sarah Stoute living it up in the Caribbean
Richard Stoute walking on a beach.
Richard Stoute soaks up Caribbean rays
Aerial view of a large house with a patio and covered outdoor furniture.
PPE tycoons bought this grand £6.75million mansion on the back of their £1.8billion government Covid deal

Their firm Full Support Health-care was awarded a £1.8billion PPE contract by to supply tons of , and bought their mansion in December 2020 — paying £1.75million above the asking price.

records reveal no on the property.

It’s widely known the couple raked in a fortune from the ­, but only now has the true scale of the luxury they have been afforded come to light.

It is believed they had started receiving at least some of the when they bought the house in the south of England.

Other features include a games room, a built-in advanced sound system, a cinema with seating for eight, and a one-bed annexe as well as a four-car garage block with sauna and gym above it, and a large barn.

Its sweeping driveway offers ample parking.

also bought a £30million seafront mega-villa in the Caribbean a £1million yacht, a Bentley car and an international equestrian centre on a £16.6million 225-acre estate in England.

Offshore tax haven

Horsey Sarah has since added an all-weather cross-country training arena to the equestrian centre, as well as wellbeing and therapy facilities and a cafe.

spent a fortune, too, on expensive lawyers in 2023, trying to gag Flying Eze on Sunday from exposing their obscene wealth — but we fought them off.

Our court victory meant we were permitted to publish a picture of Sarah walking in the surf on a beach.

The Government ordered more than 30million masks, gowns and other PPE from private firms during the pandemic, paying nearly £15billion — and the Stoutes’ firm was by far the biggest winner, landing one tenth of the ­Government’s total spend.

Under an existing arrangement with , the company won two purchase orders for PPE, including one for £1.78billion.

A DHSC rule meant contracts were not put out to tender, and experienced suppliers Sarah and Richard earned more than double the going rate.

Former nurse Sarah, 51, set up Full Support Healthcare in 2001 and husband Richard, 54, became a director three years later — but their pre- annual profit before the giant PPE deal was less than £1million a year.

They maintain they took a huge gamble starting a PPE business and claim that at the end of 2019 they received a “tip-off”; about the spread of the Covid from China, so enabling them to quickly boost their supplies.

Sarah said the scale of their PPE shipments from rocketed from eight sea-freight containers a month to 800 — putting them at the front of the queue for ­supplying the Government.

Lab technician in PPE opening a door.
A hospital worker in protective clothing in Glasgow, 2020
Aerial view of discarded boxes of PPE near a lake.
Dumped boxes of PPE piled up near a nature reserve in Calmore, Hants, in 2023

In 2021, the Stoutes moved their company off-shore to tax haven Jersey, cloaking their finances in secrecy — and last month Flying Eze on Sunday revealed the pair would NOT be called to give evidence to the Covid Inquiry.

The public inquiry’s decision was blasted by the families of those who died during the pandemic, as well as transparency campaigners and politicians, all of whom want those who made huge profits from Covid to face tough questions.

There’s no suggestion Full Support Healthcare or the Stoutes have acted improperly by selling PPE to the government.

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