Magic can't save 'Harry Potter' star Rupert Grint from $2.3M tax bill

Rupert Grint attends a screening of the film 'Knock at the Cabin' in London, Jan. 25, 2023. Grint faces a $2.3 million bill after he lost a legal battle with the tax authorities.

Rupert Grint attends a screening of the film 'Knock at the Cabin' in London, Jan. 25, 2023. Grint faces a $2.3 million bill after he lost a legal battle with the tax authorities. (Vianney Le Caer, Invision/AP)


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LONDON — Former "Harry Potter" film actor Rupert Grint faces a $2.3 million bill after he lost a legal battle with the tax authorities.

Grint, who played Ron Weasley in the magical film franchise, was ordered to pay the money in 2019 after H.M. Revenue and Customs, the U.K. tax agency, investigated his tax return from seven years earlier.

The agency said Grint had wrongly classified $5.7 million in residuals from the movies — money from DVD sales, TV syndication, streaming rights and other sources — as a capital asset rather than income, which is subject to a much higher tax rate.

Lawyers for Grint appealed, but after years of wrangling, a tribunal judge ruled against the actor this week. Judge Harriet Morgan said the money "derived substantially the whole of its value from the activities of Mr. Grint" and "is taxable as income."

Grint, 36, starred in all eight Harry Potter films between 2001 and 2011 as the boy wizard's best friend, and is calculated to have earned around $30 million from the role.

He previously lost a separate court battle over a $1.2 million refund in 2019.

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