TV and radio presenter Vogue Williams is laughing all the way to the bank as her media company more than doubled its cash reserves last year.
Newly filed accounts for the 39-year-old’s firm, Howth Media Ltd, reveal that cash at the company soared from £1.29million to £3.22million in the 12 months to the end of July 2023 – a staggering £1.9m jump, or a 148% increase.
The sharp rise in part reflects the success of her and co-hosts Joanne McNally, My Therapist Ghosted Me, the irreverent podcast-turned-live-show that sells out venues whenever they take it on tour.
The company, which Vogue owns outright, also draws income from brand deals, TV appearances and other podcast projects — including the one she co-hosts with sister Amber Wilson before her husband Spencer Matthews stepped down.
Official documents for her firm show that the revenue is derived from ‘podcast fees, brand ambᴀssador fees and TV appearance fees.’
While her company isn’t required to publish total annual revenue due to its size, its profitability is clear: after posting £191,139 in post-tax profit, the company declared a dividend of £539,015 to Vogue.
TV and radio presenter Vogue Williams is laughing all the way to the bank as her media company more than doubled its cash reserves last year
Newly filed accounts for the 39-year-old’s firm, Howth Media Ltd, reveal that cash at the company soared from £1.29million to £3.22million in the 12 months to the end of July 2023 – a staggering £1.9m jump, or a 148% increase
That’s on top of an already strong financial track record. The company booked profits of £1.13m in 2023, £479,161 in 2022, and has posted six-figure surpluses each year since 2020.
Meanwhile, the rise in the firm’s cash reserves came even as amounts owed to the company by debtors shrank dramatically — from £1.49m down to just £18,296 — meaning more money in the bank and fewer outstanding invoices.
The company also slightly increased its headcount over the year, from three to four employees.
Vogue, who split her time between homes in Ireland and London with Spencer and their three children, also made a personal investment last year — the couple splashed out £2.4million on a new family home in her native Howth.
Despite her growing UK profile and various projects across the pond, she has registered Howth Media Ltd in the UK, where her star continues to rise thanks to a steady stream of TV gigs and brand deals.
It comes after Vogue admitted she would’ve swiped past her husband Spencer if they had met on a dating app.
The model and her hunk Spencer have been married since 2018, and recently hit back at claims their marriage was ‘on the rocks.’
Prior to her relationship with the former Made In Chelsea star, she was married to Irish pop star Brian McFadden from 2012 to 2017.
The sharp rise in part reflects the success of her and co-hosts Joanne McNally, My Therapist Ghosted Me, the irreverent podcast-turned-live-show that sells out venues whenever they take it on tour
The company, which Vogue owns outright, also draws income from brand deals, TV appearances and other podcast projects — including the one she co-hosts with sister Amber Wilson before her husband Spencer Matthews stepped down
Vogue is married to husband Spencer Matthews and they share three children Theodore, six, Gigi, four, Otto, three
Read More Vogue Williams stuns in pink kaftan during beach day with husband Spencer Matthews in St Barts
During the latest episode of her podcast Vogue & Amber, the presenter shared with her sister Amber Wilson that Spencer would not have been ‘her type’ when they first met.
Responding to a listener’s dilemma about wanting to find a genuine connection, Vogue said: ‘I totally get that, and I’ve got single friends and they feel the same.
‘Although dating apps are obviously a great place to start, I’ve personally never used them, but I’ve had a go on peoples. But you’re just judging someone completely on the way they look.
‘And I always say this, Spencer is obviously gorgeous, but he wouldn’t have been my type when we met. And I would have swiped past him on a dating app.
‘And then we met, and we were mad about each other because we just loved each other’s personalities.
So, I think trying to meet somebody in real life, although it can be hard, can be a really amazing thing.’