One Direction Paid £8.2m In Tax Last Year, Shaming Britian's Biggest Businesses

One Direction Throw Shade On Facebook By Paying A Lot More Tax
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Britain's most successful boyband One Direction paid at least £8.2m in tax last year, enough to fund 370 junior nurses, 260 secondary school teachers and 5 new primary schools.

The foursome, whose fifth member Zayn Malik quit earlier this year, earned an impressive £73.7m from their musical exploits and popular live gigs.

Their contribution dwarfs that of social network Facebook which paid just £4,327 in corporation taxes last year, despite boasting about increasing advertising revenues and over a billion active users.

The group paid £10.47m to HMRC in taxation in 2014 of which £8.24m was paid in UK corporation tax.

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One Direction make millions from live performances

Here's What One Direction's Taxes Could Buy

What 1D's Taxes Could Pay For
370 Junior Nurses(01 of06)
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One Direction's corporation tax payment would pay for 370 nurses on a annual starting salary of £21,692. (credit:Tetra Images via Getty Images)
285 Firefighters(02 of06)
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Their tax could help pay 285 firefighters for a year, with a higher salary band of around £28,766, according to Prospects. (credit:doble.d via Getty Images)
31 MRI Scanners(03 of06)
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With MRI scanners presenting prohibitive cost to the NHS, 1D could help pay for 31 of them, helping patients across the country. (credit:Morsa Images via Getty Images)
5 New Primary Schools(04 of06)
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With primary schools costing an average of £1.5m to construct, 1D's contributions could have paid for more than 5 of the buildings. (credit:Gareth Fuller/PA Wire)
315 Police Officers(05 of06)
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With police officers paid around £25,962 after initial training, 1D could well be helping law and order everywhere. (credit:Michael Price via Getty Images)
260 Secondary School Teachers(06 of06)
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With secondary school teachers paid a higher salary of around £32,000, 1D could be helping to keep students engaged and motivated across the country (...and keen to buy their music, of course). (credit:Chris Ryan via Getty Images)