Fact Check: Did The Times publish Nigel Farage’s daughter’s address?
Verdict: ❌ False
What’s being claimed?
During his resignation speech on 7 July 2026, Nigel Farage claimed:
“Last week the editor of the Times newspaper decided to publish a picture of where my daughter lives.”
He went on to argue that this had directly threatened her security and privacy.
The implication is that The Times revealed his daughter’s home address or otherwise identified her location.
The facts
The Times published an article about Nigel Farage’s property portfolio, including a photograph of a property where it reported his daughter lives.
However, the newspaper did not publish the property’s full address. The house was described only in general terms, with identifying details such as the nameplate obscured. The article referred only to a property in a “Kent village”, making it difficult for readers to identify the location from the article alone.
Following Farage’s speech, Sky News also clarified that its journalists had attended a property where Farage had previously been registered to vote, rejecting claims that it had targeted his daughter at the earlier time shown in Farage’s CCTV footage.
Analysis
There is an important distinction between publishing a photograph of a property and publishing someone’s address.
The evidence available indicates that The Times did not disclose the property’s full address or provide information that would directly identify its location to the general public. Instead, it used a photograph with identifying details obscured and described the location only in broad terms.
That does not mean the coverage was welcomed by Farage or his family, but it does mean his statement overstates what the newspaper actually published.
Conclusion
Nigel Farage claimed that The Times published where his daughter lives.
While the newspaper did publish a photograph of a property reported to be associated with his daughter, it did not publish the property’s address and obscured identifying details.
The available evidence does not support the suggestion that The Times publicly revealed her home address.
Verdict: ❌ False