Animal Aid

Horse Racing

Horse fall

Most people regard horse racing as a harmless sport in which the animals are willing participants who thoroughly enjoy the thrill. The truth is that, behind the scenes, lies a story of immense suffering.

Approximately 18,000 foals are born into the closely-related British and Irish racing industries each year, yet only around 40% go on to become racers. Those horses who do not make the grade may be slaughtered for meat or repeatedly change hands in a downward spiral of neglect. Of those horses who do go on to race, around 420 are raced to death every year.

Campaign Resources

Beneath its glamorous façade, commercial horse racing is a ruthless industry motivated by financial gain and prestige. Cruelty? You can bet on it!

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Race horse falling

Horse Racing Awareness Week

Horse Racing Awareness Week takes place in the seven days leading up to the Grand National meeting in Aintree - a notoriously hazardous three-day event that has killed 35 horses over the last decade.

Read more about Horse Racing Awareness Week

Anti-whip protest

Ban the Whip

Using pain in an effort to control an animal is morally repugnant to anyone with respect for animals. The evidence shows, in any case, that such violence is counter-productive in terms of safety and in producing winners.

Read more about our 'ban the whip' campaign

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