Based on publicly available records reviewed as of July 2026, Marcus Fysh's net worth is estimated in the range of £1.5 million to £3 million. That range is driven primarily by his likely equity in Naish Priory, a Grade I listed property in East Coker, Somerset, combined with a modest portfolio of financial instruments declared through parliament and residual interests in private companies. Confidence in this estimate is low-to-moderate: the figures rest on indirect evidence rather than disclosed personal balance sheets, and several key data points, particularly the current market value of Naish Priory and the present worth of his private company stakes, carry meaningful uncertainty.
Marcus Fysh Net Worth: 2026 Estimate, Sources & Breakdown
Who is Marcus Fysh?
Marcus John Hudson Fysh was born in November 1970. He served as the Conservative Member of Parliament for Yeovil from May 2015 until he lost his seat on 30 May 2024, when Parliament dissolved ahead of the general election. Before entering politics, Fysh had involvement in business and private company activity that continued alongside his parliamentary career. His public profile is shaped by three overlapping areas: his political work in Westminster, his declared financial interests ranging from cryptocurrency derivatives to listed equity instruments, and his association with Naish Priory, a historically significant Somerset property.
Political career milestones
Fysh held the Yeovil seat for nearly a decade, a constituency with strong historical ties to the Liberal Democrats before the 2015 Conservative wave. During his parliamentary tenure, he sat on various select committees and participated in debates touching on trade, Brexit, and local Somerset issues. His exit from parliament in May 2024 ended his salary as an MP but did not end his corporate registrations, some of which were filed in the final weeks before dissolution.
Business interests and investments
Fysh's Companies House record under the name Marcus John Hudson FYSH lists three officer appointments: East Coker Preservation Ltd (company no. 07459849), West Sea Investments Limited (08569809, dissolved January 2023), and London Wessex Brands Limited (09361429, wound up by liquidation around 2016 to 2018). More recently, Companies House shows he was incorporated as a director and person with significant control of SARISA Limited (no. 15569240) from 16 March 2024, with his PSC status recorded as ceasing on 23 September 2024. A statement of capital filing for SARISA in January 2025 shows allotted share capital of £16,000, which represents nominal paid-up capital, not a market valuation. He also held a declared shareholding of more than 15% in Clean Cell Technologies Ltd at the time of his final parliamentary registration.
Where his money comes from
Fysh's income has come from several distinct streams over the years. Understanding each one helps frame the overall estimate honestly.
Parliamentary salary and allowances
UK MPs receive a salary set by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (IPSA). For most of Fysh's tenure, the base MP salary ranged from approximately £67,000 to £86,584 per year (the figure in the 2023 to 2024 parliamentary year). MPs also receive expenses and allowances for staffing, office, and accommodation through the IPSA system, but these are reimbursements for costs incurred, not personal income. After nine years as an MP, Fysh would have accumulated several hundred thousand pounds in total salary, though much of that would have been offset by living costs and typical personal expenditure over the period.
Parliamentary pension
MPs who serve a full term accrue benefits under the Parliamentary Contributory Pension Fund (PCPF). After roughly nine years of service, Fysh would have built up a defined-benefit pension entitlement, though the capitalised value of that pension depends on when he draws it, actuarial assumptions, and whether he took a lump sum. A nine-year parliamentary pension at standard accrual rates would typically produce an annual pension in the low thousands to low tens of thousands of pounds; capitalised at standard multiples that could represent a notional asset of somewhere in the £100,000 to £250,000 range. This is a soft estimate and is included here for completeness rather than precision.
Financial instruments: derivatives, CFDs, and crypto
The parliamentary Register of Members' Financial Interests for Fysh (2021 through his final entry as at 28 May 2024) repeatedly declared beneficial interests in derivatives and contracts for difference (CFDs) linked to public securities and indices. Named positions included exposure to ADA (Cardano) utility tokens, Cameco Corporation (a uranium miner), the Russell 2000 index, the S&P 500, Texas Pacific Land Trust, and various ETFs. CFDs and derivatives are leveraged instruments, meaning the actual capital committed can be far smaller or far larger than the gross notional position. Parliamentary registers capture the existence of these interests but do not require disclosure of position size or profit and loss. It is therefore impossible to assign a reliable value to this part of his portfolio. What the disclosures confirm is that Fysh was an active retail or semi-professional investor with a taste for speculative instruments, not purely a passive saver.
Private company directorships and shareholdings
As noted above, two of Fysh's three Companies House appointments were in companies that have since dissolved or been wound up. London Wessex Brands Ltd was liquidated; West Sea Investments Ltd was voluntarily struck off and dissolved in January 2023. Dissolved companies contribute nothing to current net worth unless residual assets were distributed before dissolution. The register shows Fysh held more than 75% of West Sea Investments, but without sight of the full accounts (which were filed for years up to 2020 and are available as PDFs at Companies House), the book value of that vehicle at dissolution is not publicly summarised here. Readers who want the exact balance-sheet figure can retrieve the total-exemption full accounts from the Companies House filing history. SARISA Limited, the newest company, had nominal capital of £16,000 at its last filed capital statement; it is not possible to assign a meaningful market value to a nascent private company on that basis alone.
Unpaid directorships and consultancy
Fysh declared his directorship of SARISA Limited as unpaid at the time of his final parliamentary registration (28 May 2024). No remuneration from consultancy or advisory roles was declared in the registers reviewed. That does not preclude income from these sources after he left parliament, but there is no public record to quantify it.
Known assets and liabilities
Naish Priory
The most significant known asset associated with Marcus Fysh is Naish Priory in East Coker, Somerset (Historic England List Entry 1057189). This is a Grade I listed building, a designation held by only around 2% of listed structures in England, indicating the highest level of historical or architectural significance. Companies House PSC records for West Sea Investments Limited identify Fysh's correspondence address as Naish Priory, East Coker, Yeovil, Somerset, BA22 9HQ, placing him in residence or closely associated with the property. A historical listing in 2007 put the property's guide price at £1.775 million. Adjusting for general property price inflation in Somerset over the subsequent 17 years, a current market value in the range of £2.5 million to £4 million is plausible, though Grade I listed status introduces significant complications: owners face strict constraints on alterations, potentially high maintenance costs, and a smaller buyer pool than equivalent unlisted rural properties. Whether Fysh owns Naish Priory outright, part-owns it, holds it subject to a mortgage, or rents it cannot be confirmed from publicly available records alone. No mortgage registration or Land Registry data is cited in the primary research. That uncertainty is one of the biggest variables in the overall estimate.
Company shareholdings
Fysh's shareholdings in Clean Cell Technologies Ltd (more than 15% at last parliamentary declaration) and any residual interest in SARISA Limited represent potential future value. Neither company has publicly filed accounts that allow a reliable valuation. Early-stage and private company stakes are illiquid, their value is speculative, and they are treated here as having a value somewhere between zero and an indeterminate positive figure. They are not assigned a hard number in the primary estimate.
Liabilities
No public records reviewed here confirm the existence or scale of personal mortgage debt, director's loans, or other liabilities. The dissolution of West Sea Investments and the liquidation of London Wessex Brands could in theory have resulted in creditor claims or tax liabilities, but nothing of that nature appears in the publicly accessible records cited. This absence of confirmed liabilities does not mean they do not exist; it simply means they are not visible from the sources used.
| Asset / Income Source | Estimated Value or Range | Confidence | Primary Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Naish Priory (property) | £2.5m – £4m gross (mortgage unknown) | Low | Historic England; Companies House PSC; 2007 guide price |
| MP salary (cumulative, 2015–2024) | ~£700k gross pre-tax over 9 years | Moderate | IPSA published salary scales |
| Parliamentary pension (notional capital) | £100k – £250k | Low | PCPF standard accrual rates (estimated) |
| Financial instruments (CFDs, derivatives, crypto) | Unknown | Very low | Register of Members' Financial Interests 2021–2024 |
| West Sea Investments Ltd (dissolved) | £0 (dissolved Jan 2023) | Moderate | Companies House filing history |
| London Wessex Brands Ltd (wound up) | £0 (liquidated 2016–2018) | Moderate | Companies House filing history |
| SARISA Limited shareholding | Nominal / illiquid | Very low | Companies House SH01 (Jan 2025); £16k nominal capital |
| Clean Cell Technologies Ltd stake (>15%) | Unknown / illiquid | Very low | Register of Members' Financial Interests (May 2024) |
Financial disclosures, public filings, and controversies
The 2020 Standards Committee finding
In June 2020, the House of Commons Committee on Standards published a report finding that Marcus Fysh had breached the Code of Conduct for Members of Parliament. The committee found he failed to register several unpaid directorships and was late in registering changes to his shareholdings. The committee recommended rectification and a public apology. This finding is relevant to a net worth profile not because it reveals hidden wealth, but because it demonstrates that his declared interests were, at times, incomplete or delayed. Readers should factor that into how much confidence they place in the completeness of his parliamentary disclosures as a map of his full financial picture.
Register of Members' Financial Interests (selected key entries)
The Register is the primary official window onto an MP's financial interests. Fysh's entries from 2021 to his final declaration on 28 May 2024 are publicly available on the UK Parliament website. See Contributions for Mr Marcus Fysh, Hansard (UK Parliament) for a searchable record of his on‑record parliamentary contributions and related register entries Contributions for Mr Marcus Fysh — Hansard (UK Parliament). The pattern of disclosure shows a consistent presence of leveraged financial positions (CFDs and derivatives) tied to both equity indices and specific companies, plus cryptocurrency exposure via ADA tokens. The final entry also added SARISA Limited (director, unpaid, from 16 March 2024) and a declared shareholding of more than 15% in both SARISA and Clean Cell Technologies Ltd.
Companies House filings summary
The three most relevant Companies House filings for understanding Fysh's financial history are: the West Sea Investments Ltd accounts (full accounts filed for years up to 2020, then voluntary dissolution), the SARISA Limited filing history (incorporation March 2024, capital allotments through January 2025), and the East Coker Preservation Ltd record (which relates to local heritage activity rather than commercial investment). The West Sea Investments accounts, if retrieved individually from Companies House as PDFs, would give the clearest available balance-sheet data for one of his private vehicles, though the company is now dissolved.
How the estimate was built
Here is the step-by-step reasoning behind the £1.5 million to £3 million range, so you can see exactly where each figure comes from and how certain I am about it.
- Property anchor: Naish Priory is the largest identifiable asset. The 2007 guide price of £1.775 million, adjusted for Somerset house price growth (approximately 40 to 60% over 17 years in comparable rural areas), suggests a gross value of roughly £2.5 million to £3 million today. Grade I listing suppresses demand, so I apply a conservative discount to arrive at an effective contribution to personal net worth in the £1 million to £2.5 million range, conditional on ownership being full or majority and subject to unknown mortgage debt. This single item dominates the estimate and is also the largest source of uncertainty.
- Salary accumulation: Nine years of MP salary at average rates of approximately £70,000 to £80,000 per year produces cumulative gross pay of roughly £630,000 to £720,000. After income tax and national insurance, take-home over the period would be in the region of £400,000 to £480,000. The portion retained as savings or investment (rather than spent on living costs, a second home in or near London, constituency activity, etc.) is unknown. I assign no specific savings figure here; it is captured implicitly in the overall range.
- Pension: A notional pension capitalisation of £100,000 to £250,000 adds a modest but real component. This is a soft estimate based on standard PCPF accrual and is included to avoid understating total wealth.
- Financial instruments: The CFD and derivatives positions are impossible to value without position-size disclosure. They could represent gains, losses, or near-zero net exposure. I treat this as a zero-sum unknown in the range.
- Private company stakes: Dissolved companies contribute nothing. SARISA and Clean Cell Technologies are illiquid early-stage stakes. I treat their current contribution as zero to a small positive figure and do not assign a number.
- Liabilities: No confirmed debt data exists. If Naish Priory carries a mortgage of, say, £500,000 to £1 million, the net property equity falls materially. This is the primary downside risk to the estimate.
- Overall range: Adding a conservative property equity of £1 million to £2 million, plus retained savings from salary and pension in the range of £500,000 to £800,000, produces a personal net worth range of roughly £1.5 million to £3 million as of mid-2026. The midpoint of approximately £2.25 million is a reasonable central guess, but given the number of unknowns, I hold this estimate with low-to-moderate confidence.
What you should know about the uncertainty
Net worth estimates for private individuals, including former politicians, are inherently imprecise. There is no requirement for UK MPs or former MPs to publish a personal balance sheet, and the Register of Members' Financial Interests is a disclosure of interests, not a declaration of wealth. The figures here are estimates built from indirect evidence, not confirmed totals. Three things could change this estimate significantly: first, confirmation of whether Fysh owns Naish Priory outright, as a co-owner, or subject to a substantial mortgage; second, the actual profit and loss on his CFD and derivatives positions over the years; and third, any post-parliament income from consultancy, board fees, or commercial activity that has not yet entered the public record. A correction to a higher or lower range would be made here if new primary-source information became available.
Readers sometimes ask why these estimates span such a wide range. The honest answer is that without access to private bank statements, Land Registry mortgage entries, and company accounts for unlisted firms, precision is not achievable. A range of £1.5 million to £3 million is not a failure of research; it is an accurate reflection of what public records can and cannot tell us. Any site that gives you a single precise figure for a private individual's net worth is almost certainly making it up.
Marcus Fysh vs. similarly named people
Marcus Fysh is occasionally confused with other people named Marcus, particularly in search results. The name Marcus Fairs is sometimes conflated with Fysh in searches about design and media, since Marcus Fairs is a well-known design journalist and editor. Marcus Fizer is a former NBA basketball player whose name surfaces in sports-related wealth searches and is a completely separate individual in a different field. Marcus Filly is associated with the fitness and functional bodybuilding community, again with no connection to the political Marcus Fysh. Marcus Pearson appears in various professional contexts across several industries, and Marcus Nimbler is another distinct individual whose profile sits separately in this site's coverage. If you arrived here looking for any of those people, the profiles for Marcus Fizer, Marcus Filly, Marcus Pearson, Marcus Fairs, and Marcus Nimbler are all available elsewhere on Marcus Worth Guide. For readers seeking information on that individual, see the Marcus Pearson net worth profile for a dedicated overview. See the Marcus Fizer net worth profile for the former NBA player's financial summary. Common misspellings that lead to Fysh's profile include "Marcus Fish", "Marcus Fysh MP", and "Marcus Fysh Yeovil", all of which refer to the same person covered in this article.
| Name | Field | Connection to Marcus Fysh |
|---|---|---|
| Marcus Fysh | Politics / private investment | Subject of this article |
| Marcus Fairs | Design journalism / media | Different field; name similarity causes search confusion |
| Marcus Fizer | Professional basketball (NBA) | No connection; separate individual |
| Marcus Filly | Fitness / functional bodybuilding | No connection; separate individual |
| Marcus Pearson | Various professional contexts | No connection; separate individual |
| Marcus Nimbler | Various | No connection; separate individual |
Suggested visuals and related profiles
For editors publishing this profile, a few image ideas are worth considering. A photograph of the exterior of Naish Priory (subject to licensing and Historic England image rights) would anchor the property discussion visually. A screengrab or reproduction of the relevant Register of Members' Financial Interests entries (publicly available Crown copyright) would support the financial disclosure section without requiring a paywalled source. A simple bar chart showing the estimated breakdown of net worth by component (property equity, pension, savings from salary, company stakes) would help readers absorb the estimate structure at a glance.
Within Marcus Worth Guide, the profiles most directly relevant to readers who landed here are those for Marcus Fairs (another UK-based public figure operating in media), Marcus Pearson, Marcus Fizer, Marcus Filly, and Marcus Nimbler. Cross-referencing those profiles gives readers a sense of how wealth accumulation differs across fields, from politics and heritage property to professional sport and fitness entrepreneurship, which is exactly the kind of context this site aims to provide.
FAQ
Headline and meta description
Headline: Marcus Fysh net worth (best-supported estimate and sources) — Marcus Worth Guide. Meta description: A transparent, well-sourced profile estimating Marcus Fysh’s net worth (range and confidence), with a breakdown of income sources, known assets and liabilities, recent public filings and controversies, and full methodology using parliamentary registers, Companies House and property records. Sources: UK Parliament register entries (https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240528/fysh_marcus.htm), Companies House (https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk), Historic England (https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1057189).
Quick answer: what is the best-supported estimate of Marcus Fysh’s net worth?
Estimated net worth (best-supported range): £0.5 million to £3.0 million (estimate date: 30 May 2024). Confidence level: moderate. Rationale: public evidence shows ownership or control of small private companies (Companies House filings), shareholdings in recently formed entities (SARISA Ltd), investment positions declared in the Parliamentary Register (derivatives, CFDs, ETFs and token positions), and association with a Grade I listed property (Naish Priory) whose ownership and sale history are public but not fully evidenced as his sole personal asset. Sources: Parliamentary Register (https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240318/fysh_marcus.htm; https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240528/fysh_marcus.htm), Companies House officer and company pages (https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/officers/z-6QGfLpyAMtHqZd7Y5EZive5T0/appointments; https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/filing-history), Historic England (https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1057189). Note: range reflects uncertainty from dissolved companies, undisclosed private asset valuations and trading positions that are not cash holdings.
Biographical summary and career milestones relevant to income
Marcus John Hudson Fysh (b. November 1970) served as Member of Parliament for Yeovil until 30 May 2024 (Register: https://members.parliament.uk/member/4446/registeredinterests). Relevant income-generating milestones: - Private-sector roles and multiple company directorships recorded at Companies House, including West Sea Investments Ltd and London Wessex Brands Ltd (officer list: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/officers/z-6QGfLpyAMtHqZd7Y5EZive5T0/appointments). - Ownership/control of investment vehicles (West Sea Investments Ltd; PSC entry: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/persons-with-significant-control). - Post-parliament directorship and shareholding disclosures: SARISA Ltd (registered 16 March 2024; Register entry: https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240528/fysh_marcus.htm; Companies House filings: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/15569240/filing-history). - Parliamentary Register shows declared trading in derivatives/CFDs/futures and token positions across 2021–2024 (https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240318/fysh_marcus.htm). These business and investment activities are the primary documented bases for personal wealth.
Breakdown of likely income sources
Primary income sources documented or plausibly contributing to wealth: - Parliamentary salary and allowances: standard MP salary until 30 May 2024 (public pay scales; MP profile: https://members.parliament.uk/member/4446/registeredinterests). - Company directorships and dividends: appointments and company accounts for West Sea Investments Ltd and other companies provide evidence of corporate activity and possible distributions (Companies House filing histories: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/filing-history; https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/09361429/filing-history). - Investment trading/gains: Register of Members’ Financial Interests lists beneficial positions in derivatives, CFDs, ETFs, token holdings and shareholdings (https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240318/fysh_marcus.htm). These could produce realized or unrealized gains but transaction details and profit/loss are not publicly disclosed. - Property: association with Naish Priory (Grade I listed) appears in public records and press but definitive modern ownership and market valuation as a personal asset require land registry/property sales records (Historic England: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1057189; Companies House PSC correspondence: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/persons-with-significant-control). - Other income: consultancy, speaking, book royalties or private investments are possible but not documented in public registers.
Known assets and liabilities (publicly documented)
Known/documented items: - Company interests: West Sea Investments Ltd (PSC shows >75% control; filing history: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/filing-history), London Wessex Brands Ltd (appointments and dissolution: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/09361429/filing-history), SARISA Ltd (incorporated 16 March 2024; filings: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/15569240/filing-history). - Investment positions declared on the Parliamentary Register (derivatives/CFDs/futures, tokens and ETFs; see latest entries: https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240318/fysh_marcus.htm). - Property association: Naish Priory is linked to Fysh in correspondence addresses and press, and is a Grade I listed building (Historic England: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1057189). - Company accounts: West Sea Investments Ltd accounts are filed and available (Companies House accounts PDFs: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/filing-history). Liabilities: company filings may disclose director loans or liabilities in the accounts; no comprehensive public personal mortgage or unsecured liability register exists — such private debt is not generally publicly available. Sources: Companies House filings (https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk), Parliamentary Register (https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240318/fysh_marcus.htm).
Recent financial disclosures, filings and controversies
Recent disclosures: - Register entry (28 May 2024) records Fysh as director (unpaid) and >15% shareholder in SARISA Ltd and shareholding >15% in Clean Cell Technologies Ltd (https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/240528/fysh_marcus.htm). - Companies House records SARISA Ltd incorporation (16 March 2024) and subsequent capital allotments (https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/15569240/filing-history). Controversies and standards findings: - Committee on Standards report (18 June 2020) found Fysh breached the Code of Conduct by failing to register unpaid directorships and late registration of shareholding changes; committee recommended rectification and apology (https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/290/committee-on-standards/news/115158/committee-on-standards-publishes-report-on-mr-marcus-fysh/). - Multiple dissolved companies and winding-up filings are recorded for business vehicles connected to him (Companies House filing histories: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/09361429/filing-history; https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/08569809/filing-history). These events reduce company-level net assets available to claim as personal wealth. Media reporting provides additional context but must be cross-checked against primary filings (example: Independent, local press).
Marcus Nimbler Net Worth: Estimate, Income Sources, and How to Verify
Marcus Nimbler net worth estimate, income sources, why figures vary, and a checklist to verify claims.


