Horse Racing - Animal Aid (2024)

Many 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.

Animal Aid’s main campaigning goals are: the establishment of a new, independent organisation with sole responsibility for race horse welfare; and a ban on the whip (for any reason other than safety). We continue to press for the racing authorities to publish full details of on-course Thoroughbred deaths (currently running at around 200 a year) and an end to the Grand National.

We want to see an end to all horse racing, because it is an intrinsically cruel and exploitative industry, which fails to take care of horses when they are deemed to no longer be of use. After many years of exposing the truth about a heavily romanticised industry, Animal Aid has succeeded in changing the public perception and media coverage of racing.

How can I help?

  • Please do not support the industry by betting on horses or attending racecourses.
  • Read our 2024 6 month report
  • Read our briefing sheet into equestrian sports and why the Olympics should go animal-free
  • Order a Horse Racing Action Pack or leaflets by emailing info@animalaid.org.uk
  • Help with our campaign objectives – see below
  • Make a donation to Animal Aid so that we can continue holding the racing industry to account.

Read our background notes on the horse racing industry

Read our Briefing: 'The Trouble with Horse Racing'

Campaign to end horse slaughter

Horse Racing - Animal Aid (1)

Animal Aid has uncovered the stark reality for horses and ponies who are no longer wanted in our society. Between October 2019 and February 2020, we filmed inside a UK abattoir which slaughters horses. The majority of the horses were killed for meat – destined to be sold for human consumption abroad.

Click here to see our ground-breaking investigation into horse slaughter

Ban Jump Racing

Animal Aid’s new campaign, which calls for a ban on Jump Racing, was launched in March 2023 in order to highlight the dangers of Jump Racing to horses’ lives and welfare. Since 2001, more than 3,000 horses have been killed in Jump Races in Great Britain.

Jump racing events – such as the Cheltenham Festival in March and the Grand National Festival in April – are heavily promoted through the media, which helps to normalise routine cruelty to horses (such as the use of the whip) whilst failing to present comprehensive information relating to horse deaths and injuries.

More information about our campaign to Ban Jump Racing

Ban the whip!

Horses are the only animals who may be beaten in public for entertainment. Animal Aid has campaigned for many years to ban the whip from racing in Britain. Many jockeys repeatedly misuse the whip because, even when they are found guilty of misconduct, they still keep their riding fees and may not lose their winnings. Animal Aid is calling for the word ‘encouragement’ to be removed from the rules so that jockeys may use the whip only for extreme situations when safety is at risk.

Write to your MP

See more on our anti-whip campaign

Race Horse Death Watch

Animal Aid’s Race Horse Death Watch was launched during the 2007 Cheltenham Festival, after nine horses had been killed racing at the previous years’ event. Its purpose is to expose and record every on-course thoroughbred fatality in Britain. While we record every on-course fatality that comes to our notice, the true figures is considerably higher.

  • See our 2020 infographic on race horse deaths.

Visit Race Horse Death Watch

Ban the Grand National

The Grand National is a deliberately hazardous race. Since 2000, 37 horses have died on the Grand National course and, over the course of the three-day meeting, 65 horses have been killed in that same period.

  • Animal Aid is calling for this punishing, uncivilised event to be banned. Our annual Horse Racing Awareness Week takes place in the seven days leading up to the Grand National meeting in Aintree. Please follow the link below to find out how you can help raise awareness and join our campaign.

Visit our Ban the Grand National campaign page

Aftercare of race horses campaign

Current aftercare of race horses is a disgrace. Every year, around 13,000 foals are born into the British and Irish racing industries, in the owners’ hope to breed the “next big winner”. Many of these horses will never even see a racecourse. Most will not even win a race.What happens to the approx. 7,500 horses who leaving racing each year? There is a shameful lack of information surrounding a huge number of these.

To find out more, click here.

Write to your MP and support George Eustice's call for £12 million to be allocated for race horse welfare

Cheltenham Racecourse

Cheltenham Racecourse is the second most dangerous course in Britain. In 2018, ten horses died there, seven of whom were killed during the four-day Cheltenham Festival. Horses have continued to die there since.

Read about the Cheltenham Festival

Campaign for a new race horse welfare regulator

The British Horseracing Authority (BHA) is currently responsible for race horse welfare – but the number of on-course fatalities is still around 200 a year, and horses continue to be abused with the whip.

In 2018, Animal Aid secured a Parliamentary debate on race horse welfare. The debate came about as the result of more than 105,000 compassionate people signing a government petition calling for the British Horseracing Authority to be stripped of its responsibility for race horse welfare, and instead for that vital job to be awarded to a body of professionals that would hold the industry to account over the shocking rate of race horse deaths and injuries. The racing industry responded by setting up its own welfare body – but because it has so far failed to make any meaningful improvements, Animal Aid continues to campaign for government intervention.

You can help our campaign to lobby the government to establish a fully-independent welfare body by writing to your MP.

Key Reports and Briefings

Animal Aid continues to produce revealing and thoroughly researched reports and Briefings on a wide range of topics related to horse racing. They include the abuse of the whip in racing, breeding of race horses and the safety and welfare problems at specific racecourses.

See our key reports

Horse Racing - Animal Aid (2024)

FAQs

What are the animal welfare issues with horse racing? ›

Racehorses are at risk of harm during races, training and trials with the main types of injuries involving muscle, bones, tendons and ligaments. Serious injuries such as fractures and ruptured ligaments or tendons which cause pain or distress, and cannot be treated should result in immediate euthanasia.

Is horse racing considered animal abuse? ›

Here are just some of the animal welfare concerns with horse racing: Racing exposes horses to significant risk of injury and sometimes, catastrophic injury and death through trauma (e.g. broken neck) or emergency euthanasia. The odds are stacked against horses in the racing industry.

Does PETA protest horse racing? ›

New and Stricter Horse Racing Rules Passed in California

PETA supporters gathered outside Los Angeles County District Attorney Jackie Lacey's office to protest the slow pace of her office's investigation into the deaths of horses at Santa Anita racetrack. Thirty-seven horses have died there in less than a year.

What famous racehorse was sent to slaughter? ›

He entered stud in 1989 and was later sold to a breeding farm in Japan in 1994. Much to the outrage of many horse racing enthusiasts, reports indicate that in 2002, Ferdinand was sent to slaughter in Japan with no fanfare or notice to previous owners.

Why is PETA against horseback riding? ›

Horses are herd animals—in nature, they spend time with other horses in large groups, graze in meadows, play, and travel great distances. They don't want to do the things that humans ask or expect of them, like carrying people on their backs, pulling them around in carriages, and running in races for our entertainment.

How many racehorses are sent to slaughter each year? ›

Two-thirds of horses set to slaughter are quarter horses, and many are castoffs from the rodeo or racing industries. The Thoroughbred-racing industry sends an estimated 10,000 horses to slaughter annually, meaning that half of the 20,000 new foals born each year will eventually be killed for their flesh.

What is the dark side of horse racing? ›

Horse racing also exposes horses to significant risk of injury including sometimes catastrophic injuries, leading to death or euthanasia. Wastage is the term for horses that are no longer racing or it never made it to the track.

How humane is horse racing? ›

Horse racing isn't any good for humans, either. Industry practices put jockeys at risk, as well as the horses they ride; on average, two jockeys die and sixty are paralyzed each year, and the industry is also grappling with higher rates of mental health and illness amongst jockeys than other elite sportspeople.

How does PETA feel about the Kentucky Derby? ›

“As long as horses are dying at Churchill Downs, no one should be attending or betting on the Kentucky Derby,” says PETA Senior Vice President Kathy Guillermo. “PETA is calling for moral distancing from Churchill Downs in protest of the 25 horses—each a thinking, feeling individual—who died there last year.

Is the Kentucky Derby ethical? ›

Multiple Kentucky Derby winners have been dethroned because of their failed post-race drug tests and, worse, many others have died due to injuries that have been ignored.

Are horses whipped during races? ›

In horseracing, in addition to being used for safety, the whip is also used to 'encourage' the horse to run faster, and so maintain or advance their position in the race.

What is horse meat called? ›

Smoked, cured horse meat is widely available as a cold cut under the name hamburgerkött (literally hamburger meat).

What happens to racehorses that don't win? ›

The Solution. The racing industry does not have a retirement plan. This results in thousands of racehorses being sent to knackeries and slaughterhouses where they're killed for dog meat and human consumption.

Who was the horse serial killer? ›

The teenaged Tommy Burns had been working as a groom in 1978 when Ward hired him to work on his farm; Ward eventually arranged for Burns to commit 15 different horse killings.

What are the unethical practices in horse racing? ›

Tongue ties is the widely used and unregulated practice of immobilising a horse's tongue to prevent the horse getting their tongue over the bit during a race and to preventing 'choking' during high intensity exercise.

What are the animal welfare issues with rodeos? ›

Bucking Tradition

Other tools include metal spurs and “bucking straps” that burn the animal's abdomen and groin area and cause him to “buck” and can lead to back and leg injuries. Travel between events is punishing, as well. Animals are often transported over long distances in hot and overcrowded trucks and trailers.

What are the animal welfare issues with greyhound racing? ›

The inherent welfare issues that go hand-in-hand with the commodification of racing dogs are plentiful and devastating to the animals: excessive breeding; destruction of retired dogs; the burden placed on animal rescue organizations; the likelihood of injuries; and inadequate housing, sustenance, affection and ...

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