Captain Sir Tom Moore’s disgraced daughter and son-in-law took twice as much out of their business – as the company fell £117,000 into the red, according to the company’s accounts.
Hannah Ingram-Moore, 54, and her husband Colin, 68, took home £59,323 from Maytrix Group Limited in 2024, according to Companies House, a stark increase from the £30,523 they were due in 2023. It is not known if the money has yet been paid out.
In the same time period the management consultancy company’s net assets went from £5,385 to a negative figure of £117,880.
Mr and Mrs Ingram-Moore have been embroiled in scandal since Covid hero Captain Tom stole the hearts of the nation when he walked 100 laps of his garden to raise money for the NHS before marking his 100th birthday in 2020.
Almost £39million was raised for NHS charities and he was knighted by the Queen in July 2020. Later that year his memoir, Tomorrow Will Be A Good Day was published. He wrote in the prologue that it was ‘a chance to raise even more money for the charitable foundation now established in my name.’
But following his death in 2021 the couple were condemned when the charity watchdog uncovered ‘repeated failures of governance and integrity’, and found they had pocketed more than £1million in his name from links to the Captain Tom Foundation.
The couple even put charity money into building an illegal spa in their garden, which was later ordered to be demolished. In January, they erased the walking veteran’s name from the charity set up in his honour.

Hannah Ingram-Moore, 54, and her husband Colin, 68, took home £59,323 from Maytrix Group Limited in 2024, according to Companies House, a stark increase from the £30,523 they were due in 2023. It is not known if the money has yet been paid out

In the same time period the management consultancy company’s net assets went from £5,385 to a negative figure of £117,880. Pictured: Hannah Ingram-Moore and her husband Colin Ingram-Moore

The couple took home £59,323 from Maytrix Group Limited in 2024, a stark increase from the £30,523 they were due in 2023
And they have faced issues with money ever since – with the price of their home in picturesque Bedfordshire, where Captain Tom achieved his feat, now having been slashed three times from £2.25m to £1.95m as they desperately try and sell it.
In the last year, Mrs Ingram-Moore released her book – Grief: Public Face Private Loss – but was reported to have sold only one copy a day.
Companies House documents show the amounts owed by the Ingram-Moores to creditors increased by more than £80,000 in one year for Maytrix Group Ltd.
In the same time the money they held in fixed assets plummeted by more than £60,000 and the cash owed by debtors and held at bank and in hand only increased by less than £20,000.
The business, which features the couple as its sole directors, has also cut down its employees in the time period from five to two.
Maytrix Group claimed up to £100,000 in furlough money over a period of 10 months, Government documents detailing furlough bailouts showed last year.
Meanwhile, the company took £47,500 in Covid loans, despite making bumper profits during the pandemic.
Ms Ingram-Moore was also paid ‘thousands of pounds’ through her family company for appearances linked to her late father’s charity, it was revealed last August.

Captain Tom Moore died in February 2021 aged 100. He rose to fame during the pandemic, raising millions for NHS charities by walking laps of his garden in lockdown

The Ingram-Moores sparked fury when in August 2021 they used the charity’s name to apply for planning permission for an indoor swimming pool building in the grounds of the family’s Grade II-listed home (pictured)

Hannah Ingram-Moore, who owns consultancy firm Maytrix Group Ltd with her husband, Colin
She reportedly attended and judged awards ceremonies in 2021 and 2022 as interim chief executive of the Captain Tom Foundation, but had payments for the appearances made to Maytrix Group.
The BBC claimed she received thousands of pounds on behalf of Maytrix for attending the Virgin Media O2 Captain Tom Foundation Connector Awards – despite promotional videos suggesting she was representing the charity.
The event was named after the charity and had the charity logo on its award plaques.
She is thought to have been on a salary of £85,000 as the charity’s interim chief executive at the time.
The Captain Tom Moore Foundations accounts also showed that the firm made a large profit from expenses it charged the charity.
Maytrix Group was given back £37,942 in reimbursements ‘in respect of website costs (£5,030), office rental (£4,500), phone costs (£656) and third-party consultancy costs (£27,205)’, according to the foundation’s accounts.
A critical report published by the Charity Commission in November last year found that the Ingram-Moores benefited ‘significantly’ through their association with the high-profile Captain Tom Foundation and were guilty of ‘serious and repeated’ instances of misconduct, mismanagement and failures of integrity – among them the book deal.
The public had been ‘misled’, said the damning report, when buying items they thought would benefit the Captain Tom Foundation, which was set up in May 2020 to carry on raising money for charity after the success of his sponsored walk.

The home of Mrs Ingram-Moore and her husband (left) next to their unauthorised home spa (right) in their garden, which has been demolished after a planning row
Questions were first raised in February 2022 when it was reported that £240,000 of the charity’s £400,000 expenditure went on fundraising and admin costs and £50,000 of ‘reimbursed expenditure’ was paid to companies controlled by the Ingram-Moores.
The Charity Commission was told that the £1.47 million book advance was paid to Club Nook, the private company set up by the couple in April 2020. Only £18,000 – £1 a copy from sales of the first book – went to the charity.
Accounts for Club Nook filed with Companies House showed that their financial fortunes had also collapsed. It has net current assets of just £149. The previous year this figure stood at £336,300.
Meanwhile, in accounts to April 2024, the company owes creditors £67,000. Its liabilities are recorded as standing at £19,246 net, where in the year to April 2023 they stood at £106,104 in the black.
In 2022, she and her husband refused a request by the Charity Commission to ‘honour the commitment’ made by Captain Tom in his foreword. They were twice asked to ‘rectify matters by making a donation to the charity’ but declined both times.
The Commission produced a 30 page report said that Mrs Ingram Moore had been ‘disingenuous’ in her denials of personal benefit. She was paid £85,000 a year as CEO of the charity before stepping down.
The Ingram-Moores released a statement accusing the charity watchdog of a ‘predetermined agenda’ and of ‘unfairly tarnishing’ their name.
The family further sparked fury when in August 2021 they used the charity’s name to apply for planning permission for an indoor swimming pool building in the grounds of the family’s Grade II-listed home.

Hannah Ingram-Moore pictured with her late father Captain Tom Moore in the garden of his home near Milton Keynes in April 2020
Initially approved by Central Bedfordshire council, largely because of its supposed charitable purposes, the family went on to build a larger structure, containing a pool, spa, kitchen and toilets.
They removed references to Captain Tom in a retrospective application for the changed structure, later telling the Charity Commission inquiry that its original inclusion was ‘an error’ and that they were both distracted because they were ‘busy undertaking global media work’.
They were later ordered to remove the complex, which was demolished in February 2023.
They spent several days removing the roof tiles one at a time and have been spotted taking gym equipment and other items out of the building.
A gaping hole was left in the ground of the spa complex over the weekend after a crane removed the spa swimming pool.
The former chief executive of the Captain Tom Foundation has said he was ‘gobsmacked’ by what he discovered at the charity.
Jack Gilbert has told of what he believed to be questionable practices within the foundation and said Captain Tom’s daughter was motivated by a ‘level of self-interest’.
Mr Gilbert took over as chief executive from Mrs Ingram-Moore and ran the charity for five months until the watchdog investigation into the charity caused it to become inactive.

Ms Ingram-Moore and her husband have been embroiled in scandal since it was revealed they put charity money into an illegal spa in their garden, which was later ordered to be demolished
He told the BBC: ‘When I came in, I must admit, I was gobsmacked. I was shocked at the number of systems that just did not accord with best practice.
‘One of my first exercises was, of course, to get trusted charity status for the foundation, which meant going through a whole range of different hurdles.
‘And the fact was that although we had done many of them, there were lots of key practices that simply were not in place.’
Also among those criticising the Ingram-Moores was former Met detective Mick Neville, who said their behaviour ‘strikes me as greedy and wicked’.
Meanwhile, former Liberal Democrat MP Norman Baker told MailOnline: ‘Captain Tom won the hearts of the nation with his selfless activity at his age, and generated much admiration.
‘For his family to now be accused of misappropriating funds is not only tacky in the extreme but a betrayal of everything Captain Tom stood for.’
Hannah-Ingram Moore has been contacted by MailOnline for comment.