Friday, 10 July 2026
Equine welfare and the ethical care and use of horses are at the heart of British Equestrian (BEF) and our work. We constantly seek to ensure that the needs of our horses are at the forefront of decision-making and without compromise to their health, safety or wellbeing. Reflecting our commitment to continuous improvement and evolving equine welfare and ethics expectations, the federation and its member bodies have intensified efforts to raise standards, strengthen compliance and drive meaningful change.
Ahead of World Horse Day on 11 July, the United Nations-backed celebration of the vital role horses play in society, British Equestrian is proud to provide further details of the Equine Welfare Action Plan 2026–2028 – a clear roadmap for continuous progress within the federation over the current four-year Olympic cycle and beyond.
As the national federation, British Equestrian unites 19 member organisations under a shared commitment to responsible equine guardianship. Guided by the Charter for the Horse (introduced in 2022), alongside a comprehensive and enhanced rulebook and Equine Ethics and Welfare Policy (below) released last year, the federation provides a framework which supports member bodies to deliver leisure, sporting and educational activities under the governance of their own rules, codes and policies.
Equine Ethics and Welfare Policy
British Equestrian is committed to:
To help deliver these goals, British Equestrian created the Equine Welfare and Ethics Advisory Group (EWEAG) in 2022, independently chaired by Professor Madeleine Campbell. This was followed by the Equine Welfare Steering Group (EWSG) in 2024, led by the BEF Chair Fields Wicker-Miurin OBE FKC. The EWSG drives changes in policy, rules, coaching and compliance through specialist taskforces in regulation, education and communications. The group comprises leaders from member bodies, veterinary experts, elite equestrian athletes and BEF staff.
These groups are in addition to the existing specialist committees that continue to operate across equine science, horse health and anti-doping.
This action plan is being continuously reviewed, ensuring progress remains measurable and aligned with emerging challenges and opportunities. The work is underpinned by sport and activity-specific action plans developed by individual member bodies to ensure there is a concerted effort and coordinated approach across the federation.
Fields Wicker-Miurin OBE FKC, Chair of British Equestrian, said: “The horse must always come first. There can be no compromise on their health, safety or wellbeing. We have a responsibility - as regulators, educators and, most importantly, as people who love horses - to deliver real, tangible change and to hold ourselves and others to the highest standards.
“Increased scrutiny offers an opportunity to demonstrate what good welfare looks like, to be transparent in our actions and to celebrate those who dedicate their lives to delivering a positive environment for horses. We have made good progress, but there is always potential for improvement. We keep learning, as science and evidence reveals new insights about horse welfare and behaviour, and we will continue to evolve in response to these developments. Only by being humble and recognising there is collectively more to do will we be able to build a sustainable, trusted future for equestrianism.
“Our advocacy for horses never stops. Acting has their guardians, we will continue to champion their value to society and never waver in our commitment to put welfare at the forefront of every activity across our community through knowledge, education and learning,” she concluded.
British Equestrian has expanded the ethics and welfare section of their website and added a reporting hub to raise safeguarding, welfare, anti-doping or integrity concerns in complete confidence, which is accessible from any web page. For member body-specific equine welfare policies, rules, initiatives and frameworks, please visit their respective websites.