THE latest details of Malcolm Offord's multimillion pound property empire have been revealed, with records showing he owns homes in Cape Town and the Isle of Wight.
Reform UK's Scottish leader boasted to voters in the run-up to the election that he owned six houses, five cars and six boats.
In his register of interests published this week, details of five of those properties have been revealed.
The record shows Offord owns a flat on the Isle of Wight with a market value of between £1.2 million and £1.3m and a house in the South African city of Cape Town which is worth up to £1m.
He rents out the Cape Town house and usually receives an annual income from this of between £25,000 and £30,000 a year. However, the register states that since the end of March the property has been vacant.
Elsewhere, Offord owns a house in Argyll and Bute with a market value of between £1.5m and £1.6m and a flat in Kensington and Chelsea worth between £1.7m and £1.8m.
The register also shows he has a flat in Inverclyde worth between £100,000 and £200,000.
A row erupted during a debate in the run-up to the Scottish election when the former Conservative Lord brought up his £45 million paid in tax over his 40-year career, before listing his extensive material wealth, citing his six homes, five cars and six boats.
In an attempt to paint the Scottish Greens as anti-success and anti-business, Offord asked their co-leader Ross Greer: "Mr Greer, in your Scotland, do you want more people like me, or fewer people like me?"
After laughter from another panellist, Greer immediately responded: "Fewer people like you."
The MSP told the former Scotland Office minister and Tory donor: "I'm glad you've finally admitted how many homes that you have, Lord Offord.
"I think it's worth at this point in the debate pointing out that there are three times as many holiday homes and empty properties in this country as there are homeless children. You don't need six homes, you don't even need two homes, everybody just needs a home to live in.
"Surely if we're to tackle the housing crisis, the super rich elite individuals like you should be giving up some of those homes so that people who desperately need a roof over their head can actually have somewhere to live."
Previously, records showed Offord owned a flat in the Inverleith area of Edinburgh, near the city’s botanic gardens, but there are no details of this on his current register.