It comes after Devon and Cornwall Police made a legal bid to seize the money from the brothers and a third person.
www.bbc.co.uk
Police can seize more than £2m from Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan after they failed to pay tax on £21m of revenue from their online businesses, a court has ruled.
Devon and Cornwall Police had sought to seize the funds - held in seven frozen bank accounts - from the brothers and a third person, referred to as J.
The chief magistrate at Westminster Magistrates' Court said what appeared to be a 'complex financial matrix' was actually a 'straightforward cheat of the revenue'.
Andrew Tate said the ruling "is not justice", calling it a "co-ordinated attack".
The court previously heard the brothers had paid just under $12m into an account in J's name.
They had also opened a second account in her name, even thought she had had no role in their online businesses, which include the War Room, Hustlers' University, Cobra Tate and OnlyFans.
Part of the held in J's name was in the form of a cryptocurrency.
Devon and Cornwall Police's lawyers told the court that Andrew Tate had publicly declared he had not paid tax in the UK, and that his approach had been to 'ignore, ignore, ignore because in the end they go away'.
Ruling in the police force's favour, Judge Paul Goldspring
said the brothers had given the court no evidence relating to tax payments, but had insisted through their lawyers that the movement of the cash had been legitimate business activity.
The force can seize £2,683,345 in total, including cryptocurrency.