Thank you for signing!
End The Cruel Rule That Lets Bleeding Horses Suffer For Competition
Final signature count: 14,495
14,495 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
The FEI wants to let bleeding horses keep competing — a shocking betrayal of compassion that puts trophies above lives and threatens to turn equestrian sport into a spectacle of suffering.
The Fédération Équestre Internationale (FEI) was founded to protect horses and ensure fair play. But a proposed new rule threatens both. Under this change, horses with visible blood in their mouth or nose would no longer face immediate elimination. Instead, riders could receive a warning and continue competing if a veterinary delegate declares the horse “fit.”1
This shift would replace a clear welfare safeguard with an administrative loophole. The current “blood rule” exists because bleeding is never trivial. It signals tissue damage and pain. To ignore that is to deny the horse’s suffering. The FEI’s proposal would turn compassion into convenience — and horse welfare into a technicality.2
A Step Backward for Welfare
For decades, elimination for bleeding has upheld the idea that competition must never override the welfare of the horse. This rule is not punitive; it is protective. The proposed change, however, moves in the opposite direction. It weakens accountability for riders and officials while normalizing injury as part of sport. The FEI says its “zero-tolerance stance on abuse remains firm,” but this policy contradicts that claim.2
Under the new rule, two warnings within a year would result in a small fine and a temporary suspension. In practice, this means an injured horse could compete, again and again, before any serious consequence is imposed.3 This is not welfare. It is willful blindness — and it risks turning equestrian sport into something the public no longer trusts.
Ethics, Empathy, and Evidence Ignored
The FEI’s proposal rejects the core principles of the Five Domains of Animal Welfare — nutrition, environment, health, behavior, and mental state. Blood is not “minor.” It is a visible wound that reflects physical harm and distress. Permitting horses to continue under rein pressure after such an injury defies every ethical, veterinary, and moral standard in modern sport.1
This change also sends the wrong message to young riders and fans: that winning matters more than welfare. Over 50,000 people have already signed petitions opposing this rollback, urging the FEI to keep “blood = competition over.”4 National federations in Germany and Denmark have also spoken out, warning that the rule “does not benefit equestrian sport and does not take into account the interests of the horse.”2
Horse Sports Must Not Become Blood Sports
Horses cannot speak, but their bodies tell the truth. Blood is pain. Allowing that pain to be dismissed is an abdication of care and leadership. The FEI’s credibility — and the future of every horse on course — depends on drawing the line at welfare.
Sign now to tell the FEI to halt this unethical rule change and uphold the highest standard of horse welfare. Compassion must come before competition.
The Petition
Recent Signatures
- Jen DelSignore
- Sally Sandine
- Kristin Albers
- Theresa Potenza
- Marcia Hurley
- Anonymous
- Gay Hawkins
- Marcia Tomka
- Laura Bryant
- Marilyn Higgins
- Chrystelle Rondin
- Vicky Hudak
- Martina Colombo
- Tracy Schuermann
- Barbara Cherry
- Sibylle Dadey
- Sue Blackman
- Denise Donovan
- Natasha Soliar
- Michele Halbeisen
- Anonymous
- Christine Hesselbarth
- Laura Gustoson
- Ellie Carin
- Ed McElroy
- carla sieuw
- Sue Shell
- Teresa Mucherino
- Laurence PISANI
- Christian Genitrini
- Kathy Bolton
- Hans Ng
- Susan Civitano
- Klaske Bootsma
- Sharon Matticola
- Lori Stoneback
- Kimberly Sheehan
- Anonymous
- Amy Bernett
- Georgette DeRoo
- Anne Pagliaro
- Anonymous
- Anonymous
- Melissa Firestine
- Theresa Votzmeyer
- Natsal Vega
- Debra Noren
- Tulin Attila
- Anonymous
- Rosemary Hunt
- tina i
- Pam Cassidy
- Anna Ovsienko
- Danielle Durand
- Joan Cummings
- TRACEY COOK
- Pat Strauss
- Carla Stites
- Hanne Bjorklund
- Dominica Kirizopoulos
- Rachel Magnavite
- Christine Rosselli
- Linda Partain
- Lesley Ruddy
- Rachel Magnavite
- Marion Hefner
- Louise Moore
- Antonina Licastri
- Lucille Karczynski
- Kathy Harris
- Mariana Bilic-Nohra
- Doriana Basilici
- Margaret Hope
- Jill Ryan
- Emily Borrows
- Valérie RAYNAUD
- Kerry Jones
- Tanem Torbjørn
- Ildiko Gemes
- Christa LaRocca
- Lynne Byington
- Fabienne Stoudmann
- Jan Keave
- Linda Reilly
- Jane Burgess
- t kosaka
- Christine Frascati
- Sharon Zerkle
- Lana Roske
- karine masone
- Angela Elmore
- Joy Stevens
- Cc Curmo
- Lisa Lovell
- Adriana Chalson
- Rita Deus
- Mary Shiring
- Wendy Horowitz
- Theresa Swarny
- LARA Hembom
