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Reading: UK Pubs Need 825M Extra Pints to Offset Business Rates Hike
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UK Pubs Need 825M Extra Pints to Offset Business Rates Hike

Madisony
Last updated: January 31, 2026 3:15 pm
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UK Pubs Need 825M Extra Pints to Offset Business Rates Hike
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Independent pubs across the UK face a significant challenge from the recent business rates increase announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves. New analysis reveals that these establishments will need to sell more than 825 million additional pints annually to offset the costs. With an average profit of just 13 pence per pint, each independent pub in England and Wales must sell approximately 43,969 extra pints to cover the rise.

Contents
Industry Reaction to the Rates DiscountPolitical Critique and Job ImpactVoices from the Hospitality FrontlineGovernment’s Response and Support Measures

Industry Reaction to the Rates Discount

Pub owners have ed disappointment over the government’s support package, which includes a 15% discount on business rates for pubs and music venues starting in April. Many describe this measure as insufficient to address the broader financial pressures. Concerns extend to the restaurant sector, where the rates surge threatens job losses. The average increase over the parliamentary term is projected at £13,561, equivalent to the earnings of an 18- to 20-year-old working three eight-hour shifts per week at the minimum wage.

Political Critique and Job Impact

Shadow Chancellor Sir Mel Stride highlighted the policy’s effects during a visit to the Jobber’s Rest pub in Upminster, London, where he met with hospitality industry representatives. “Rachel Reeves’s business rates rise is yet another tax on jobs,” Stride stated. He criticized the Labour government’s approach, noting that it promised to reform business rates but instead imposes burdens that harm entry-level employment and vital high street businesses.

Stride pointed to a loss of about 90,000 jobs in retail, hospitality, and leisure sectors under the current administration. “It hasn’t happened by accident – it’s happened because of the government’s choices,” he said. He warned of broader consequences, including weakened communities and fragmented high streets if pubs, restaurants, and shops continue to close. “We need to be building up our high streets, not pushing them down,” Stride emphasized.

The shadow chancellor linked the hospitality sector’s role to addressing youth unemployment, with around 900,000 young people currently not in employment, education, or training. He called on the chancellor to reduce the welfare bill by encouraging people into work and redirecting funds to ease taxes on pubs. Local business owners shared stories of reduced Christmas trade due to cost-of-living pressures, prompting Stride to advocate for lowering energy costs by eliminating certain carbon taxes and subsidies.

Voices from the Hospitality Frontline

Julia Lopez, local MP and Shadow Science Secretary, joined Stride at the pub and argued that the 15% discount fails to tackle fundamental challenges. “It’s not enough to change the pressures that are facing these businesses,” she said. Lopez praised the dedication of pub and restaurant operators: “They’re employing people, they’re taking risks, they’re trying to make some money, they’re paying their taxes and they’re being crushed.”

Jack Sandhu, 71, owner of the Chequers pub in Hornchurch, east London, reflected on shifting social habits. “Back in the old days, the first thing you did when you finish work was go down the pub. Now you can’t find a pub,” he noted. Rising costs, including business rates, television sports subscriptions, and energy prices, are overwhelming landlords.

In the restaurant sector, Honey Uppal, 44, who co-runs the Tandoori Lounge in Hornchurch with her husband Sukh, 46, ed survival fears upon learning of the rates increase. “How are we going to survive?” she recalled thinking. The cost-of-living crisis has cut dining-out frequency from weekly to monthly, leading to three fewer staff members. Uppal warned that without intervention, few independent eateries will remain.

Alison Taffs, 53, co-owner of the award-winning Hopp Inn in Hornchurch, anticipates her rates bill jumping from £2,700 to £6,500 despite the discount. Additional pressures from minimum wage hikes, alcohol duties, and National Insurance compound the issue. “If she wants growth, growth has to start with small independent businesses on local high streets,” Taffs urged. She highlighted the local economic contributions: “We pay local council tax, we live locally, we spend all our money locally, we employ locally… We don’t take out, we put in.”

At the Jobber’s Rest, Richard Ferrier, 40, chief executive of Heartwood Inns, projects a rates rise from £20,000 to nearly £44,000 even after the discount. “There’s just got to be something bigger and bolder around hospitality in general,” he pressed. Ferrier voiced sector-wide frustration over unfulfilled promises of business rates reform in the Labour manifesto, amid mounting costs. He positioned hospitality as key to employing young people outside education or training but described the industry as currently “apoplectic.”

Government’s Response and Support Measures

A government spokesperson outlined efforts to support the sector, including a £4.3 billion budget package that caps major bill increases, preventing rises for over half of business properties. The Plan for Small Business aims to equip small and medium enterprises with necessary tools and support. Later this year, a new High Streets Strategy will further bolster local economies.

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