Rates relief for pubs in UK

From April, pubs in England will receive a 15% discount on business rates — worth about £1,650 per venue on average — with bills then frozen in real terms for two years. Live‑music venues are included. Helpful? Yes. A cure‑all? Hardly.

First: the on‑trade reality — pub closures

England and Wales fell below 39,000 pubs in 2024; around 412 venues were lost that year, roughly 34 a month. Industry trackers indicate the pace stayed high through 2025 — often summarised as about one pub a day and 200+ closures in H1. When taps disappear, variety shrinks first: fewer lines, less risk‑taking, fewer niche beers. The new relief aims directly at this spiral.

Breweries feel the knock‑on effects

Fewer pubs mean fewer lines for cask and keg — a lifeline for independents. As of 1 Jan 2026, the UK counted 1,578 breweries (1,715 at the start of 2025; 1,815 at the start of 2024). That is a net loss of 237 breweries in 2025 — roughly three a week. Demand for independent beer is there, but costs, financing and debt service squeeze margins. When pubs close, many small breweries lose their primary market.

What London actually announced*

The Treasury’s package totals £80m+ per year, delivering the 15% rates discount from 1 April and a two‑year real‑terms freeze. Ministers also flagged a methods review and looser late‑opening rules around major events. 

British Beer & Pub Association chief executive Emma McClarkin welcomed the move, saying it brings “certainty for tens of thousands of pubs” and a “sigh of relief”. The consumer group CAMRA called the decision “shortsighted”, arguing that temporary relief won’t fix structural pressures. Exchequer Secretary Dan Tomlinson said pubs would save “on average £1,650” under the 15% discount from 1 April, with bills then “frozen in real terms for two further years.”

Last call

Rates relief is a decent head start — a well‑pulled time‑out. Whether it changes the game depends on what happens between cellar and counter, week after week, that remains to be seen.

 

 

Source: The Guardian (27 Jan 2026), “Pubs and live music venues to get support after business rates backlash” 
Photo: @AdobeStock - TenWit

 

 

Comments

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ExploreWithTheElz • 3 days ago
The UK has taxed the people so hard effectively we work 3 days a week out of 5 just to pay tax.....why? Any government is corrupt, imagine a company with an owner, they want to make a profit and get good value for what they pay for. If the owner doesn't care if they make money or not, they buy services and products from those who will benefit them (either contracts with friends to help them or those who will offer favours or gifts to them... And we just accept this. Perhaps we shouldn't. The UK basically tells us everything is bad, driving, drinking, even drinking fizzy sugar soda pop... BUT, if you pay them more through taxes , it's ok....why? Because it's a scam.
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Yawa • 5 days ago
I haven't looked too deep into it, but I saw someone explaining it as "a pint is £5, the Gov made them charge £10 then turned around and gave this relief, so now it's only £8.50, a bargain apparently"
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