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Eat Out to Help Out boosts visitors to seaside towns but bigger cities struggle as workers stay home

Some areas of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ have seen a big improvement in visitor numbers while others have failed to see much uplift

People enjoy the hot weather on Bournemouth beach in Dorset earlier this month(Image: PA)

Seaside towns are benefiting the most from the Government’s Eat Out to Help Out scheme, new research from a think tank has found.

Bournemouth saw the biggest boost to visitor numbers on Monday to Wednesday evenings in early August, according to the Centre for Cities High Street Recovery Tracker.

Footfall in the coastal town rose 23 percentage points - the most of any city or town in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Southend ranked second on the list, rising 22 percentage points, while Blackpool also benefited, with an increase of 18.

But the tracker, which used mobile phone data, found the scheme had been less effective in large cities, such as London and Manchester.

In the capital, the number of city centre visitors on Eat Out to Help Out nights was just three percentage points higher than the same nights in late July – one of the lowest increases in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

According to Centre for Cities, a reduction in office workers in city centres could be to blame.

The think tank found the number of workers heading back to the office had increased in fewer than half of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest city and town centres.