º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

'Thousands of pubs under threat': Publicans make plea for help ahead of Autumn Budget

More than one pub a day is expected to close this year, according to the British Beer and Pub Association

Damian and Miranda Knight have run pubs with St Austell Brewery for 12 years(Image: Handout)

Publicans across the South West are urging the government to ease mounting financial pressures ahead of the Budget, warning the sector is at a "critical tipping point".

Rising costs and increased taxation are threatening the survival of thousands of pubs, according to a number of pub landlords from across the region.

Kevin Georgel, chief executive of St Austell Brewery, which operates 164 pubs across the West of England, says the government "must act" to keep a pint of beer affordable, protect jobs and ensure pubs remain open.

“Our sector contributes tens of billions to the economy, yet pubs are under increasing pressure from unsustainable tax burdens," he said.

“Business rates are the most pressing issue - relief was cut from 75% to 40% at the last Budget, adding thousands of pounds to annual rates bills. We need meaningful reform that works for businesses, not against them."

The warning comes as the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) predicts more than one pub will close every day in 2025 - an estimated 378 closures across England, Wales and Scotland.

Kevin Georgel, chief executive of St Austell Brewery

Damian and Miranda Knight have run pubs with St Austell Brewery for 12 years and are the current publicans of the Cornubia Inn and the Royal Standard Inn in Hayle, Cornwall. Despite bouncing back after Covid, Mr Knight says the current financial strain is "unprecedented".

“The spring budget changes, with business rate relief decreasing and National Insurance increasing, has been extremely tough," he said. "Our sales are up year on year but turning that into profit is the struggle.