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UK’s pub culture faces ‘last orders’ due to rising costs, changing tastes in a post-Covid world
- Close to 400 pubs in England and Wales closed in 2022, continuing a trend that has seen about 15,000 UK establishments shut their doors the last two decades
- Contributing factors include a 2007 ban on smoking indoors, high rates of beer tax and discounted alcohol by supermarkets, in addition to pandemic closures
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They’ve served Roman soldiers, knights and poets and have been a gathering place for communities to enjoy a brew beside a crackling fire for centuries.
Now many of Britain’s watering holes are calling “last orders” for good because of soaring costs and as people adopt healthier, alcohol-free lifestyles.
The British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA), an industry body, said the number of pubs fell from 60,800 in 2000 to 45,800 in 2022.
The trend continued this year as a result of high inflation, energy bills and business rates, which cut into increasingly stretched earnings.
The Altus Group, a commercial real estate analyst which monitors pub closures, says 386 pubs in England and Wales closed in 2022.
Nearly the same number again (383) were demolished or converted into other types of use in the first six months of this year alone.
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