A pub a day to close this year, industry body warns as it calls for cut to tax burden

An industry body has warned that the equivalent of more than one pub a day is set to close across Great Britain this year.

A pub a day to close this year, industry body warns as it calls for cut to tax burden

According to the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA), an estimated 378 venues will shut down across England, Wales and Scotland.

This would amount to more than 5,600 direct job losses, the industry body warns. It has called for a reduction in the cumulative tax and regulatory burden for the hospitality sector - including cutting business rates and beer duty.

The body - representing members that brew 90% of British beer and own more than 20,000 pubs - said such measures would slow the rate at which bars are closing.

BBPA chief executive Emma McClarkin said that while pubs are trading well, "most of the money that goes into the till goes straight back out in bills and taxes".

"For many, it's impossible to make a profit, which all too often leads to pubs turning off the lights for the last time," she said.

"When a pub closes, it puts people out of a job, deprives communities of their heart and soul, and hurts the local economy."

She urged the government to "proceed with meaningful business rates reform, mitigate these eye-watering new employment and EPR (extended producer responsibility) costs, and cut beer duty".

"We're not asking for special treatment, we just want the sector's rich potential unleashed," she added.

The government has said it plans to reform the current business rates system, saying in March that an interim report on the measure would be published this summer.

From April, relief on property tax - that came in following the COVID-19 pandemic - was cut from 75% to 40%, leading to higher bills for hospitality, retail and leisure businesses.

The rate of employer National Insurance Contributions also rose from 13.8% to 15% that month, and the wage threshold was lowered from £9,100 to £5,000, under measures announced by Rachel Reeves in the October budget.

-SKY NEWS