Pub Statistics 2026
Right then. If there's one thing that defines British culture more than a good moan about the weather, it's the pub. The local. The boozer. The place where friendships are made, deals are done, arguments are settled, and the nation somehow agrees on absolutely nothing while sharing a round.
But the British pub is at a crossroads. On one hand, the market is worth £24 billion, Guinness is having its greatest-ever decade, and younger generations are going to the pub more than their parents did. On the other hand, pubs are closing at a rate of nearly two a day in 2026, the taxman takes £1 in every £3 spent over the bar, and the cost of a round in London would make your eyes water.
We've put together 40 verified pub statistics from primary sources covering industry bodies, government data, pub groups and consumer research, to give you the full picture. From the price of a pint in Dubai to the Guinness revolution to the no/low alcohol boom sweeping through every pub estate in the country, it's all in here.
Pull up a stool. Let's get into it.
Market Size & Pub Numbers
1. The UK pub market is worth £24.1 billion in 2025
Despite everything thrown at it, from rising costs and tax hikes to changing habits, the UK pub market came in at £24.1 billion in 2025, growing 1.9% year-on-year.
Lumina Intelligence's UK Pub & Bar Market Report projects it'll reach £25.7 billion by 2028 at a CAGR of 2.1%. In an economy where margins are being squeezed from every angle, that's a remarkably resilient performance. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
2. The UK has lost 16,150 pubs since 2000, losing more than a third of the total
According to BBPA figures analysed by The Morning Advertiser, there were 60,800 pubs in the UK in 2000. By 2025, that number had dropped to 44,650, a loss of 16,150 pubs or 36% of the total stock.
The rate of closure has varied dramatically: 2017 saw the worst year with 1,950 pubs shutting. In 2025, the rate slowed to 350 net closures, the same as 2024 and a slight improvement on the 500-a-year losses seen from 2021 to 2023. Source: (BBPA / The Morning Advertiser)
3. One pub a day closed permanently in England and Wales in 2025
Tax analysis firm Ryan found that the total number of pubs in England and Wales (including those vacant and being offered to let) fell from 38,989 to 38,623 during 2025.
Every single region recorded a net loss, with the sharpest declines in the East Midlands, the north-west and Yorkshire and the Humber.
Industry experts described the situation as 'drastic', with the data published ahead of expected further business rate pressure in April 2026. Source: (Institute of Licensing / Ryan Tax)
4. Almost two pubs a day shut in Q1 2026, with closures up 26% on last year
2026 has started even harder. BBPA figures for Q1 2026 show 161 pub closures across England, Scotland and Wales in just three months, up 26% on the same period in 2025. That's almost two closures every day, equating to around 2,400 jobs already impacted in the first quarter alone.
The BBPA's chief executive Emma McClarkin called on the government to 'establish a permanent long-term plan' rather than year-by-year sticking plasters. Source: (BBPA / Employment Hero)
5. Managed pub operators now generate over 50% of market revenue from just 25% of sites
Lumina Intelligence's data shows that managed, branded and franchised pub groups now account for over half of total UK pub market revenue, despite representing only about a quarter of all pub outlets.
The managed model is outperforming independents on every metric. Scale and capital investment allow bigger groups to absorb cost shocks, invest in refurbishments and execute premium pricing strategies that smaller operators simply cannot match. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
The Cost of a Pint
6. The average pint across the UK now costs £5.50, up 6% in two years
Finder.com's analysis of pint prices across 56 UK cities puts the average at £5.50 in 2026, up 6% from £5.17 in 2024.
The cheapest pint can be found in Doncaster and Bradford at £3.25, while London remains the most expensive city at an average of £6.75, which is 14% higher than 2023's £5.90 average and more than double the global average of £2.85. Oxford is the second most expensive city at £6.36, followed by Brighton at £6.25. Source: (Finder.com)
7. A pint of Guinness now costs an average of £5.56, up from £5.37 just 12 months earlier
The Morning Advertiser's exclusive pint price survey tracks brand-by-brand pricing across Great Britain. Guinness has climbed from £5.37 to £5.56 over the past year. That's the national average.
In London, a Guinness will set you back £6.45. Diageo confirmed a further 5.2% wholesale price rise from April 2025, with Heineken UK following suit with a 2.7% uplift from February 2026, citing higher employer taxes, energy and packaging costs. Source: (The Morning Advertiser) Source: (The Morning Advertiser)
8. Craft beers Camden Hells and BrewDog Punk IPA are now the most expensive pints on average at £6.34
The Morning Advertiser's Pint Price Survey (April 2025 data) found Camden Hells and BrewDog Punk IPA are joint-highest priced pints across Great Britain, averaging £6.34 per 568ml. T
hree premium lagers tipped over the £6 mark: Peroni (£6.14), Asahi (£6.11) and Birra Moretti (£6.04). The cheapest average pint in the survey was Carlsberg at £4.23. Meanwhile, the Midlands offers the best-value pints at an average of £4.68 across all brands. Source: (The Morning Advertiser)
9. For every £3 spent in a pub, £1 goes straight to the taxman
The BBPA has consistently highlighted that the pub sector is one of the most heavily taxed in the country.
For every three pounds a customer spends in a pub, roughly one pound goes directly to the government in tax, whether that's beer duty, VAT, employer NIC or business rates.
The sector pays out an estimated £12.6 billion in tax per year. Pubs make an average of just 12p profit on every pint sold once taxes and costs are deducted. Source: (BBPA)
The Guinness Phenomenon
10. Guinness is now the UK's number one beer in the on-trade. One in every nine pints poured is a Guinness
According to CGA data cited by Marketing Week, Guinness has become the number one beer in the UK on-trade. One in every nine pints poured in the UK is now a Guinness, up from one in ten the previous year.
Globally, Guinness sales grew 13% in the year ended June 2025 on volume growth of 14%. That's a remarkable figure when AB InBev's volumes fell 2.2% and Molson Coors dropped 6.4% over the same period. Source: (Marketing Week / CGA / Diageo)
11. UK Guinness keg sales were up 20.9% in a single quarter, while overall beer sales fell 0.5%
CNN Business reported that from July to October 2024, overall UK beer sales fell 0.5% according to CGA data. Over exactly the same period, Diageo's UK beer sales increased 23.2%, with Guinness keg sales growing a staggering 20.9%.
Demand was so intense that Diageo put allocation limits on Guinness supplies to ensure stock would last through Christmas, the busiest period for UK pubs. Source: (CNN Business / CGA / Diageo)
12. Guinness consumption among women in Great Britain grew 27% in two years
Diageo CEO Debra Crew revealed on the company's fiscal year-end earnings call that Guinness consumption among women in Great Britain increased 27% between fiscal years 2022 and 2023.
The brand has spent years deliberately broadening its audience beyond the traditional 'rugby lads' demographic, investing heavily in campaigns targeting younger consumers and women, and the numbers show it's working. Source: (Diageo / CNN Business)
13. Guinness 0.0 is now worth almost £50 million and accounts for 20% of all Guinness off-trade sales
The alcohol-free version of Guinness, launched in 2021, has become the UK's most popular alcohol-free beer and is now worth almost £50 million.
It accounts for around 20% of all Guinness sales by value in the off-trade, according to figures released in summer 2025. In Europe, Guinness 0.0 saw net sales double in fiscal year 2024. One Diageo executive reportedly said it would one day outsell its 4.2% ABV equivalent. Source: (The Telegraph / Diageo / NIQ data)
The No and Low Alcohol Revolution
14. 2025 was a record year for no/low alcohol beer: 200 million pints sold
BBPA figures show that 200 million no and low ABV beers were sold in 2025, up nearly 20% on the 170 million poured in 2024. The category now accounts for 2.7% of the UK's total beer market. December alone accounted for 22 million pints.
The BBPA attributed the growth to the on-trade's ability to respond to changing consumer preferences, and warned further growth is being hampered by the UK's restrictive 0.05% ABV threshold for 'alcohol-free', which is far stricter than the 0.5% standard used in most other countries. Source: (BBPA / Beer Guild)
15. 45% of people consumed low/no alcohol drinks in the past 12 months, up from just 22% in 2021
The 2025 Drinkaware Monitor (YouGov survey of 7,256 UK adults, June 2025) found that 45% of respondents had consumed low or no alcohol drinks in the past 12 months.
In 2021, that figure was just 22%. The no/low category has grown 750% in volume since 2013. The IWSR forecasts the total no-alcohol market will grow at a CAGR of 7% between 2024 and 2028. Source: (Drinkaware / BBPA / IWSR)
16. Stonegate's alcohol-free beer sales surged 32% in Q1 2025
Stonegate Group, the UK's biggest pub company, reported a 32% increase in low and no alcohol beer and cider sales in Q1 2025 compared with the same period in 2024, with 271,000 alcohol-free drinks sold across its estate in just three months.
Interestingly, the biggest consumers of low and no alcohol drinks in Stonegate pubs aren't the youngest adults. 25-34-year-olds account for 21% of those sales, versus just 14% from 18-24-year-olds. Source: (Stonegate Group)
17. UK adults are drinking less often than they were in 2018. 14% drink four or more times a week, down from 18%
The Drinkaware Monitor 2025 tracked a clear long-term shift in UK drinking habits. In 2025, 14% of UK adults drink four or more times per week, down from 18% in 2018.
When they do drink, they are also less likely to binge and less likely to exceed the Chief Medical Officers' low-risk guidelines than they were seven years ago. The direction of travel is clear, but pubs are adapting rather than panicking. Source: (Drinkaware)
Who's Going to the Pub and How They're Spending
18. The average spend per pub visit is £24.59, and it's going up
Lumina Intelligence's UK Pub & Bar Market Report (52 weeks ending 08/06/2025) puts the average spend per visit at £24.59, up more than 7% year-on-year.
Consumers may be going to the pub slightly less frequently, but when they do go, they are spending considerably more, driven by premiumisation, higher food spend and a shift towards spirits and cocktails. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
19. Brits visit the pub five times a month on average. Gen Z goes the most
A Premier Line survey of 2,000 UK adults found that Brits visit the pub an average of five times a month. Somewhat against the stereotype of the sober, screen-obsessed Gen Z, it's actually under-30s who visit the most, at six times per month on average, compared with just four times for the over-60s.
Despite this enthusiasm, 67% of respondents said they find pubs expensive, and 46% said the rising cost of a drink has caused them to cut back on their visits. Source: (Premier Line)
20. 68% of Brits see pubs as a British institution
The same Premier Line survey found 68% of respondents consider pubs a British institution, and 35% say pubs are the best place to catch up with friends.
More than half (55%) expressed sadness over the closure of so many pubs and bars, suggesting the emotional attachment to the local is still very much alive, even if wallet pressure is pushing people to visit less often. 32% of under-30s now always opt for non-alcoholic drinks at the pub. Source: (Premier Line)
21. Millennials' share of pub visits grew from 18.2% to 19.7% year-on-year, the biggest gain of any age group
Lumina Intelligence data shows Millennials (aged 25-34) increased their share of UK pub and bar visits from 18.2% to 19.7% year-on-year, the highest gain of any age group.
The reasons are higher disposable income, fewer dependants and a concentration in urban areas where premium pub formats are thriving. Gen Z's occasion share also rose, from 11.2% to 11.8%, suggesting the 'sober generation' stereotype may be overstated. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
22. Beer is still king: ordered on 63% of pub occasions, but spirits and cocktails are gaining fast
Beer remains the dominant choice at 63% of pub and bar drinking occasions, though its share is flat year-on-year. The growth is coming from spirits (+1.4 percentage points) and cocktails (+0.6 percentage points), driven by premiumisation and a willingness to spend more per drink on fewer occasions.
Alcohol-free cocktails are up 27% and alcohol-free beers up 38%, confirming the no/low shift is real and accelerating. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
Tax, Costs and the Threat to Pubs
23. The October 2024 Budget raised employer NIC from 13.8% to 15% while cutting the threshold from £9,100 to £5,000
The October 2024 Autumn Budget delivered a significant blow to the pub sector. Employer NIC contributions rose from 13.8% to 15%, while the secondary threshold was cut from £9,100 to £5,000 from April 2025. For an industry that employs large numbers of part-time, low-wage workers, this was a disproportionate hit.
The BBPA estimated this would lead to 378 pub closures in 2025 and 5,600 direct job losses. Source: (BBPA / Employment Hero)
24. 84% of small hospitality business leaders anticipated having to raise prices or cut hours following the Budget
Employment Hero's March 2026 survey data found that 84% of small business leaders in hospitality anticipated having to raise prices or reduce hours as a direct result of the NIC and Employment Rights Act changes.
The BBPA's position is that the cumulative gap between what has been offered and what the sector needs to arrest closures remains significant. At the current pace, the UK could lose another 500 pubs before the end of 2026. Source: (Employment Hero)
25. The beer and pub sector contributes £34.4 billion to the UK economy and supports over 1 million jobs
BBPA figures from 2024 show the beer and pub industry poured more than £34.4 billion into the UK economy in that year alone and contributed more than £17.4 billion in taxes.
The sector supports over 1 million jobs across Great Britain, spanning farming, brewing, logistics and hospitality, making it one of the most significant employers in the country. Oxford Economics' separate GVA analysis put contributions up from the previous figure of £26.2 billion. Source: (BBPA / Oxford Economics)
26. The UK government announced a £300 million, three-year support package, but the industry says it's not enough
The Chancellor announced a £300 million, three-year support package for pubs including a 15% business rates discount, acknowledged as recognition of pubs' cultural value. However, the 40% retail, hospitality and leisure relief that cushioned bills throughout 2025-26 was discontinued on 31 March 2026.
The BBPA's Emma McClarkin called on government to move beyond sticking plasters, warning that without a permanent, long-term commitment to business rates reform, closures will continue. Source: (Caterer & Licensee / H2 Products analysis)
Global Pint Prices and Pub Culture
27. Dubai is the most expensive place in the world to buy a pint: £10.04
Finder.com's global pint price analysis across 164 cities found Dubai tops the world rankings at £10.04 per pint, followed by Doha, Qatar (£10) and Muscat, Oman (£9.63). London's £6.75 average ranks it 10th globally, more than double the world average of £2.85.
The cheapest pint on the planet is in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where you'll pay just £0.48. The global average has crept up from £2.76 in 2025 to £2.85 in 2026. Source: (Finder.com)
28. More than 10 million pints of Guinness are sold every day around the world
Guinness is one of the most widely distributed beers on the planet, sold in approximately 50 countries. More than 10 million pints are consumed globally every single day.
The brand was founded in 1759 by Arthur Guinness at St James's Gate in Dublin, making it one of the oldest and most enduring beer brands in the world, still producing what is now the UK's number one draught beer more than 265 years later. Source: (The Telegraph / Yahoo)
29. 68% of CAMRA survey respondents say large brewers are making it harder for independent breweries to survive
A CAMRA poll of 2,173 UK adults (conducted by YouGov) found 68% of the public believe large brewers are making it harder for independent breweries to survive. CAMRA's chairman Ash Corbett-Collins described the findings as a wake-up call for politicians and regulators to tackle anti-competitive practices.
The same CAMRA survey found many pub-goers are being priced out of visiting their local, with lower disposable incomes and rising costs combining to reduce visit frequency. Source: (CAMRA / Morning Advertiser)
Pub Food, Tech and the Experience Economy
30. More than 80% of UK pubs now serve food, and food makes up around 40% of total pub revenue
According to BBPA data cited by commercial kitchen platform Oya, more than 80% of UK pubs now serve food, a remarkable shift from the traditional wet-led model that dominated for decades. Food revenue now makes up around 40% of total pub income on average, doubling over the past two decades.
The UK pub food market is valued at approximately £8 billion per year. The Sunday roast remains the most popular dish, accounting for 25% of all pub food sales every week. Source: (BBPA / Oya)
31. Pub like-for-like sales have outperformed restaurants every single month of 2025
CGA by NIQ's hospitality tracker showed that UK pub like-for-like sales outperformed the wider hospitality sector, including restaurants and bars, in every month of 2025.
In September 2025, pub like-for-like sales were 1.9% ahead of the previous year while restaurants were down 0.7%. CGA director Karl Chessell noted pubs are benefiting from consumers trading down amid weak confidence, with beer and cider sales boosted by good summer weather. Source: (CGA by NIQ / Restaurant Online)
32. Loyalty-linked transactions now account for up to 22% of total sales at some major pub operators
Lumina Intelligence's drinks market analysis found that major operators including Greene King, Stonegate and Heartwood are scaling app-based loyalty schemes with personalised rewards and gamified offers.
For some operators, loyalty-linked transactions now represent up to 22% of total sales, a significant shift in how pubs retain customers and drive repeat visits in a market where footfall is increasingly hard-won. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
33. 63% of pub customers say rising costs have caused them to reduce their visits
Mintel's UK Pubs and Bars Market Report 2025 found that 63% of customers have reduced their pub visits due to rising costs, putting the onus on operators to justify the spend.
The response has been a surge in promotions, loyalty programmes, set menus and meal deals. 54% of eat-in diners used a meal deal in 2025, according to Mintel's UK Eating Out Review, and 43% of pub diners chose set menus, reflecting the broader value-seeking shift across the out-of-home eating market. Source: (Mintel)
34. One in four 18-24-year-olds now abstains entirely from alcohol
IBISWorld's UK Pubs and Bars industry analysis (January 2026) flagged that approximately one in four 18-24-year-olds in the UK now abstains entirely from alcohol. It's a generational shift that is forcing pubs to rethink their entire offer.
The response has included expanding mocktail menus, hosting food-led events and building experience-based formats like brunches, quiz nights, competitive socialising and interactive games. Source: (IBISWorld / Drinkaware)
35. UK pub and bar market revenue has grown at a CAGR of 11.3% over the five years to 2025/26
IBISWorld's UK industry data puts the market's compound annual growth rate at 11.3% over the five years to 2025/26, with revenue expected to reach £24.9 billion.
The caveat? Much of that growth reflects post-pandemic recovery and price inflation rather than volume growth in visits or pints consumed. The sector has learned to make more money from fewer customers. Source: (IBISWorld)
36. Pub visit frequency is up 4.3% year-on-year. The pub is recovering
Lumina Intelligence's UK Pub & Bar Market Report found that pubs and bars benefited from an uptick in visit frequency of 4.3% and penetration of 1.3 percentage points year-on-year.
Consumer confidence remains fragile, but the data suggests that when people do feel confident enough to go out, the pub is where they're heading. It's a meaningful signal of resilience in a sector that has faced enormous headwinds. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
37. 26% of Gen Z pub visitors who drink are aged 18-24 and go for draught, but only 14% of low/no purchases come from that group
Stonegate Group's MiXR app data found that while 18-24-year-olds account for 24% of total draught beer sales, they only represent 14% of low and no alcohol sales in Stonegate pubs. It's actually the 25-34-year-old group driving the low/no revolution, accounting for 21% of alcohol-free purchases.
Demand for low and no peaks on Saturdays, with nearly a quarter of all sales between 5pm and 7pm. Source: (Stonegate Group)
38. Alcohol-free cocktails up 27% and alcohol-free beers up 38% in UK pubs
Lumina Intelligence's UK drinks market analysis for 2025 found alcohol-free cocktails grew 27% and alcohol-free beers grew 38% in the on-trade, far outpacing their alcoholic equivalents.
Health-conscious occasions are now described by Lumina as 'no longer niche', driving a rise in early-evening visits and lower-tempo pub occasions. Fruit juices and smoothies gained 1.9 percentage points in pub occasion share, confirming the shift is across drink types, not just beer. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
39. UK alcohol occasions among 18-34s increased 4.2 percentage points year-on-year. The 'sober Gen Z' myth is fading
Despite the headlines about Gen Z being a sober generation, Lumina Intelligence's data shows UK alcohol occasions among 18-34-year-olds actually increased 4.2 percentage points year-on-year, while total alcohol penetration rose 1.1 percentage points, ending what had been a long-term decline.
The picture is more nuanced than the stereotype. Younger drinkers are choosing quality over quantity, premium over volume, and experience over routine. Source: (Lumina Intelligence)
40. Greene King's alcohol-free drink sales are up 36% across its 1,600 managed pubs
Greene King reported total alcohol-free drink sales up 36% across its 1,600 managed pubs over the 12 months to December 2025. Over 70% of those sales were packaged 0.0% beer and cider.
Almost a quarter of managed pubs across the UK now serve at least one alcohol-free beer on draught, up sharply from just 2% in 2019. Source: (BBPA / Beer Guild citing Greene King data)
Wrapping Up
So there you have it. 40 statistics that tell the real story of the British pub in 2026, and it's a complicated one.
The pub is far from dead. The market is growing, people are spending more when they do go out, Guinness is enjoying a revival that nobody saw coming, and a whole generation is rediscovering the local on their own terms, whether that's with a craft pint, a cocktail or a very well-poured 0.0. The no and low alcohol revolution is real, it's accelerating, and far from damaging pub trade, it's bringing in new customers who'd previously felt the pub wasn't for them.
But the pressures are real too. Tax hikes, NIC increases, rising energy bills, business rates headaches, and pubs making just 12p profit on every pint. It's a brutal environment to run a business in. The closure rate slowed slightly in 2025, but Q1 2026 figures suggest the worst may not be over.
Whether your local is a sticky-floored relic of the 80s or a gastropub doing £28 sharing boards and £11 negronis, it's worth popping in more often. Because the stats are clear: when a pub closes, it doesn't come back.
Get the round in.
Sources
1. Lumina Intelligence: UK Pub & Bar Market Report 2025
2. The Morning Advertiser: UK Loses 16,150 Pubs Since 2000 as Closures Slow to 350 in 2025
3. Institute of Licensing: One Pub a Day Closed Permanently in England and Wales in 2025
4. Employment Hero: Why Are UK Pubs Closing in 2026?
5. Lumina Intelligence: UK Pub & Bar Market Report 2025
6. Finder.com: The Average Price of a Pint in the UK and Around the World (2026)
7. The Morning Advertiser: From £2.99 to Over £5: How the Price of a Pint Changed in a Decade
8. The Morning Advertiser: What Is the Average Price of a Pint of Lager in Great Britain?
9. BBPA: Britain Set to See a Pub Close Every Single Day in 2025
10. Marketing Week: Guinness Boosts Appeal Among Women and Younger Drinkers to Fuel Success
11. CNN Business: British Pubs Worried They'll Run Out of Guinness
12. CNN Business: British Pubs Worried They'll Run Out of Guinness
13. Yahoo / The Telegraph: Guinness's Dramatic Rise to the Top, In Numbers
14. Beer Guild: 2025 Is a Record Year for the No and Low Beer Market With 200 Million Pints Sold
15. Drinkaware: Drinkaware Monitor 2025
16. Stonegate Group: Alcohol Free Beer Sales Up by 32% in First Three Months of 2025
17. Drinkaware: Drinkaware Monitor 2025
18. Lumina Intelligence: UK Pub & Bar Market Report 2025
19. Premier Line: The Great Pub Divide: UK Pub Trends in 2025
20. Premier Line: The Great Pub Divide: UK Pub Trends in 2025
21. Lumina Intelligence: UK Pub & Bar Market Report 2025
22. Lumina Intelligence: UK Drinks Market 2025: The Rise of Premium, Mindful and Social Drinking
23. BBPA: Britain Set to See a Pub Close Every Single Day in 2025
24. Employment Hero: Why Are UK Pubs Closing in 2026?
25. BBPA: Pub and Beer Industry Pour Billions into UK Economy
26. H2 Products: Are Pubs Really Closing? What Companies House, Google Trends and FSA Data Actually Show
27. Finder.com: The Average Price of a Pint in the UK and Around the World (2026)
28. Yahoo / The Telegraph: Guinness's Dramatic Rise to the Top, In Numbers
29. The Morning Advertiser: UK Pubgoers Cutting Back on Pub Visits as Cost Pressures Bite
30. Oya: 20 Surprising Statistics Around UK Pub Kitchens
31. Restaurant Online / CGA by NIQ: Pubs Continue to Outpace Restaurants for Sales Growth (Oct 2025)
32. Lumina Intelligence: UK Drinks Market 2025: The Rise of Premium, Mindful and Social Drinking
33. Mintel: UK Pubs and Bars Market Report 2025
34. IBISWorld: Pubs and Bars in the UK Industry Data and Analysis (Jan 2026)
35. IBISWorld: Pubs and Bars in the UK Industry Data and Analysis (Jan 2026)
36. Lumina Intelligence: UK Pub & Bar Market Report 2025
37. Stonegate Group: Alcohol Free Beer Sales Up by 32% in First Three Months of 2025
38. Lumina Intelligence: UK Drinks Market 2025: The Rise of Premium, Mindful and Social Drinking
39. Lumina Intelligence: UK Drinks Market 2025: The Rise of Premium, Mindful and Social Drinking
40. Beer Guild: 2025 Is a Record Year for the No and Low Beer Market With 200 Million Pints Sold
