Thursday, 5 February 2026

UK Pub ownership 1974 - 2024

A Home Ales Bendigo Strong Ale label featuring a bare-knuckled boxer and the date 1811.
I spent yesterday afternoon scanning the BBPA Statistical Handbook 2025. Providing me with lots of fresh, juicy numbers. With which I'll be boring you over the coming days.

Kicking off with pub ownership. Which has been transformed since I started drinking. When the vast majority of pubs were owned by breweries.

I was going to say that it's a shame the numbers don't go back a little further. Then realised I did have some for the 1970s. Which confirm what I suspected: that brewery ownership of pubs peaked in the 1970s.

You can see that from 72% in 1974, brewery ownership fell to just 17% in 2024. While pubcos, which peaked with owning 55% of pubs in 2003, subsequently also saw it share fall, down to 33% in 2024. Which means the "independents", i.e. free houses, have increased from 28% to 50% between 1974 and 2024.

Though I'd take those independent figures with a pinch of salt. In the 1970s, quite a lot of "free houses" were effectively tied to brewers by loan ties or other agreements. Scottish & Newcastle, in particular, were keen on this sort of tie. Which, in Scotland, was a commoner sort of arrangement than outright ownership. 

Not sure how common alternative ties are currently. But I doubt all of those "independent" outlets are really free to buy beer from any brewery they fancy.

I sort of miss the days when every brewer's estate had its own particular livery and character. Unlike those of large pubcos. Though it wasn't quite so much fun when one brewer owned almost all the pubs. As was the case in my hometown of Newark. 

UK Pub ownership 1974 - 2024
Year brewery owned pubco Independent Total
  no. % no. % no. % no.
1974 52,131 72.00% 0 0.00% 20,273 28.00% 72,404
1980 49,000 71.01% 0 0.00% 20,000 28.99% 69,000
1990 43,500 68.50% 0 0.00% 20,000 31.50% 63,500
1991 29,500 47.43% 12,700 20.42% 20,000 32.15% 62,200
1992 25,700 41.72% 15,900 25.81% 20,000 32.47% 61,600
1993 26,200 42.95% 14,800 24.26% 20,000 32.79% 61,000
1994 26,000 42.83% 14,700 24.22% 20,000 32.95% 60,700
1995 22,200 36.39% 18,800 30.82% 20,000 32.79% 61,000
1996 22,300 36.68% 18,500 30.43% 20,000 32.89% 60,800
1997 21,900 36.14% 18,900 31.19% 19,800 32.67% 60,600
1998 19,700 32.30% 21,700 35.57% 19,600 32.13% 61,000
1999 20,400 33.17% 21,700 35.28% 19,400 31.54% 61,500
2000 11,200 18.42% 30,400 50.00% 19,200 31.58% 60,800
2001 10,100 16.64% 31,600 52.06% 19,000 31.30% 60,700
2002 9,800 16.31% 31,500 52.41% 18,800 31.28% 60,100
2003 8,300 13.97% 32,500 54.71% 18,600 31.31% 59,400
2004 8,900 15.08% 31,700 53.73% 18,400 31.19% 59,000
2005 9,400 16.04% 31,000 52.90% 18,200 31.06% 58,600
2006 9,400 16.15% 30,400 52.23% 18,400 31.62% 58,200
2007 9,400 16.35% 30,000 52.17% 18,100 31.48% 57,500
2008 9,100 15.99% 28,900 50.79% 18,900 33.22% 56,900
2009 8,900 15.92% 28,400 50.81% 18,600 33.27% 55,900
2010 8,700 15.70% 24,200 43.68% 22,500 40.61% 55,400
2011 8,500 15.54% 22,800 41.68% 23,400 42.78% 54,700
2012 9,300 17.29% 19,800 36.80% 24,700 45.91% 53,800
2013 9,300 17.71% 19,000 36.19% 24,200 46.10% 52,500
2014 9,800 18.88% 17,500 33.72% 24,600 47.40% 51,900
2015 9,400 18.50% 16,900 33.27% 24,500 48.23% 50,800
2016 9,400 18.69% 16,900 33.60% 24,000 47.71% 50,300
2017 11,000 22.75% 14,700 30.40% 22,650 46.85% 48,350
2018 10,600 22.27% 14,200 29.83% 22,800 47.90% 47,600
2019 9,900 20.97% 13,900 29.45% 23,400 49.58% 47,200
2020 8,100 17.31% 15,600 33.33% 23,100 49.36% 46,800
2021 8,100 17.48% 15,300 33.01% 22,950 49.51% 46,350
2022 7,950 17.34% 15,250 33.26% 22,650 49.40% 45,850
2023 7,750 17.09% 14,950 32.97% 22,650 49.94% 45,350
2024 7,750 17.22% 14,700 32.67% 22,550 50.11% 45,000
Sources:
BBPA Statistical Handbook 2025, page 69.
“The Brewing Industry, a Guide to Historical Records” by Lesley Hammons & Alison Turton.

 

1 comment:

Matt said...

"But I doubt all of those "independent" outlets are really free to buy beer from any brewery they fancy."

Wetherspoons pubs are a good example of that. The Free House sign on them means that they aren't tied to a national or regional brewery, but their area managers do deals with smaller local breweries and then produce lists of the beers that licensees can order from them.