Number of pubs ‘vanishing’ up by 50% in last 3 months
During the three months to the end of September 2022, analysis of government property tax records, reveals that 150 pubs were either demolished or converted into other types of use such as homes and offices

The number of pubs that have vanished from the communities that they once served has rocketed by 50% in the last three months, according to real estate adviser Altus Group.
It warned that 50 pubs a month are now disappearing from communities across England and Wales.
During the three months to the end of September 2022, analysis of government property tax records, reveals that 150 pubs were either demolished or converted into other types of use such as homes and offices. Wales and the North West lost the greatest number of pubs.
That number is up 50% on the 200 pubs which ‘vanished’ and were lost for good during the first six months of 2022.
The total number of pubs, including those vacant and being offered to let, fell below 40,000 for the first time to 39,973 at the end of June compared with 40,173 at the end of the 2021 calendar year according to Altus Group’s annual business rates review released today.
Until the end of March next year, pubs receive a 50% discount on their business rates bills worth on average £9,563 per pub although that support is capped at £110,000 per business and is due to end on 1st April 2023.
Wetherspoons has already warned that they are facing “a momentous challenge” to persuade pub goers back into its bars after they got used to drinking cheap supermarket beer during the pandemic.
Robert Hayton, UK president at Altus Group, said: “It beggars belief that a self-proclaimed low tax Government could allow pubs to lose their business rates discount next April as well as seeing any benefit from next year’s revaluation potentially wiped out by inflation.”