PUBS will be allowed to host more gigs and stay open all night in a new bid to boost growth.
Sir Keir Starmer today vowed to hack away at red tape that slashes profits and sucks the fun out of going out.
GettyPubs will be allowed to host more gigs and stay open all night in a new bid to boost growth[/caption]
For years, stuffy rules have made it harder for locals to serve food outdoors, host live music, or even keep the doors open late.
Some historic venues have even been forced to shut after noise complaints or because of outdated advertising laws.
The shake-up could spark a boom in street food, live acts and easier licensing for pubs simply trying to give punters a good night.
Plans to slash the bureaucracy will go out to a four-week consultation, with punters, landlords and communities all invited to have their say.
On a trade visit to Mumbai, the PM said: “Pubs and bars are the beating heart of our communities.
“We’re backing them to thrive.
“This review is about cutting red tape, boosting footfall, and making it easier for venues to put on the kind of events that bring people together.
“When our locals do well, our economy does too.”
Nick Mackenzie, co-chair of the Licensing Taskforce and CEO at Greene King, said: “Pubs are faced with continued rising costs, placing them under enormous pressure.
“The Government must continue to back the sector, including critical reforms on business rates which would unlock opportunities for pubs to invest and help drive economic growth.”
It comes as more than 2,000 pubs – and the equivalent of 12,000 jobs – could vanish next year unless Chancellor Rachel Reeves cuts one of the industry’s biggest costs, the British Beer and Pub Association has warned.
The BBPA said the sector is heading into a “perfect storm” in 2026, driven by the planned withdrawal of business rates relief and a fresh revaluation of pub properties — both sending bills soaring.
New figures from the Centre for Economics and Business Research, commissioned by the BBPA, show which regions in England face the worst hit.
The South East tops the list, with 417 pubs at risk, followed by the North West where 328 could shut, and the South West losing up to 309 next year.
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