Eight pubs a week have โvanishedโ for goodย from the communities they once served during the first half of 2025 โ the latest blow in a crisis that is reshaping Britainโs social and cultural fabric, according to analysis by global tax firm Ryan.
New figures show the total number of pubs in England and Wales โ including those vacant and to let โ has plunged to just 38,780 by the end of June 2025, down 209 in six months and a staggering 2,283 lost forever in the past five and a half years.
Pubsย which have โvanishedโ from the communities that they once served have either been demolished and/or converted into other typesย ofย use such as homes,ย offices or even day nurseries.

Alex Probyn, Practice Leader of Property Tax (Europe and Asia-Pacific) at Ryan, warned that the squeeze on the pub trade is intensifying.
Probyn said, โSlashing business rates relief for pubs from 75% to 40% this year has landed the sector with an extra ยฃ215 million in tax bills. For a small pub, thatโs a leap in the average bill from ยฃ3,938 to ยฃ9,451 โ a 140% increase.โ
โThe combination of soaring business rates, higher national insurance contributions, the rising national minimum wage and packaging taxes are all quietly draining profits until staying open becomes impossible. When that happens, developers are quick to snap up the plots for more lucrative uses.โ Probyn added.
Michael Kill, CEO of the Night Time Industries Association, said:
โThe scale of pub closures we are witnessing is devastating for communities across the country. Eight pubs a week โ more than 200 in just six months โ are disappearing, and this is not only a blow to local economies but to the social fabric of villages, towns and cities. These are places where people come together, where communities are built and memories made โ once they are gone, they are gone forever.
It is particularly alarming to see pubs demolished or converted to other uses at such speed. This isnโt just about temporary closures โ these venues are being permanently erased, and with them the chance of revival. The sector is being besieged on all sides, from rising taxes and labour costs to planning challenges that are fundamentally weakening the foundations of hospitality and the night time economy.
It is devastating to see the pace of losses ramping up. The Government must pay attention and act decisively. Without urgent, supportive measures in the autumn budget โ particularly on tax and planning protections โ we risk losing even more of these vital institutions that sit at the heart of our culture and heritage.โ
For centuries, the local pub has been a cornerstone of British life โ a meeting place, community hub, and source of local employment. But the latest figures show that the rate of decline remains relentless with hundreds more set to disappear.
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