Sunak unveils overhaul of alcohol duty and tax cuts on some drinks

Budget: drinks to be taxed in line with alcohol content, as part of ‘radical simplification’ of system

Taxes on draught beer and prosecco will be slashed after the chancellor announced sweeping changes to alcohol duty that reward lower-strength drinks.

Announcing the move, Rishi Sunak, who is teetotal, said the UK’s 380 year old system of alcohol duty was “outdated, complex and full of historical anomalies”.

Sunak’s five-point plan, which takes effect in 2023, will simplify the tax brackets at an overall cost to the Treasury of £555m by 2027. The plans will cut the cost of a range of drinks but increase the duty levied on wine with alcohol content above 11%, such as high-strength ciders and fortified like port and Buckfast.

Interactive

The chancellor said the plans represented the biggest overhaul of alcohol duty for 140 years and claimed the changes had been made possible by the UK’s exit from the EU.

Share prices in pub companies jumped after the announcement, with JD Wetherspoon gaining 5.3, Mitchells & Butlers5.7% and City Pub Group 1.2%.

Sunak’s overhaul of alcohol duty rewards lower-strength drinks, pubs that sell draught beer and cider, as well as English wine producers, which are more heavily weighted towards low ABV and sparkling wines such as prosecco.

Pointing to the government’s response to a consultation on alcohol duty, which found that such drinks were “no longer the preserve of the wealthy”, Sunak said the move would help English winemakers, many of which make sparkling wine thanks to the similarity of the topography of southern England with France’s Champagne region.

In a separate measure he said would help pubs struggling because of the effect of the pandemic, the chancellor announced “draught relief”, cutting the tax on drinks served from pumps, such as beer and cider, by 5%. The duty cut will bring down the cost of a pint by 3p, or as much as 25p for beer below 3.5% ABV.

In the short term, an increase in alcohol duty that was due to take effect from midnight on Wednesday will be cancelled, at a cost of £3bn.

But the broadest change in his five-pronged plan for alcohol duty involves, according to Sunak, a “radical simplification”, under which the number of bands at which different duties are levied will be cut from 15 to six.

Drinks will be taxed in line with how much alcohol they contain, a move the chancellor said was aimed at encouraging healthier choices.

Sign up to the daily Business Today email or follow Guardian Business on Twitter at @BusinessDesk

This means that a bottle of 9.5% wine would be 47p cheaper, factoring in VAT, while an 11% bottle would rise by 12p, a 15% bottle would be 81p more expensive and a bottle of port at 20% would be £1.09 higher.

Low-strength ciders will attract up to 2p less duty in pubs and shops, while duty on 2.5-litre bottles of high-strength cider will rise by as much as 45p.

Andrew Carter, the chief executive of Kent-based sparkling wine specialist Chapel Down, said: “The duty saved will enable the industry to create jobs, support families, and bring even more young talent into this exciting, developing sector as it recovers from the pandemic.

“The English wine industry – comprising of 3,800 acres under vine, 800 vineyards, 178 wineries – is expanding rapidly and governmental support provides the opportunity to build English wine on a global level.”

The British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA) welcomed the immediate freeze in alcohol duty, as well as the “draught relief” due to take effect in 2023.

“This is great news for our local pubs and recognises the crucial role they play in our economy and society,” said the BBPA’s chief executive, Emma McClarkin.

But small brewers’ trade body Society of Independent Brewers (SIBA) pointed out that the cut only applied to products sold in containers of 40 litres or above, meaning craft brewers, which typically sell their product in 30-litre kegs, will lose out compared to large beer corporations.

“By amending this lower threshold to 20 litres the Treasury can ensure all independent breweries benefit from this welcome new duty relief on draught beer,” said the SIBA chief executive, James Calder.

Small brewers already enjoy some tax relief, a measure introduced when Gordon Brown was chancellor and credited with sparking a craft beer revolution.

The Treasury is consulting on possible changes to the regime.

Sunak also announced a “small producers’ relief” that would broaden the relief to include cider makers who produce drinks with a strength of less than 8.5%.

Contributor

Rob Davies

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Rishi Sunak to launch £1.4bn fund to attract more overseas investment
Money earmarked by chancellor in budget will have particular focus on electric vehicles and life sciences

Julia Kollewe

24, Oct, 2021 @11:02 PM

Article image
Freeze on alcohol duty to be extended to help UK hospitality industry
No increases until August 2023 despite Jeremy Hunt’s first full budget being scheduled for 15 March

Larry Elliott Economics editor

19, Dec, 2022 @7:21 PM

Article image
Rishi Sunak offers spending now – and signals tax cuts later
Analysis: Economic growth enables budget giveaways, but chancellor’s plans could go off course

Larry Elliott Economics editor

27, Oct, 2021 @1:26 PM

Article image
Rishi Sunak urged to cut business rates to unlock billions in investment
Employers’ groups warn ahead of budget that failure to take action would hit UK’s economic ambitions

Richard Partington Economics correspondent

13, Oct, 2021 @11:01 PM

Article image
Budget 2021: Sunak softens universal credit cuts to tackle squeeze on families
Chancellor announces measures to help households, with lower alcohol and fuel duties

Richard Partington and Jessica Elgot

27, Oct, 2021 @1:07 PM

Article image
Sunak cuts £2bn from R&D budget but will fund Cummings science agency
Chancellor announces £800m for Aria, a new body that will fund ‘high-risk, high-reward’ technologies

Jasper Jolly and Richard Partington

27, Oct, 2021 @4:26 PM

Article image
Will Sunak’s budget really help ease the cost of living squeeze?
Benefits of increasing minimum wage and unfreezing public sector pay could be eroded by inflation

Richard Partington Economics correspondent

25, Oct, 2021 @9:34 PM

Article image
Tax cuts before next election will require sacrifices elsewhere, Sunak told
Office for Budget Responsibility warns public spending would have to decrease or borrowing go up

Phillip Inman

27, Oct, 2021 @6:27 PM

Article image
Craft beer brewers say alcohol duty changes threaten their business
Small breweries and artisanal spirit makers say Sunak’s reforms will favour large corporations

Rob Davies

29, Oct, 2021 @4:12 PM

Article image
Budget 2021: key points at a glance
Rishi Sunak has announced his budget – here are the main points, with political analysis

Richard Partington and Rowena Mason

27, Oct, 2021 @11:40 AM