
Standing on a sunny British seaside and watching families wait in line for fish and chips and ice cream as the establishments serving them silently question whether the season will go through the winter is a little weird. Uncertainty has long been a part of coastal hospitality. Rain and rail strikes. An awful August. However, the most recent pressure feels different. The danger involved in operating a seasonal business near the sea is no longer the same. It’s a spreadsheet issue, and spreadsheets are frequently more merciless than natural disasters.
Even by themselves the stats are unattractive. Late last year, Hospitality issued a warning that the typical hotel’s business rates payment would grow by 115% over three years, while the average pub’s charge would increase by 76%. In 2026, six hospitality locations per day may disappear without more extensive action, according to the trade group. That may seem extreme, but consider the layout of many seaside towns, where lodging, bars, arcades, cafΓ©s, and small eateries are not incidental. They are or almost are the economy
| Topic | Important Information |
|---|---|
| Sector | UK coastal hospitality: pubs, hotels, cafΓ©s, restaurants, holiday venues |
| Core issue | Rising business rates, higher labour costs, energy bills, and weaker margins |
| Key pressure point | UKHospitality said average business rates could rise 76% for pubs and 115% for hotels over three years under the post-revaluation system. |
| Coastal relevance | Seasonal resorts depend heavily on summer trade and are especially exposed when fixed costs rise but off-season demand falls. |
| Government response | On 27 January 2026, the Government announced 15% off new business rates bills for pubs in England, plus a real-terms freeze for two further years, while also promising reviews of pub and hotel valuation methods. |
| Wider warning sign | UKHospitality said six hospitality venues a day could close in 2026 without a broader sector-wide solution. |
| Long-run backdrop | The UK has lost about 15,800 pubs since 2000, a stark measure of how fragile the trade has become. |
| Authentic reference | UK Parliament Hansard: Business Rates, 27 January 2026 |
A photograph of a crowded patio, lobster on platters, and vacationers lounging into the sun from Bran caster Saithe’s White Horse in Norfolk last summer could have led anybody to believe that the industry was flourishing. Even yet, James Nye of Anglian Country Inns noted that growing overheads were being concealed by favorable weather, calling summer our Christmas The real pain starts when the season softens he said. That statement is memorable because it neatly encapsulates the coastal predicament. In August, a business by the water may appear strong, but by November, it may appear weak.
The pile on effect is what makes this particular time particularly difficult. Business rates aren’t coming in by themselves. In addition, hospitality owners have had to contend with rising wages changes in employer national insurance, rising food prices, and unyielding energy bills. According to The Guardian, since the October Budget, the industry has already lost 84,000 jobs, and the number of temporary hospitality job openings has decreased by 25% annually. That is not a technical policy issue in coastal locations, where students and young people frequently depend on seasonal hospitality labor. There are fewer opportunities, fewer shifts, and fewer routes to employment.
The way this is landing also seems oddly unjust. A portion of the issue has now been acknowledged by ministers. In addition to a two year real terms freeze and a 15% decrease in new business rates payments for pubs in England, the government agreed to evaluate hotel and bar valuation practices in January. Some venues will benefit from that. A few might even be saved. However, there is a perception that the strategy has been overly restrictive, as though a coastal economy can be neatly classified. Relief comes to the pub. The adjacent hotel awaits a review. The cafΓ© across the street continues to perspire.
Moreover, hospitality at the shore is rarely that neat. A tavern beside the shore may double as a hotel. There may be live music at a hotel bar. Only by spreading summer revenues over slower months can a restaurant make it through the winter. It is difficult to ignore how little Westminster’s discussion of “methodologies” and “multipliers” resembles a windy promenade in February, when just a few lights remain on and every open venue counts.
The lengthy view exacerbates the situation rather than improving it. Since 2000, some 15,800 pubs have closed in Britain. Of course, many of those closures did not occur along the shore, but the pattern speaks for itself. Businesses in the hospitality industry are frequently dismissed as quaint local accents until they begin to fade. Politicians then realize their cultural significance. Writing in a different era, Belloc expressed concern that a nation would lose its inns and, along with them, a piece of its identity. He sounded romantic, perhaps. He now appears uncomfortable in his practicality as well.
Whether the government’s larger high street plan will result in genuine structural assistance or just more token gestures is still up in the air. A review may be important. Support throughout transitions might be important. However, seasonal seaside enterprises don’t require sympathy when it comes to policy theater. For trading to be profitable outside of the peak months, they require costs. In order to employ, make investments, and continue operating during the school vacations, they must have sufficient confidence.
In London debates about rate reform, that is the point that is frequently overlooked. Coastal hospitality is more than just a place to relax. It concerns if a town has a sense of life. Long before they appear in a ministerial statement, a boarded up hotel, a bar closed three days a week, or a restaurant ceasing to hire summer workers may impact the atmosphere of a town. And that retreat tends to expand once it begins.
Therefore, it is true that business rates are destroying or at least contributing to the decline of seaside hospitality. Maybe not by me. But quantitatively, materially, and in communities with little leeway. The summertime crowds could yet arrive. The deckchairs will remain accessible. Trays will still be carried past the harbor by someone. However, it is becoming more difficult to overlook the economics behind that well known image.