
If you were to enter a British pub on a rainy evening in 1995, the setting would seem strangely familiar today: fruit machines buzzing in the corner, wooden bar tops polished smooth by decades of elbows, and the subtle scent of chips wafting from a little kitchen. The price board would feel different, maybe startlingly different.
A little experiment recently tried something straightforward but oddly illuminating: reconstructing a standard British pub menu from 1995 and setting the prices for the same things in 2026. The exercise isn’t flawless, and it’s not scientific either. It seems, however, that Britain’s famous pub ritual has grown much more costly than most people realize when they look at the numbers side by side, scrawled across a notebook on a leisurely afternoon.
The pint is the simplest place to begin. In the UK, a pint of beer cost around £1.68 on average in 1995. Although it wasn’t exactly pocket change, it was doable. It can seem insignificant to someone who finishes work at five to order two or three rounds before leaving for home.
According to figures from the Office for National Statistics, the national average now stands closer to £4.81. The amount frequently rises above £6.50 in London. It’s difficult not to wonder when that silent jump occurred when you watch a bartender slide a pint across the counter, froth resting beneath warm pub lights.
| Category | Information |
|---|---|
| Topic | UK Pub Prices Comparison (1995 vs 2026) |
| Region | United Kingdom |
| Key Data Source | Office for National Statistics (ONS) |
| Example Item | Average pint of beer: £1.68 (1995) vs ~£4.81+ (2024 – 2026) |
| Cultural Context | British pub culture, inflation, cost of living |
| Reference Website | https://www.ons.gov.uk |
It soon becomes clear from the recreated menu that mid 90s deals weren’t just limited to drinks. In 1995, fish and chips, a traditional Friday night meal, might cost about £1.68 at a takeaway restaurant next to a bar. It was served standing close to the bar and was typically wrapped in paper. In Britain today, the same meal typically costs between £9 and £10.
In certain places in London, it exceeds £20, which would have looked ridiculous to a typical person in the mid 1990s. Ironically, milk provides a different kind of viewpoint. A pint of milk cost about 36p in 1995. It was the kind of information that would sometimes come up in those strange celebrity interviews where people asked politicians if they were aware of the cost of regular groceries. T
oday, depending on the supermarket, that same pint costs 85p or more. Not inexpensive, but also not startling. Not all items have been equally affected by inflation, which begs the silent issue that economists continue to discuss: why do some daily necessities stay mostly unchanged while spending on leisure increases?
Another part of the story is told via eggs. In the mid 90s, a dozen eggs may cost 63p. Now, the same carton can easily surpass £2.60, depending on its size and quality. It’s difficult not to notice that basic breakfast items have subtly moved into the realm of luxury when browsing an aisle of a supermarket nowadays, where cartons are stacked under strong fluorescent lighting.
However, the experiment with the pub menu isn’t just about goods. In essence, it’s about the whole dining experience. The average cost of a movie ticket in 1995 was £3.48. That was significant since a pub night frequently melded into other customs, such as drinking first, seeing a movie later, or stopping at the Mars bar on the way home. Back then, that chocolate bar cost about 25p. In many stores today, it is close to £1. Until someone realizes that the price change is around four times greater, it seems insignificant.
When the entire night out is taken into account, the growing expense of leisure becomes even more apparent. A typical evening in 1995 might have cost about £22, including two beers, public transportation, club admission, late night takeaway, and a taxi, according to research comparing the expenses of London’s nightlife.
Today, adjusted for inflation, that amounts to about £44. However, the same night now costs around £66 on average. There’s something subtly important about that difference. Wages have, of course, gone up during that time.
In Britain, the average weekly salary has significantly increased since the mid 1990s. Even still, there’s a sense that wage increases haven’t fully kept up with the customs people value when they’re outside a packed pub on a cold night and hear someone murmuring about the cost of a round.
Behind the figures is another subtle change: the number of pubs has decreased. In 1995, there were roughly 61,000 pubs in Britain. The number fell to less than 39,000 by 2024. The impact is evident despite the many causes, which include shifting drinking patterns, increased property values, and stricter laws.
In other neighborhoods, the former corner bar has been replaced with a supermarket or upscale apartments. It was intended to be a modest curiosity, a sentimental exercise, to recreate the 1995 menu. However, it starts to look like a picture of something larger when you look at the numbers, which are printed next to each other like old and new receipts. Prices didn’t simply go up. As they did, so did the cadence of daily existence.
The fact that fish suppers and beer are now more expensive may not be the most noticeable change. It’s because the modest pub, which was once the reasonably priced living room of British society, now finds itself in an odd limbo between tradition and contemporary economy. And when you see someone hesitating before placing another order, you can’t help but think that the price board, rather than the décor, truly captures the essence of the previous three decades.
i) https://metro.co.uk/2025/11/29/much-favourite-items-cost-1995-vs-2025-a-price-comparison-24921536/
ii) https://www.olivemagazine.com/restaurants/shoreditch-foodie-guide-where-to-eat-and-drink/
iii) https://www.timeout.com/london/news/how-much-the-cost-of-a-night-out-in-london-has-changed-over-30-years-050725