
It wasn’t deliberate. Nobody created a committee or policy to make the British beer garden a workplace. Like most cultural upheavals, it started slowly and then accelerated. On sunny weekday mornings, laptop wielding professionals drank coffee and stared at spreadsheets in pub gardens. Publicans, desperate for daytime earnings amid the worst trading period ever, covertly encouraged it. After the energy crisis, household prices skyrocketed, and spending £10 at your local instead of heating your home office all day made sense.
The pub garden work trend is now part of British workplaces, and it’s worth noting how unique it is. Pubs have existed since Roman times. They have been courtrooms, auction houses, guild and trade union meeting halls, and informal community hubs for ages. As of 2019, most people would have thought it ludicrous to arrive at opening time with a laptop, phone charger, and Zoom call diary. Pandemic affected where people worked and what they could do.
Numbers tell part of the narrative. The Office for National Statistics reported that 4.7% of UK workers worked from home before March 2020. That figure rose to 46.6% by April. No gradual shift—this was a rupture. Millions of workers who had commuted their entire careers found themselves at kitchen tables, spare bedrooms, hallways, or anywhere they might find a desk. It was clear that household settings were not meant for this, and working from home carried its own anguish along with its advantages.
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Concept | Work-from-pub (WFP) remote working from pub gardens and indoor pub spaces |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Origin | Accelerated by COVID-19 pandemic (March 2020); now an established post-pandemic norm |
| Pre-pandemic home working rate | |
| Peak pandemic rate | 46.6% working from home (April 2020) |
| Current remote/hybrid rate | ~63% of UK workers doing some remote work (2025) |
| Notable pub chains offering WFP packages | Fuller’s, Young’s, Brewdog, Brewhouse & Kitchen, Stonegate |
| Typical daily package cost | £10–£15 (includes lunch, unlimited hot drinks, Wi-Fi) |
| Research institution | University of Lincoln / National Innovation Centre for Rural Enterprise (NICRE) |
| Lead researcher | Dr Jane Deville, University of Lincoln |
| Flexible Space Association | Jane Sartin, Executive Director |
| Legislative support | Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act 2023 — effective April 2024 |
| Average daily commuting cost (UK) | £19.10 (Bionic, 2024) |
| Average daily home-working cost | £9.41 |
First, they noticed the solitude. Next, expense. In 2024, Bionic predicted that working from home costs the average UK employee £9.41 per day, mostly because to higher energy prices. Nearly 86% of remote workers cited greater utility costs. After the Ukraine war, energy prices skyrocketed, raising daily costs. The rationality of leaving the house returned, and not only for a commute. Working from somewhere warm, with a solid connection, a good lunch, and other people within 20 feet seemed like a good way to solve multiple difficulties.
Fuller’s was one of the first large pub owners to offer work from pub packages including lunch and a drink for £10 per day at all 380 outlets. Young responded with a £15 deal at 185 pubs for a sandwich, endless tea and coffee, fast Wi Fi, and a toasty armchair for colder days. Brewdog’s 54 UK locations provided £10 unlimited hot drinks and a pint at night. Belushi’s added private conference rooms and a house beer or wine at 5pm for £7. The packages weren’t charity. Money was leaking from pubs. One renter claimed a 417 percent gas contract increase as energy rates rose by 300 percent or more from pre pandemic levels. Heating vacant daytime areas cost money, but a remote worker spending £10 over four hours was better than an empty table.
We can’t deny how exquisite the setup was for both parties. Remote workers needed a cause to leave the house, a change of scenery, stable internet, and a workday’s social structure. In calm hours, pubs needed customers. A Fuller’s spokeswoman stated: pubs need customers to liven them up. Late morning and afternoon remote workers enhance the vibe. No one created this quiet symbiosis, but it works against all odds.
Because it goes beyond convenience, the bar garden’s appeal should be examined separately from the pub’s interior. Brits associate pub gardens with the thrill of an unexpectedly good summer’s day. The Campaign for Real Ale reported that 55% of UK drinkers prefer pub beer gardens in summer. Many workers find natural light, fresh air, and birdsong and distant conversation useful and enjoyable. Nature rich surroundings may lower stress and improve cognitive performance by up to 15%, which may explain why so many people think better outside than under fluorescent illumination.
Anecdotal evidence supports this. A security consultancy director told The Guardian that working from a pub was better for his concentration than his home office since there were no interruptions. No fridge. No cats. No reminders to empty the bins. Another regular, an education copywriter who works from a 200 year old Greenwich tavern, said it beat the water cooler. Working at the kitchen table has become soul destroying, said Surrey pub owner Luke McMillan, who makes flip flops. Reading over these testimonials, it seems that many remote workers want more than a desk or Wi Fi password—they want a sense that the working day lives outside their heads.
Sociological implications exist. The office provided a social scaffolding for millions of individuals before the epidemic, not because the open plan floor was attractive but because it put you in close proximity to other people working. Scaffolding fell virtually overnight. Unexpectedly, pub gardens partially recreate it. Research regularly reveals that moderate ambient noise—the mild murmur of conversation, the clink of glasses, some birdsong—improves creative and associative thinking more than complete silence. Acoustically, the pub garden is in that ideal place.
All this is complicated. HR specialists observe that not all employers are comfortable with intimate chats over a pint glass, and some have regulations on remote working. Data security, client facing professionalism, and how long one can sit at a bar table awaiting a coffee order are all valid concerns. Pubs and employers are still figuring out the etiquette. Most beer gardens that accommodate laptop workers have informal expectations, and most remote workers seem to grasp them.
The work from pub garden trend may be more about what people represent than where they sit. At least 63% of UK workers worked remotely by early 2025, topping Europe in average days working from home per week. It’s no longer an emergency or temporary solution. Landscape. The beer garden workspace is one example of what happens when millions of people choose choice over obligation in their professional lives and choose their workplace quality. That’s novel. Bacon sandwiches and unlimited coffee are being served in 200 year old ivy covered beer gardens.
i) https://allwork.space/2024/08/3-key-trends-shaping-the-future-of-the-u-k-flexible-workspace-market/
ii) https://www.hrgrapevine.com/content/article/2024-04-23-work-from-pub-could-this-be-the-new-remote-work-trend
iii) https://nicre.co.uk/blog/2024/june/work-from-the-pub-post-pandemic-opportunity/