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As it happened: Stocks mixed as Trump warns takes ‘two to tango’ on Iran peace As it happened: Stocks mixed as Trump warns takes ‘two to tango’ on Iran peace Replace Reeves if Starmer goes, voters tell Labour Right to Buy has been a huge success, of course the left hates it Regional bond revolution risks making Britain more unequal and less prudent Labour may not agree with Blair, but the public does… The world can’t keep consuming more than it produces If performance matters more than privilege then prove it Wayve: London robotaxis will make passengers forget there’s no driver Mandelson Files add insult to injury, but the patient was already beyond saving Blackstone Raises its Largest Asia Private Equity Fund at $13.1 Billion Pension master trusts join forces to tackle outdated transfer systems Iran ‘pulls out of talks with US’ and threatens to strike Israel Anthropic files for IPO as race with OpenAI heats up ‘Be more Trumpian’ – Mandelson discussed dire economy and ‘lack of verve’ with key Starmer ally Deloitte UK appoints first chief AI officer in drive for ‘AI-enabled’ services Private credit is crowded — but disciplined capital still knows where to look Squash players turn to social media to cash in on LA Olympic Games opportunities Interactive Brokers Integrates AI into Client Portfolios – Informed by Agentic Technology, Controlled by the Client WWEX Group and Auctane Complete Merger, Creating Leading Logistics Provider ShipStation Global Sadiq Khan: London tech boom can weather ‘dizzying’ AI risks New mixed gender trophy introduced for coming Hundred season Labour voters lead AI adoption as public remains split on impact North Highland Names Anthony Shaw Global Chief Executive Officer Vyond Appoints SaaS Industry Veteran Scott Ernst as Chief Executive Officer Winston Taylor Completes Historic Transatlantic Combination M&S chief’s pay slashed by £3m after cyberattack turmoil Inside Celonis, the German tech unicorn that won over a fifth of the FTSE 100 Stop and think before asking for a bigger salary Brits back Blair’s growth calls – yet are squeamish over welfare cuts Number of claims management firms halves after FCA clampdown Richard Desmond hit with £40m bill over ‘fanciful’ lottery feud Pub bosses warn tax hikes driving youth unemployment crisis UK manufacturing survives Iran war impact Labour sheds union member support to Reform, poll shows Private equity-backed Ryan triumphs in bidding for European tax adviser Svalner Atlas Wise shares plummet as money transfer firm faces fraud investigation KBRA Releases Research – European Fibre ABS: From Build-out to Securitisation Everbridge Expands Presence in Germany with New Munich Office Iran war triggers slump in selfies, ME Group warns Landlords rush to protect income over Renters’ Rights Act fears Ascensia Diabetes Care Expands CONTOUR® Portfolio with CONTOUR®COMFORT Pen Needles to Bring Greater Stability and Control to the Everyday Injection Experience Corient Completes Acquisitions of Stonehage Fleming and Stanhope Capital Group; Global Assets Surpass US$500 Billion Autobrains and Uber to Launch Agentic AI Robotaxi Program in Munich built on NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion Easyjet fires back at ‘highly opportunistic timing’ as Castlelake weighs takeover bid House prices fall again as property market ‘deteriorates’ Exclusive: Roland Garros star and ATP chief in £450,000 tennis fund raise Milburn NEET review: Anger crackles from the page but will Labour act? 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Would a £10bn VAT cut really save hospitality?
Felix Armstrong · 2026-06-20 · via City AM

Business professionals discussing strategies in a modern office setting with diverse team collaboration visible
Rachel Reeves is being urged to cut VAT for hospitality(Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire)

Calls for the government to slash VAT on hospitality firms have been backed by pub and restaurant bosses, and Prime Minister hopeful Andy Burnham. What would this tax break really mean for the economy?

The UK’s pubs, hotels and restaurants say they are at breaking point. Higher business rates, hikes to national insurance and minimum wage and rising energy bills mean that the country’s hospitality industry is being “catastrophically overtaxed”.

While pubs successfully campaigned for a £300m business rates concession following last year’s Budget, hotels and restaurants were left out from this emergency support.

The hospitality industry has now rallied around a cause which it says will give pubs, hotels and restaurants the breathing room it needs, and save thousands from going under.

Celeb chef Kerridge leads campaign

A new campaign, spearheaded by celebrity chef Tom Kerridge and trade body UK Hospitality (UKH), is urging the government to slash value-added tax (VAT) on hospitality firms from 20 to 10 per cent. 

Kerridge’s lobby group, VAT’s The Problem, claims that a cut to the tax would mean fewer hospitality firms and jobs are lost, delivering “more vibrant high streets, more jobs for local people and more choice for the consumer”.

The campaign says the UK’s high rate of VAT on hospitality makes it an outlier in Europe. Only Denmark charges a higher rate to pubs, hotels and restaurants, while France, Italy and Spain levy a 10 per cent rate.

The group’s petition has amassed more than 220,000 signatures, and an early-day motion in support of the policy has been signed by more than 50 cross-party MPs. 

Some hospitality bosses have rallied behind Andy Burnham’s bid to become Prime Minister because the new MP for Makerfield has called for cuts to VAT on hospitality firms and pledged to lower business rates for pubs.  

Andy Burnham speaking at a Labour Party event, addressing current political issues, with a focused and determined expression.
Andy Burnham has backed a VAT cut for hospitality

But some tax experts have criticised the tax cut, which they say would cost £12.5bn and fail to benefit the smallest hospitality operators, while offering huge tax breaks to the biggest businesses.

Tax Policy Associates (TPA), an independent think tank, claims that the policy would cost the taxpayer £12bn. 

The Treasury costed the VAT cut at £10.5bn in February, adding that “tax breaks reduce the revenue available for vital public services and must represent real value for money for the taxpayer”.

But TPA argues that the tax cut is likely to cost £12bn, because of the so-called Jaffa Cake effect. 

As the orange-flavoured treats are classed as cakes rather than biscuits, they are charged zero per cent VAT. The think tank argues that a cut to VAT would encourage “hospitality-adjacent” firms to fiddle with their operations in a similar manner, in order to benefit from the tax break.

Supermarkets and petrol forecourts would add seating and meal deals, while cinemas and sports venues would bundle in tickets with food and drink, TPA argues. This activity, while “rational,” would likely push up the cost of the VAT cut to £12bn – or as much as £14bn, the think tank claims.

Dan Neidle, TPA’s founder, told City AM that UKH should have provided a full costing for the tax cut, and suggested where the government can make savings to pay for it.

“There are other things which could be good for growth and would be a lot less expensive than £12bn,” such as a reversal of Labour’s hikes to employee national insurance contributions (NICs) or reform of business rates, he said.

Retail and hospitality bosses have rounded on the government for their hikes to employment costs and business rates, which they say are pushing firms into insolvency and threatening these industries’ roles at gateways into employment for young people.

Allen Simpson, UKH’s chief executive, told City AM: “Dan rightly points to the cost shock of the last budgets, but that came on top of a tax system that already saw the sector pay far more than its share.”

Industry leaders say they do not feel it is their place to tell the Treasury how to fund this proposal. Simpson said the industry landed on a VAT cut because it had been told that reforms to other issues like NICs and business rates “are too technically difficult to do, let alone all at once”. 

McDonald’s to gain £432m

Hospitality figures have also clashed with Neidle over the benefits of the VAT cut, which he claims would give huge tax breaks to large corporations but fail to boost smaller businesses, whose turnover is below the £90,000 threshold for paying the tax.

Fast food giant McDonald’s would take £432m from the VAT cut, Neidle claims, while pub owner Mitchells & Butlers and Premier Inn owner Whitbread are set to gain £246m and £238m respectively.

But Leon Burton, who owns a string of pubs in the North West and the Midlands, claimed that fast food firms should be excluded from the tax break, saying: “No hospitality operator is calling for that, we’re asking for support from our locals – not a Big Mac delivered in an Uber.”

Hospitality leaders are divided over whether they would use the VAT cut to invest in their business, or opt to pass it onto consumers.

Critics of the policy “argue it won’t go to the consumer, but that’s not the point. It’s meant to support hospitality, high streets and jobs for our young people,” Burton said.

Tim Martin speaking at a business conference podium dressed in a suit, emphasizing key industry insights and strategies.
Wetherspoon founder Tim Martin said a VAT cut would bring prices down

But Tim Martin, chairman of pub giant JD Wetherspoon, told City AM that “prices would inevitably fall”. 

Neidle’s estimate that Wetherspoon would gain £194m from the tax cut is “disingenuous” because much of this would be passed onto consumers, and to the government through more tax returns as it spends more on wages, Martin claimed.

The pub tycoon has spent years urging the government to equalise a tax system which he claims unfairly benefits supermarkets, to the detriment of pubs.

Pubs have lost half of their trade to supermarkets in the last 25 years, he claims, adding that a cut to VAT would transfer food sales back away from grocers, who are not charged the tax.

Pub boss Burton agrees. “Supermarkets have consistently come for hospitality. They sell a £10 premium gastro lasagne to heat at home and pay £0 VAT. In my pub, I’d pay £1.60 VAT for effectively doing the same.”