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What the Budget means for UK Hospitality & Travel Businesses
What the Budget means for UK Hospitality & Travel Businesses
The 2025 UK Budget has introduced a range of measures with significant implications for the travel and hospitality sector, many of which will be met with disappointment and frustration given the squeeze already felt by many businesses after the last budget. From changes to labour costs and business rates to the potential introduction of tourism levies, operators across the UK will need to plan carefully to tackle the rising costs and still encourage growth.
Key Budget Announcements for Hospitality & Travel
Tourism and Overnight-stay Levy
Mayors in England can now introduce levies on hotel stays, B&Bs, and holiday lets. While this creates a potential additional cost for visitors, it also raises questions about how occupancy and visitor behaviour may shift in affected areas.
Increased Labour Costs
The national minimum wage for over-21s will increase to £12.71/h from April 2026, alongside higher National Insurance contributions and pension costs. Staffing budgets across the sector are set to come under greater pressure and means greater costs and tighter margins for an industry already suffering.
Business Rates
Smaller hospitality venues (under £500,000 rateable value) may benefit from reductions, while larger properties could face higher bills following the 2026 revaluation, impacting central-city hotels and large-scale venues in particular.
VAT Stability
No changes to VAT rates on hospitality services were announced, avoiding additional cost pressures for operators.
Increase in Alcohol Duties
Alcohol duties will continue rising with inflation meaning there will be no relief for pubs, bars or restaurants that rely on drink revenue. Higher alcohol duty will push drink prices up — squeezing margins or forcing price rises, which may dampen footfall at pubs and bars, or shift spend toward food or soft drinks.
Implications for Hospitality & Travel
- Opportunities for smaller operators: Reduced business rates could help boost profitability for boutique hotels, B&Bs, and independent restaurants.
- Pressure on larger venues: Rising labour and operational costs, combined with potential higher business rates, may squeeze margins or prompt pricing adjustments for bigger hotels and city-centre venues.
- Tourist levies: Where implemented, overnight-stay levies could influence visitor decisions and affect occupancy levels, making location-based strategy increasingly important.
- Operational focus: Businesses will need to carefully manage staffing budgets and other operating costs while monitoring how consumers respond to price changes.
The 2025 Budget does not include direct financial support for hospitality, making strategic planning and agile management more important than ever. Operators that anticipate cost pressures, optimise operations, and maintain strong consumer engagement will be best positioned to navigate this changing landscape
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