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Independent retailers warn Spring Statement missed opportunity as geopolitical tensions threaten high street recovery

5 Mar 2026

ACT parent company Bira has warned that the Chanellor's Spring Statement offered no new support for high street businesses, as rising tensions in the Middle East threaten to push up energy... Read more…

Scottish bike shop and cafe expands into bigger premises as council recognises 'positive impact on economy'

3 Mar 2026

A Scottish bike repair shop and cafe has recently moved premises into a bigger unit thanks to a growth in business, with the local council noting the positive impact it would have on the local... Read more…

Local Bike Shop Week returns this May, with independent retailers reporting strong benefits from past events

19 Feb 2026

Local Bike Shop Week is approaching, with this year’s celebrations taking place from Sunday 3 May to Saturday 9 May 2026 - and retailers have highlighted the positive experiences they've... Read more…

Independent bike shops unite for inaugural Local Bike Shop Week celebration

17 Feb 2026

A week to celebrate and highlight the expertise and passion of independent bike shops across the UK is set to be held this May.
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ACT part of coalition letter calling for consultation on online VAT reform

16 Feb 2026

A 18-strong coalition of business organisations and tax experts, including the ACT and led-by its parent company Bira, has today written to the Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury calling for a... Read more…

Government's pub-only business rates package is "poor decision based on politics", ACT parent company Bira says

29 Jan 2026

The government's decision to give pubs a 15% business rates discount while excluding independent retailers is a "poor decision based on politics rather than what is good for the local economy",... Read more…

Independent retailers demand equal treatment as Government prepares pub rates relief

9 Jan 2026

ACT parent company Bira has has demanded equal treatment for small shops after the government announced plans to water down business rate rises for pubs.
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Christmas and New Year message from ACT Director Jonathan Harrison

23 Dec 2025

An end of year message from Jonathan Harrison, Director of the ACT.
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Scottish Government urged to cut business rates for indie retailers

11 Dec 2025

ACT parent company Bira has called on the Scottish Government to follow Wales's example and introduce genuine business rates reductions for retail premises ahead of the Scottish Budget on 13... Read more…

Independent retailers to see rates bills soar by up to 15% despite government's "transformation" promises

2 Dec 2025

Independent retailers across the UK are facing business rates increases of up to 15% next year despite government promises of the "lowest tax rates since 1991", ACT parent company Bira has... Read more…

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Indies drinks retailers short-changed in government duty consultation

Posted on in Business News

Independent quality drinks retailers were woefully underrepresented among those consulted by government over the duty changes now hitting businesses, it has been claimed, after industry magazine Harpers published details of the duty consultation, following a duty hike on 1 August that saw an increase of £0.44 per 75cl bottle of wine between 11.5% and 14.5%.

Bar bottles

Of the approximately 100 companies and organisation contacted, retailers of still wines were very thin on the ground (just two), with the number of importers, brand owners and industry support bodies of wines (at 18, plus four sparkling organisations) noticeably lower than both beer, cider and low & no companies (38) and public health groups (33) – many of the latter known for pushing back on alcohol. Spirits producers and brand owners sat somewhere in between, accounting for overlap with wine.

Speaking to Harpers, Andy Langshaw of the Harrogate Fine Wine Co. said: “It really did look like the wine trade was under-represented as a whole. Of the 106 consulted maybe only 12 came from the wine trade and of those, the independent sector was hardly represented at all. And that's not just retail shops, there were no importers who primarily deal with the indies either.

"The independent retail/importer sector is not insignificant in terms of sales generated or indeed people employed, so it's shameful to have not been included in the consultation. The closest indies got to a voice was probably Fine+Rare.”

Harpers ran it’s ‘Duty hikes: Details of government consultation revealed’ piece after widespread comment on social media and elsewhere questioning who had been consulted over the deeply unpopular duty rises.

The government launched a ‘Call for Evidence’ to seek the views of stakeholders on how alcohol duty could be reformed in October 2020. This closed in November 2020 with 106 respondents, including the likes of the Wine and Spirit Trade Association (WSTA), Wine GB, Treasury Wine Estates, E&J Gallo Winery, C&C Group and Accolade Wines.

The current single rate for still wines between 11.5% and 14.5%, plus a separate higher rate for fortified, presages a full implementation of the new duty regime in 2025, following a current ‘easement’ period. Duty will then be escalated for each incremental 0.5% degree of alcohol in wine, with an estimated 80% of still wines falling into higher bands.

There will be 27 bands, including separate, higher tiers for fortifieds.

An HM Treasury spokesperson told Harpers: “For the first time in over 140 years the UK’s alcohol duty system has started making sense as a drink’s tax now reflects the amount of alcohol in it, making everything easier to understand.

However, in its consultation response in September 2022, HM Treasury admitted: “In contrast to other parts of the industry, wine producers and retailers were less positive about the overall new regime. Most wine producers and retailers expressed concern that the new duty rate for products between 8.5% and 22% abv would lead to unfair increases in duty for most still and fortified wines."

The 1 August rise will have huge implications for the wine industry, particularly bottles sold under the £10 bracket, which, according to Nielsen, is 96% of all wine sold in the UK.

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