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10 Apr 2026

It’s easy to forget the moment your love for bike shops began. Mat Clark, owner of BRINK - a UK-based business specialising in cycling retail, brand strategy, and industry insight -...

8 Apr 2026

Bike frame and fork protection specialists BikeWrap has confirmed its sponsorship of the Cytech Pub Quiz, part of the build up to Local Bike Shop Week next month.

2 Apr 2026

Bikebook has announced a new integration with Shopify

1 Apr 2026

An awards scheme celebrating independent bike shops that go above and beyond for their communities launches this week.

30 Mar 2026

ACT parent company Bira has warned that falling retail sales in February are an early sign of consumers reining in their spending amid growing economic uncertainty.

26 Mar 2026

A flagship cycling borough in outer London is poised to lift its eight-year ban on dockless e-bikes, with Waltham Forest Labour Party pledging to introduce a scheme if it retains control of...

26 Mar 2026

Bira has welcomed the government's £319 million investment in high street revitalisation, while warning that without reform of business rates and action on overseas imports, many high...

19 Mar 2026

This one's sobering: 42% of small businesses reported a cyber breach in 2024, according to the National Cyber Security Centre. And it's not just massive corporations being targeted. It's small,...

19 Mar 2026

The Chancellor held a roundtable discussion on a future high street strategy last week, with Bira the sole voice representing smaller retail businesses. Read an update on Bira's place at a...

18 Mar 2026

An independent bike shop is refusing to sell or repair e-scooters over concerns about how they are being used, with the area’s police force backing the call and urging others to follow...

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

Posted on in Business News , Cycles News

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", ACT parent company Bira has said.

Pubs
Drobot Dean/stock.adobe.com

The decision has also caused concern among specialist sectors such as independent cycling retailers, many of which operate from physical high street premises and face the same fixed-cost pressures as other independent shops.

Treasury Minister Dan Tomlinson announced that pubs and music venues in England will receive a 15% discount on their business rates bills from April and will not see increases for two years. The three-year package is worth £1,650 for the average pub.

Andrew Goodacre, CEO of Bira, said the Chancellor had failed to listen to independent retailers who face identical pressures.

Bira CEO Andrew Goodacre
Bira CEO Andrew Goodacre

Andrew Goodacre, CEO of Bira, said: "This is a poor decision based on politics rather than what is good to the local economy. The Chancellor has not listened. She says that 'we need pubs and high streets to thrive'. If she really believed and understood that comment, then we would be seeing similar support for the rest of the high streets and not just a chosen few businesses - many of which are not even on high streets."

Mr Goodacre said promises of yet another high streets strategy were "empty words" for the thousands of independent retailers facing sharp rises in their rates bills over the next three years.

This includes independent cycle shops, which have warned that rising rates, wage costs and reduced consumer spending are making long-term investment increasingly difficult.

"The Treasury states that pubs need support having lost 7,000 since 2010," said Mr Goodacre. "We have lost 17,000 independent shops in 2024 and are expecting a similar number when the figures are announced for 2025."

The CEO described the package as "yet another half-baked u-turn" that benefits pubs whilst small retailers are "being flushed down the u-bend".

"The Chancellor talks about delivering thriving high streets and permanently lower multipliers," added Mr Goodacre. "This is despite the harsh reality of 87% vacancy rates, shops closing every day, illicit shops prospering, rampant retail crime and business rates at the highest levels since 2019."

Mr Goodacre highlighted that the Chancellor is reducing business rates support from £2.5bn in 2024 to £900m in 2026, despite Labour's manifesto promise to create a fairer system for high street businesses.

"Obviously this only applies if that business is a pub," said Mr Goodacre. "The real shocking fact the Chancellor never mentions is that based on OBR forecasts, the government will increase income from business rates by £10bn or 30% by 2030/31."

The CEO accused the government of using business rates as a "cash cow instead of taking the opportunity to reduce the multipliers for everyone".

The government announcement comes after a backlash against November's Budget, which left many businesses facing major increases in their business rates bills. Earlier this month, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said she was "particularly concerned" about the impact pubs faced and hinted there would be "additional support".

The package will cost £80m in its first year, according to the government.

UK Hospitality has warned that hotels, restaurants and other businesses in the sector are also at risk, calling for the support package to be widened.

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