PolicyLens

Reform UK - Business tax

Cut hospitality taxes

Cut hospitality VAT to 10%, beer duty by 10%, employer NI and pub business rates.

Last updated: May 2026.

Read the policy-specific methodology note

Sector package

Reform's Save Our Pubs plan contains a five-part hospitality package. The party scores it as neutral by pairing tax cuts with savings from reinstating the two-child benefit limit.

  • VAT cut is the largest tax element.
  • Beer duty and pub rates also fall.
  • Two-child-limit savings are the offset.

Core trade-offs

Pubs and hospitality firms gain lower taxes and possibly higher demand. The offset falls on larger low-income families if the two-child limit is reinstated.

  • Hospitality firms and consumers may gain.
  • Larger low-income families bear the offset.
  • VAT pass-through is uncertain.

Illustrative fiscal impact

+GBP 0.0bn to +GBP 8.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 2.0bn.

  • Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
  • 10% VAT rate is the main scale marker.
  • Gross costs and receipt offsets are separated in methodology.
  • Behaviour and pass-through widen the range.
  • This is not an official costing.

Economic impact by 2027-28

  • Jobs: May support hospitality jobs, but welfare cuts reduce demand for affected families.
  • Wages: No direct wage guarantee; gains may support margins or prices instead.
  • Prices: Consumer prices may fall if VAT and duty cuts pass through.
  • GDP / productivity: Short-run sector boost; economy-wide gain likely small and distributionally costly.

Assessment

The hospitality tax cuts are targeted at a pressured sector, but the claimed neutrality depends on reinstating the two-child limit. That makes the package a transfer from larger low-income families to hospitality firms and consumers. The economic case is weaker if tax cuts are captured by margins.

Confidence: Medium-low. Reform provides a fiscal table, but pass-through, eligibility and the welfare offset require independent checking.

Main risks

  • Child poverty: Reinstating the two-child limit would cut support for larger low-income families.
  • Pass-through risk: VAT and duty cuts may support margins rather than lower prices.
  • Sector targeting: Other labour-intensive sectors may seek similar VAT and NI relief.

Safeguards

  • Do not fund sector tax cuts through child poverty rises.
  • Require price pass-through monitoring.
  • Target relief by viability, not blanket sector status.

Academic evidence

UK government evidence

Department for Business and Trade, 2025

Business population

The UK had about 5.7 million private-sector businesses in 2025, mostly small firms.

Sets affected firm context.

Business population estimates 2025 (2025)

Sources

Other Reform UK policies

PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.