Beer Republic
  • Home
  • Irish Beer
  • Podcasts
  • UK Beer
  • US Beer
  • Submit a story
  • About
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Beer Republic
  • Home
  • Irish Beer
  • Podcasts
  • UK Beer
  • US Beer
  • Submit a story
  • About
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Beer Republic
No Result
View All Result
Home UK Craft Beer

Licensees look to World Cup to lift sales

Darren Norbury by Darren Norbury
19 June 2026
in UK Craft Beer
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Up-and-down temperatures and consumers’ ongoing cost concerns have held down on-trade drinks sales in the first half of June.

NIQ beer table

NIQ’s Daily Drinks Tracker, powered by CGA intelligence, shows sales in the week to Saturday, 6th June, were 1.5% down on the equivalent period in 2025. Over the following week, the gap widened to leave trading 5.1% behind last year.

It’s a reversal to a better fortnight in the second half of May, when sales finished just ahead year on year. The Daily Drinks Tracker has now recorded negative growth in 15 of the first 23 weeks of 2026. It leaves pubs, bars, and suppliers pinning hopes on brighter weather and a boost from the men’s football World Cup in the rest of June and July. 

Sales in the first week of June trended in line with the weather, with bursts of sunshine in some places boosting daily takings before cooler and wetter weather moved in to dampen footfall. The periods of higher temperatures made it a good week for soft drinks, with sales up 3% year-on-year, and a reasonable one for cider (up 0.9%) and beer (down 0.2%).

The second week of the month was affected by tough comparisons with a sunny mid-June in 2025. This hampered sales of beer (down 3.1%), cider (down 9.4%), and soft drinks (down 5%).

“The first half of June continues the pattern of a flat 2026 for pubs, bars, and suppliers,” said Rachel Weller, NIQ powered by CGA’s commercial lead, UK &and Ireland. “It’s yet another reminder of how drinks sales are very closely pegged to the weather, and while there have been sunny patches, the conditions have worked against operators in many parts of the country over the spring and summer.

“Pubs and bars with TV screens will now be looking forward to a big upswing in footfall from the World Cup, and hoping for a successful tournament for England and Scotland to keep people visiting.”

Previous Post

Summer Ale Trail takes in 16 North East venues

Next Post

In deepest Oxfordshire, a very English collaboration

Darren Norbury

Darren Norbury

Next Post
edit post
In deepest Oxfordshire, a very English collaboration

In deepest Oxfordshire, a very English collaboration

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

This weeks most viewed posts

  • edit post
    A Tourist Guide to Macro Beer in Turkey

    A Tourist Guide to Macro Beer in Turkey

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Weirdo Guide to Dublin Pubs: Bonobo

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Annual Beer-y Roundup, 2020 Edition: Highlights

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Craft Brewing Roundtable with Independent Brewers from 🇵🇹Portugal, 🇩🇰Denmark, and 🇫🇮Finland.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Encouraging Employment in The South African Craft Beer Industry

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Our Site Your Story

Copyright © 2026Beerrepublic.ie

Latest news

edit post
In deepest Oxfordshire, a very English collaboration

In deepest Oxfordshire, a very English collaboration

20 June 2026
edit post
Licensees look to World Cup to lift sales

Licensees look to World Cup to lift sales

19 June 2026
edit post
Summer Ale Trail takes in 16 North East venues

Summer Ale Trail takes in 16 North East venues

19 June 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Irish Beer
  • Podcasts
  • UK Craft Beer
  • US Craft Beer
  • About
  • Submit a story
  • Contact
  • Login
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.