Brewser, the direct-from-brewery beer subscription, is re-introducing itself to UK drinkers with a simple promise: the beer in the box comes straight from the brewery that made it, as fresh as beer gets, and tastes better for it.

Every month, members discover a different independent UK brewery, with the beer shipped straight from that brewery’s cold store to the door. The brewery is chosen by the Brewser team after they have visited and tasted the range.
Brewser ships direct from the brewery: every box is picked, packed and posted by the people who brewed the beer, straight from their cold store to the door. The beers are the ones the brewery already makes and stands behind, chosen by Brewser after visiting and tasting the full range. Every subscription supports independent breweries and the people behind the beer, says Brewser.
Members can pick their brewery or let Brewser curate, and skip, swap, or cancel whenever they like. In a May 2026 survey of Brewser members, 91% of those who had also tried another beer subscription (from a sample of 840 respondents) said Brewser’s was better.

Olly Morgan, co-founder of Brewser, with Roger Daltrey, rock legend and owner of Lakedown Brewing Co
To mark the relaunch, Brewser is running a summer giveaway through July. One member will win: a Weber barbecue, a YETI cooler, and a day’s fishing for two at Lakedown Trout Fishery with a bar tab and a meal included, plus Lakedown beer and Brewser merch. Find out more here.
“I spent more than a decade in brewing, and the thing that always got to me was that the best, freshest beer in the country was the hardest to actually buy,” said Brewser co-founder, Olly Morgan. “It would be sat going warm on a shelf somewhere, miles and months from the brewery that made it.
“So in 2021, from a tiny house in mid-Wales, we started Brewser to fix that. Every month you get beer sent straight from the brewery that made it, as fresh as they can get it to you, and the brewery gets backed for doing what they do best. That was the whole reason it existed, and it still is.”



