Brewing giant Heineken will reopen 62 pubs that were closed in recent years and invest £39m in refurbishing hundreds of sites across the UK.
The company said the cash injection into its Star Pubs & Bars chain will create more than 1,000 new jobs.
The UK pubs industry has been hard hit by closures both during the Covid pandemic and afterwards as cost of living pressures weighed on consumer spending.
Between 2021 and 2023, pubs have shut at a rate of 500 a year, according to the British Beer and Pub Association (BBPA).
Star Pubs & Bars currently operates 2,400 pubs. In 2019, it had 2,700 pubs across the UK.
A spokesperson for Star Pubs & Bars said: “It would be unrealistic for any major leased and tenanted pub company to have all its pubs open at any one time.”
They said the number fluctuates on a range of factors, but added: “Around 95% of ours pubs are open at any one time.”
Star plans to renovate more than 600 pubs, choosing locations it said reflect how many of its customers have cut back on how often they commute into city centres.
Heineken said: “With working from home more commonplace and people looking to save on travel, major refurbishments will concentrate on transforming tired pubs in suburban areas into premium locals.”
The company said that by the end of this year, the UK operation will have reopened 156 pubs since the start of 2023, “reducing the number of closed pubs in its estate to pre-pandemic levels”.
During Covid, pubs were forced to close to prevent the spread of the virus. When they were allowed to reopen, they faced a number of restrictions including mandatory table service, limits on the size of groups and a 22:00 curfew.
In early 2021, Heineken announced it would cut 8,000 jobs globally. The following year it warned inflation – which measures the pace of price rises – was “off the charts”, in particular on commodities such as barley and aluminium.
This was before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in late February 2022 which lifted the cost of energy, fuel and grains.
The average price of a pint of draught lager reached £4.71 in March, according to the Office for National Statistics, compared to £3.76 in February 2020 before widespread pandemic lockdowns the following month.
Meanwhile, the number of pubs in the UK has fallen from 47,200 in 2019, before Covid, to 45,350 in 2023, data from the BBPA shows. However, pub numbers have been declining for some time. A decade ago there were 52,500 in operation which is 7,150 more than 2023.
Some of the pubs that Heineken is re-opening have been shut for more than four years, others have been closed for 12 months.
The Ship in Worsbrough, Barnsley closed its doors four-and-a-half years ago and lay dormant until it was refurbished at a cost of £370,000 and reopened in February 2024.
The Ashford Arms in Derbyshire, which Star Pubs described as “a Covid casualty”, was shut in March 2020 but reopened after joint £1.6m refurbishment by the company and Longbow Venues, an independent hospitality business in the Peak District.