Wetherspoons warns on profits due to ‘substantial’ cost increases
The boss of pub giant JD Wetherspoon has warned it could miss profit guidance after a jump in costs.
It came as the firm, which has 794 managed pubs and 21 franchise sites, revealed slower sales growth over the latest quarter.
Chairman and founder Tim Martin said the group is among hospitality operators to have seen “substantial increases in costs” recently.
He added that this could therefore result in “profits slightly below market expectations”.
Wetherspoons previously said increases in National Insurance contributions and wages would cost the business around £60 million per year.
It is also facing an extra £1.6 million in tax this year through the Extended Producer Responsibility packaging levy.
On Wednesday, Wetherspoons also reported that like-for-like sales grew by 3.4% in the 13 weeks to April 2026, compared with a year earlier.
Like-for-like sales had risen by 4.8% over the six months to the end of January.
It means like-for-like sales have risen by 4.3% over the financial year-to-date, with total sales up 4.9% for the period.
Wetherspoons said it also opened eight more pubs over the latest quarter but saw its total pub estate remain stable after also shutting eight sites.
Mr Martin said: “The company has a strong pipeline of new pubs and planned openings include Manchester Airport, Heathrow Airport, Paddington station, Charing Cross station and Shaftesbury Ave in central London.”
Robinhood UK lead analyst Dan Lane said: “Wetherspoon pubs are pulling their weight but it’s becoming a familiar story of costs (labour and taxes in particular) absorbing that growth.
“Sales are holding up, with the company’s value proposition still bringing in customers in a stretched consumer environment.
“But, with cheap pints getting people through the doors, management is clearly reluctant to push pricing meaningfully, which means there’s little sign of margin relief ahead.”
