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community-run pub is a pub that’s owned and operated by the local community, rather than by a private landlord or a big brewery.

In practice, that usually means:

Think of it as “the village living room” rather than a business purely chasing profit 

People run a community pub because it does things a normal pub often can’t — socially, economically, and emotionally. The reasons usually stack up like this:

 Keeps the community alive

 Saves an important local asset

 Keeps money local

 More than a pub

 Gives people a say

Builds pride, skills, and confidence among locals.

Members get real control, not just “customer feedback.”

Leaving an indelible mark on the landscape of tomorrow.

FAQs


Will it work?

We’ve looked into different types of local community pubs and believe we’ve figured out what makes them work well. We’ve also learned from community pubs that didn’t succeed and identified which approaches are most likely to succeed.


Why set up now when the pub isn’t for sale?

We’d like to be in a position to make an offer should the pub become available. It will take time for us to become organised.


Pubs don’t survive in this economic climate.

We intend to run the pub to become a community hub, not just a pub. Some of the plans include creating lunch clubs, a regular cafe, sessions for older members of the village, co-working spaces and so on. Evidence from Plunkett UK shows that 99% of community owned pubs succeed.


Will it be volunteer run?

No, we intend to have a paid manager, however, there will be volunteering opportunities.