Drinks sales continue to compare well to pre-covid patterns, despite a host of supply, staffing, and cost pressures across the on-trade.

CGA drinks

CGA’s latest Drinks Recovery Tracker shows average drinks sales by value in the seven days to Saturday, 18th September, were down by 5% on the same week in 2019. That’s a dip from growth of 1% in the previous seven days and 5% the week before that. However, trading remains solid, given the context of major challenges highlighted by CGA’s latest business confidence survey.

The week-on-week drop was also influenced by damper and cooler weather. Daily sales were down on 2019 levels by between 2% and 12% between Sunday and Friday (12th to 17th September), but recovered well to sit just 1% down on Saturday.

Continuing the pattern of the summer, spirits sales comfortably outpaced the market, with cocktails extending their popularity. Spirits sales across the week were 16% up on the same week in 2019, but beer (down 11%), soft drinks (down 7%), cider (down 16%), and wine (down 13%) were all in negative territory.

“While just short of 2019 levels, these figures show the impressive resilience of the on premise,” said Jonathan Jones, CGA’s managing director, UK and Ireland.

“Trading conditions aren’t easy at the moment, and there are likely to be plenty of ups and downs between now and the end of the year. But consumers remain as enthusiastic as ever about drinking out. If supply and staffing issues can be mitigated, operators have a good chance of ending 2021 on a high.”

• CGA’s Drinks Recovery Tracker service will continue to monitor sales as the drinking-out market continues to recover, providing category, supplier, and brand rate of sale performance versus pre-covid sales. Suppliers and operators who want to track the recovery of drinks sales, benchmark performance, or identify changes in trends and consumer preferences, should email jonathan.jones@cgastrategy.com.