Menu Menu
[gtranslate]

Should delivery apps impose alcohol limits?

The death of a young woman has sparked debate over the access afforded by instant delivery services. 

For people with alcohol dependency, food delivery platforms have transformed drinking into a private and frictionless ritual. The limits imposed on physical retails, such as opening hours and – in some cases – units per spend, are bypassed on apps like Deliveroo and Uber Eats. They also make access to alcohol almost instant.

This loophole is now being questioned following the death of 35-year-old Zoe Hughes, who struggled with alcoholism. Her family have started a petition calling for restrictions on delivery apps after Zoe used them to spend between £1000 and £1500 a month on alcohol.

Zoe’s sister, Alex, has said it ‘came as a shock’ when the family discovered her drinking problem. She was ‘full of life’ and ‘lived and breathed for her children,’ but as her alcohol dependency worsened, she utilised online services to drink in secret.

‘At first she was living with my parents who are in a rural part of Lincolnshire, so she had to walk to the shops to get a drink,’ Alex told the BBC.

‘But when she moved into her own place in a more urban area it spiralled.’

While apps like Deliveroo currently operate within the law, there are no restrictions on when you can order alcohol or how much you can order per day. In some cases, Zoe was using online services to obtain alcohol as early as six in the morning.

‘All she had to do was go on her phone, click a few buttons and it would be delivered in as quick as 20 minutes.’

Alex and the rest of Zoe’s family want the government to introduce safeguards to help vulnerable people.

‘There needs to be a cap so you can only order so much in a 24-hour period and also a time stop.’

Betting companies now operate self-exclusion registers, affordability checks, mandatory intervention tools and advertising restrictions. Meanwhile someone can still order bottles of vodka to their home at six in the morning with little more than a tap.

And while strict licensing rules are in place for physical retailers, the lines are more blurry when it comes to the sale of alcohol online.

For instance, while the Licensing Act 2003 made it an offence to sell alcohol to someone who is already drunk, instant delivery apps and couriers have no way of knowing what state consumers are in when they make a purchase.

Zoe’s story has encouraged other recovering alcoholics to share their stories, like Hattie Underwood, a 35-year-old who currently helps others with their sobriety.

Hattie also used delivery apps when struggling with alcohol dependency, saying that they ‘psychologically took all the barriers out of the way.’

‘I would use the apps to order alcohol to my door. I would set myself a time of 10am before I was going to drink and I’d never be able to wait that long.’

This week, Alcohol Change UK renewed calls for tighter regulation around alcohol delivery apps following Zoe’s death. An inquest concluded she died following an unwitnessed fall while under the influence of alcohol.

Unlike pubs or off-licences, these platforms are designed to erase resistance. The entire economy of delivery apps rests on eliminating boundaries to consumption. Alcohol dependency thrives in secrecy and repetition, and delivery apps offer both.

The cultural structures that surround drinking in the UK also make regulation a controversial and complex subject. Alcohol is embedded into social life so deeply that attempts to regulate it are often framed as puritanical overreach. The image of addiction that still dominates public imagination is the visibly chaotic alcoholic. It’s someone drinking openly on a park bench or collapsing out of a pub.

In reality, by the time concern becomes obvious, the infrastructure enabling it is already deeply embedded into daily life.

Health experts in Scotland have now warned that online alcohol sales present particular risks for vulnerable drinkers and underage users. Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems argues licensing laws have failed to keep pace with delivery technology, pointing out that while supermarkets face restricted alcohol trading hours, app-based deliveries often operate around the clock.

Enjoyed this? Click here for more Gen Z focused tech stories.

Accessibility