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The UK nightclub scene is dying off rapidly

New figures from the Night Time Industries Association show that more than one in four late-night venues have closed down since 2020 in the UK. What are the factors at play?

We have all inevitably had that banal chat with our elders about what a particular club venue was once called in their day. At this rate, however, that trend may die with Gen Alpha in the UK.

During my own ‘out out’ era, I spent an unreasonable amount of time at a big mainstream club in Kingston, South London, which had numerous titles and facades. What was ‘Oceana’ later became ‘Pryzm’, and now Pryzm is shutting down while its owners ‘reimagine the venue for the next generation of partygoers.’

It sounds like a proactive move – and one that is perpetually occurring with each generation – but make no mistake, this pivot, like so many other businesses in the UK, is born out of necessity.

The latest figures from the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA) show that as many as one in four late-night venues have been forced to close since 2020. In fact, nearly 800 such businesses have shuttered over the past five years, representing a 26% contraction in the UK’s nightlife industry during this short period.

The NTIA claim that only 2,424 late-night venues continue to operate throughout the country, and say that accelerated closures have reached a crisis point of roughly three-per-week – according to net figures of the last three months.

Cliché as it is to say, it’s a sign of the times. For the UK’s younger generations, talking economics is the nation’s second-worst pastime, just behind watching grass grow, simply because the reality is both depressing and overwhelming.

The job market is in continual freefall, with both vacancies and salaries diminishing while entry-level jobs hit a five year low. The hospitality sector, which nightclubs obviously fall under, is also the worst affected by government tax increases, highlighted by the 89,000 lost jobs since the autumn budget last year.

The NTIA – which represents 10,000 businesses, and the majority of UK nightclubs – is calling for the government to reverse the increase in employers’ national insurance contributions, cut VAT, and adjust business rates on venues. In the current landscape, 40% of venues fear closure in the next 6 months without support.

‘We must stop the silent slide into night-time deserts before the damage becomes irreversible,’ said Miachael Kill, the NTIA’s chief executive.

While this may stave off nightclub closures a while longer, there needs to be an acceptance from influential people in the industry that younger people are less inclined to go out clubbing, and willingness to adapt to that fact. Across the board, Gen Z are drinking less, having less sex, and are being charged more than ever for a double voddie or jagerbomb – let alone rent or groceries.

In an attempt to grab their attention once more, Kingston’s Pryzm (RIP) is about to undergo changes that go beyond merely cosmetic, with the announcement that the vast space is due to become a smaller club and dance bar. Whether this will be one of the few establishments to avoid being ghosted remains to be seen, though.

Inevitably, there will be some early interest in the joint, but whether this can blossom into sustained success will rely on whether the venue provides value for money and a sense of experience. Gen Z have to be super selective with where they spend their wages, and it’ll likely be the same once Gen Alpha come of age.

For the pubs and bars that are lucky enough to have been relatively unscathed, here’s a salient piece of advice to remain so: stop skurfing everyone out at bloody 11:00pm.

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