Community Owned Pubs (COPs) are a relatively recent phenomenon. The first was the Red Lion in Preston, Hertfordshire bought by the villagers from Whitbread in 1983 and still going strong. The next twenty years saw only a few more come along but the high profile reopening of the Old Crown, Hesket Newmarket, Cumbria on the cooperative model gave the sector a boost.
The next milestone was the Localism Act 2012 which introduced ACVs and the community right to bid. In 2013, the Plunkett Foundation launched its cooperative pubs advice line with government support. They followed this in 2016 with the More Than a Pub programme, funded by the government and the Power to Change Trust – this can offer financial support at all stages of a pub rescue campaign. Government funding ceased in 2024 but at the time of writing (July 2026), a £61m Community Right to Buy Fund had just been announced – this is associated with new legislation giving communities the right to buy their local pub in certain circumstances.
Progress with community ownership was initially relatively sedate and in 2017 we were aware of only 56 COPs – but since then there has been a significant acceleration. Our latest figures (July 2026) are:
237 COPs - including 8 pubs that are both owned and run by the community
29 Community run – freehold held by an individual or pubco, but community looks after day-to-day running
101 active campaigns
Of the COPs, 139 are Community Benefit Societies, 14 are Community Interest Companies, 47 are private limited companies and 15 are Parish Council-owned and 5 are Co-operatives.
North Yorks has the most COPs – 14 – followed by Essex and Suffolk (12), then Buckinghamshire (10). On the flipside, there are none in the West Midlands, one in Merseyside, four in Greater Manchester and five in Greater London.