Revellers flock to pub selling Britain’s cheapest pint – at same average price as in 1997

A PUB is selling Britain’s cheapest pint at just £1.80 — the average price in 1997.

The bargain boozer emerged after news that the typical price had soared above £4.

CHRIS NEILLA Blackpool landlady runs Britain’s cheapest pub[/caption]

CHRIS NEILLLynn Haworth has kept pints down to just £1.80 at The Ardwick[/caption]

The Sun found more than 20 customers were already waiting at the bar when the Ardwick opened at 11am yesterday in Blackpool, Lancs.

Landlady Lynn Haworth, 64, said: “I keep the costs down due to the volume I sell.

“We get holidaymakers but it’s mainly regulars.”

The deal includes John Smith’s, Foster’s and Strongbow cider.

Cabbie Phil David said: “Whenever I go south I start paying three or four times more.”

Phil, 62, joked: “My daughter moved to Surrey, and she’s been totally stunned by how expensive everything is.”

But Lynn said: “You wouldn’t get away with it in Blackpool.”

The last time an average pint cost just £1.80 was 26 years ago in May 1997 – when Gary Barlow’s post-Take That solo track Love Won’t Wait was top of the charts.

Pints would cost just £3.36 if they had risen in line with inflation for other ­consumer goods since 1997, figures from the Bank of England show.

On Monday we revealed some beers in London’s plush West End had topped the £9 mark.

The eye-watering tab was found at a bar in the theatre district as part of a 90,000-pub survey carried out by industry trackers CGA.

   

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