Map reveals countries with the cheapest BEER including 25p pint as thirsty Brits jet off on Easter holidays

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A MAP has revealed the countries with the cheapest beer.

An outstanding new study has found that thirsty Brits could jet off to a destination where a pint will only cost them a measly 25p.

AlamyThe top 10 cheapest locations for a pint have been revealed[/caption]

And if that country doesn’t appeal to you, there are nine others with shockingly cheap alcohol that could see you splash just £1.

In all fairness, they’re not the classic holidays sun-loving Brits would go on.

But it’s interesting to see just how little you could be spending if you did decide to hop on a plane out of here this Easter break.

Nigeria has been revealed as pulling the cheapest beers for just 25p – with Belarus following close behind.

The Eastern European location is offering each pint at just 75p.

Vietnam came in at selling to punters for 79p while the most expensive pint of the cheapest is still just only £1.05, in Kazakhstan.

We also have the most expensive locations for your thirst-quenching pint – and some of them aren’t surprising.

The average cost of a pint in the UK is now over £4 for the first time – at £4.58, compared to £2.30 in 2008 during the last recession.

And a pint in London’s West End can top £9 while one in ten taverns sell at between £6-£6.99 and 40 per cent ask the average of £4.58.

It comes after one UK pub was hailed for taking a trip down memory lane and selling pints for as little as £2.30.

The Waggon and Horses in Oldbury, West Midlands, started flogging all beers, ciders and ales for under three quid to encourage punters to drink in traditional local boozers.

A pint of Stella will now set you back just £2.80, while Carling, Coors and John Smiths is £2.40 and a pint of Thatcher’s Gold is £2.30.

Leaseholder Matthew Porter said: “I’ve had this pub for seven years, and it’s a proper locals pub. It deserves to be busy every day.

“There are multi-million pound companies either side of us who are putting their prices up and we’re putting ours down to say ‘come and drink with us’.

“It’s hard for people at the minute, some are struggling and aren’t going to go out and spend £40 on a Friday night anymore.”

The most expensive nations to buy a beer

THE most expensive nations to buy a beer in – from the steepest

United Arab Emirates – £8.51
Oman – £8.13
Norway – £7.44
Israel – £6.42
Switzerland – £6.23
Finland – £5.98
Singapore – £5.87
Denmark – £5.73
Sweden – £5.72
Australia – £5.69

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