The cheapest European countries for a pint
Exclusive: head to the Balkans for a bargain boozer
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Your support makes all the difference.The parlous state of sterling has pushed up the relative cost of drinking for British travellers, according to analysis by The Independent of the latest research by Eurostat.
The European statistical agency compared the cost of alcoholic drinks across all 28 EU nations, as well as six adjacent countries.
Iceland is the most expensive place for alcohol, with drinks an average of 108 per cent higher than in the UK.
Norway is in second place, with high taxes pushing prices 96 per cent above British levels.
Among European Union nations, alcoholic beverages in Finland cost an average of 41 per cent more than in the UK. The corresponding figure a year ago was 35 per cent.
In second place is Ireland, 27 per cent above British levels.
Sweden’s drinks prices are 18 per cent higher than the UK’s, which actually represents a small decrease in the course of the last year.
Greece is rated fourth-most expensive in the EU, three per cent above Britain.
The UK, in fifth place, continues to be more expensive than most EU countries. Eurostat says prices are 29 per cent higher than the European mean – which happens to represented by Italy.
British prices are said to be 37 per cent above those in France and 54 per cent higher than the cheapest major holiday nation, Spain.
Prices for British travellers in Spain have risen by 4 per cent over the past year.
Eurostat’s figures for Turkey, regarded as one of the lower-cost Mediterranean destinations, look questionable, however.
Drink prices are said to have fallen by one-sixth in the course of a year, yet cost 26 per cent more than in the UK – which could make British holidaymakers choke on their Efes beer, Turkish wine or raki.
The very cheapest destination in the EU is Romania, with Bulgaria almost as inexpensive. Britain is almost 75 per cent pricier than both.
Cheaper still, though, are two countries that have yet to join the European Union: Bosnia-Herzegovina and North Macedonia. A round of drinks in the UK will typically cost 80 per cent more than in either component of the former Yugoslavia. And for the price of a small glass of wine in Iceland, a drinker in either country could buy an entire bottle.
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