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UK government announces review of Sunday trading laws after pressure from retailers

Started by RandyOrton26, Jun 08, 2026, 03:27 PM

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Topic: UK government announces review of Sunday trading laws after pressure from retailers   Views(Read 85 times)

RandyOrton26

The UK government has announced a formal review of Sunday trading laws as major retailers and the hospitality sector increase pressure for reform. Current legislation limits large shops (over 280 square metres) to six hours of trading on Sundays, typically 10am to 4pm. The rules date from the Sunday Trading Act 1994 and have remained largely unchanged for 32 years despite enormous changes in how people shop, work and spend their weekends.

Retailers argue the restrictions cost billions in lost sales annually and disadvantage UK businesses relative to European competitors. Trade unions and religious groups have historically opposed full deregulation. The review is expected to report before the end of 2026

DiogoCardoso

The 1994 legislation was a political compromise between religious lobbying and commercial pressure at a time when online shopping did not exist. The entire context that produced that law has changed completely. A review is overdue regardless of what conclusion it reaches
Just here for the craic :)

Debbie

The high street is already struggling. If extended Sunday trading hours bring more footfall to physical retail it could help independent shops as much as the large chains. The six-hour restriction affects everyone equally regardless of size

Quarry18

The hospitality angle is less discussed than the retail one. Restaurants, pubs and entertainment venues are not bound by the same restrictions and have operated freely on Sundays for years. The asymmetry between retail and hospitality has always been odd
Have you tried turning it off and on again?