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Starbucks’s retail arm gets £13.7m tax credit even as sales increase

about 3 hours ago
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Starbucks’s UK retail arm received a £13.7m corporation tax credit last year, even as its sales increased 6% and it added more than 90 stores.The credit, which can be used to offset future tax bills, comes after losses widened to £41.3m in the 12 months to the end of September – almost matching the £40m it paid in royalty and licence fees to its parent company.Starbucks said price increases, new loyalty schemes and the introduction of “freshly baked in-store food” had helped to increase sales to £556.

3m, accounts filed at Companies House show.Paul Monaghan, the chief executive of the Fair Tax Foundation campaign group, said: “This all feels so very Groundhog Day.As per a decade ago, Starbucks UK reports annual growth in income and store numbers, whilst at the same time declaring a loss due to the payment of hefty royalty fees to other Starbucks subsidiaries.The end result, no corporation tax is paid.”Last year’s tax credit comes after the UK retail business paid no corporation tax for 2024 as it dived to a £35m loss after paying £40m in royalty and licence fees to its parent.

The royalty fees were paid to a UK-based entity, Starbucks Emea, which collects similar fees from across Europe, the Middle East and Africa.That business paid out $27m (£20m) in corporation tax, the accounts show, but it was unclear how much of that would be paid in the UK, after it made a profit of $84.5m on revenues of $402m collected from several countries.The profit came after it paid out almost $65m under a “cost-sharing agreement” with its US parent and $17m in “support fees” to Starbucks Italy.The group also paid a $207m dividend to the US parent, up $7m on a year before.

A spokesperson for the Starbucks group said the company was committed to paying all its taxes, wherever they are due.“As a responsible business, we manage our global tax responsibilities in keeping with our mission and values,” it added.“Our approach to tax aims to align with the needs and long-term interests of our various stakeholders – including governments, shareholders, partners and the communities where we operate and source products.”Starbucks UK opened 92 more outlets during the year, taking the total to 1,304, including those run by franchise partners.The openings included 25 company-run stores, taking that total to 398.

However, it said it had cut overall staff numbers by 244 to 5,352 because it had shifted away from part-time workers towards full-time staff.The company said its losses had widened in 2025, citing a “challenging consumer environment characterised by inflationary pressures, reduced discretionary spending and increased competition”.It said prices of unroasted coffee had increased by more than 35% since August 2025 while wages and benefits costs had increased by 7.8% compared with 2024, including the government’s increase in employer national insurance contributions.The company also incurred a one-off cost associated with the closure of some underperforming stores.

Starbucks UK said its parent group had ploughed £30m of cash into the business to keep it afloat in the year to the end of September and a further £60m in February this year.It said the contribution was made to “strengthen the company’s liquidity position in the light of financial pressures experience in 2024 and 2025” as well as costs linked to its restructure.The group took out a £70m credit facility, which expires in December, and at its year-end in September had £166m of debts payable within a year, up from £144m a year before.
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The Guide #237: Fab 5 Freddy, the street artist at the heart of New York’s creative zenith

In this week’s newsletter: A new memoir by Fred Brathwaite offers an insight into the city’s emerging underground scene in the 70s and 80s – and shows us the power of subcultures in difficult times Don’t get The Guide delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereHello everyone, I’m Coco Khan, covering for Gwilym Mumford, and this week, as the sun started to peep out from behind the clouds, I counted five Jean-Michel Basquiat T-shirts on passersby during a park walk.Sure, I may live in a trendy London borough – but it’s still hardly surprising, given that the name and works of the New York artist whose roots were in graffiti have been licensed to fashion brands from Next, Primark and Uniqlo to Supreme and Saint Laurent. It’s hard to imagine that the artist – who died at 27 of a drug overdose, and whose signature slogan SAMO© (Same Old Crap – a criticism of consumerism, and the commodification of art, with a playful copyright mark) – would approve of the Basquiat name being on keyrings, tote bags and clothing. But hey, what do I know – I’m just another purist bore still upset that Ramones T-shirts are worn by millions who couldn’t name a song, when the Ramones themselves did not care.Still, the hope is that such merchandise connects new audiences to the artist’s work and graffiti as an art form

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From The Drama to Malcolm in the Middle: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

R-Patz and Zandaya star in a romcom with bite, and the lovably dysfunctional family is back in a revival of the turn-of-the-millennium comedy hitThe DramaOut now It is hard to imagine a more zeitgeist-flavoured proposition than Zendaya and Robert Pattinson starring in a dark romantic comedy from A24 – and frankly we are here for it. The pair play a couple whose relationship is tested by the revelation of brand new information during their engagement. Directed by Kristoffer Borgli (Dream Scenario).Kim Novak’s VertigoOut now The notional star of Alfred Hitchcock’s masterly ode to obsession is James Stewart, but it is the image of Kim Novak in her iconic dual role that endures. Documentarian Alexandre O Philippe sits down with the actor as she discusses her career in general and her iconic work on Vertigo in particular

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Post your questions for DJ Shadow

It’s almost 30 years since DJ Shadow released his era-defining debut album, Endtroducing….., and as is the way of the nostalgia industry, it had a lavish 25th-anniversary reissue five years ago, remastered at Abbey Road studios. It was such a success that Shadow has decided to repeat the process and clean up his “pre-album and non-album” catalogue. In May comes The Mo’Wax Singles 1993-1997, a box set featuring eight 12ins with all the Californian producer’s singles for James Lavelle’s label, plus alternative mixes and brand new art

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Colbert on Trump’s shifting tone on Iran: ‘It’s a military strategy known as starting a 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle’

Late-night hosts touched on soaring oil prices from Donald Trump’s war in Iran as he backs down from solving the crisis in the strait of Hormuz.Stephen Colbert opened Tuesday’s monologue with an acknowledgment that for the first time since 2022, gas prices have soared to more than $4 a gallon. “I mean, who could’ve seen this coming? Just two days ago gas was a reasonable $3.98,” the Late Show host quipped. “Yesterday it was $3

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Chatting dating, jazz and the Harlem Renaissance: the exclusive supper clubs where Black women nourish community

Dimmed lights and the honey-like vocals of R&B singers greeted guests at Sost, a restaurant in Washington DC, in late December. Though they entered as strangers, the 11 Black women attendees hugged each other before taking their seats. The ambiance was intimate and soulful, with a sparse table setting in a private room that boasted deep red walls. Crystle Johnson, the founder of Kinory, a dining community for Black women, led the group in a moment of silent meditation.As an icebreaker, everyone shared who they were without talking about their profession

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‘After one gig, someone stole my car with my dole money in it’: Morcheeba on how they made The Sea

We’d made our first album and were waiting for it to come out. But we wanted to carry on writing more stuff while we were in the mood. I even cut Christmas dinner short at my uncle’s in Brixton, London, so we could get back to the studio. We would work until we passed out, then I’d sleep underneath the mixing desk with my head in the bass drum, as that’s where the pillow was.One night in early 1996, my brother Paul and I stayed up all night drinking vodka, trying to write as many songs as we could, and we came up with much of the Big Calm album

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technologySee all
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Amazon upsets ebook lovers by ending support for old Kindle devices

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OpenAI shelves Stargate UK in blow to Britain’s AI ambitions

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British computer scientist denies he is bitcoin developer Satoshi Nakamoto

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Britons warned about Russian hackers targeting internet routers for espionage

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The life-changing magic of wearing smartglasses | Letters

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Tell us: do you use AI chatbots to make decisions for you?

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