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Whitbread to Cut 3,800 Jobs at Premier Inn in Five-Year Restructuring Plan
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BBC Business4/30/2026Business1 min read

Whitbread to Cut 3,800 Jobs at Premier Inn in Five-Year Restructuring Plan

UK's biggest hotel chain to overhaul restaurant model and save £250m amid falling profits

Quick Look

  • Whitbread, owner of Premier Inn, announces 3,800 job cuts in UK and Ireland as part of a five-year plan to save £250m and overhaul restaurant operations.
  • The company will replace restaurants at 197 hotels with an integrated food and drink model and cut £1bn from its capital building programme.
  • Pre-tax profit fell 19% to £298m for the year to February.

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Why It Matters

Whitbread employs 30,000 people across its Premier Inn chain, the UK's biggest hotel group. The company faces increased operating costs including business rates and national insurance contributions, while profit has declined year-on-year.

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The owner of Premier Inn is to cut 3,800 jobs in the UK and Ireland as part of a five-year plan to save £250m and overhaul its restaurants. Whitbread, based in Houghton Regis, Bedfordshire, also said it would change the way its serves food and cut £1bn from its capital building programme. Restaurants at 197 hotels will be replaced by an "integrated food and drink model", which the company said would be more efficient and was preferred by guests. Chief executive Dominic Paul said increased costs in the form of business rates and national insurance meant changes were needed at the UK's biggest hotel chain. "We've looked hard at the options open to us to maximise value creation over the medium and long-term," he said. This has been a rigorous process and we've approached all options with an open mind. "Our new five-year plan builds on our strengths and drives a significant acceleration of our strategy." Whitbread, which employs 30,000 people, said the plans were subject to a staff consultation and it expected to retain a significant proportion of those affected through redeployment. The firm made 88 roles redundant last year when it moved a call centre to Egypt and cut 1,500 jobs in 2024. It comes after the business reported a pre-tax profit of £298m for the year to 26 February, which was 19% lower than the year before.

Open Questions

  • How many of the 3,800 affected staff will be redeployed?
  • What specific changes will the new integrated food and drink model involve?
  • Will any hotel locations close entirely?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC Business.

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