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Rick Stein shutters Marlborough restaurant as group struggles with losses

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Celebrity chef Rick Stein will close his Marlborough restaurant this weekend, the second outlet to shut in a week as his family-run hospitality empire battles mounting financial pressure.

The High Street site, which opened almost a decade ago, will serve its last meals on Sunday, October 5. The closure follows the permanent shutdown of Stein’s Coffee Shop in Padstow, Cornwall, where three staff were redeployed.

In a statement signed by Stein, his wife Jill and sons Ed, Jack and Charlie, the family said the Marlborough branch was “no longer viable” and thanked staff for their “passion, hard work and dedication”. Customers with gift cards will still be able to redeem them across the wider group.

The business, which spans restaurants, hotels, shops, a cookery school and an online retail arm, has been hit by falling sales and rising costs. Last year, group revenues declined 5.4 per cent to £30.4 million, while losses deepened. At the Seafood Restaurant in Padstow, Stein’s flagship, pre-tax losses widened to £459,000.

Stein has been vocal in blaming government tax policy for worsening the strain on hospitality. He has criticised Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s rise in employer national insurance contributions and other levies, arguing that they have added costs to an industry already squeezed by weak demand. “Because the economy is not looking too good, people aren’t going out as much, so the one thing you don’t want to do is impose a heavy tax on the sorts of industries that are actually producing stuff,” he said in a recent interview.

Stein’s dominance in Padstow — where he operates 13 venues — has transformed the town into a major tourist destination over the past five decades. His presence has been credited with driving visitor numbers and employment but has also sparked criticism. Locals argue that the “Padstein” brand has sent property prices soaring, squeezed independent traders and made the town heavily reliant on tourism. Average house prices in Padstow now top £750,000, above London levels, while the town’s 2,500 population often doubles in summer as holidaymakers and second-home owners flood in.

The closures highlight the wider fragility of Britain’s restaurant and leisure sector, which is contending with sluggish consumer spending and higher operating costs. Industry groups have warned that Labour’s planned reforms to business rates and further tax rises could accelerate closures unless relief measures are introduced.

For Stein, whose brand has become synonymous with Cornish seafood, the retrenchment underlines the challenge of keeping an extensive portfolio profitable in an unforgiving trading environment. The family said they had “loved being part of the Marlborough community” but insisted that difficult decisions were needed to secure the future of the wider group.

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