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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

No children in pub after 5pm

581 replies

SweetSouls · 15/04/2024 10:16

My local banned children after 7pm a few years ago.

This seemed unnecessary to me, but I suppose that's after 'bed time' so I could sort of see the logic. Adult time etc.

On Saturday I went to stop there for a drink in the afternoon, and they have now banned children after 5pm.

This seems very odd to me given it's an area that people move to with their families. It's not some town centre boozer, it's surrounded by housing.

Is this just not terrible business? I do not get it at all.

It was almost empty, incidentally, at 5.15 on a Saturday afternoon.

OP posts:
wombat15 · 15/04/2024 14:14

I think it depends on whether it's specialising in food or more of drinks pub with rubbish food. Also, what age are children banned from? Children over 8 are usually well behaved and certainly no worse than drunk adults.

Anonymous2025 · 15/04/2024 14:15

I honestly will never grasp how unfriendly to children the U.K. is , even after decades of living here .

DyslexicPoster · 15/04/2024 14:15

We was in a pub in a city centre last week and wasn't asked to leave until 9pm. We was eating there.

I really have never been to pub with kids without eating something. I have also never seen pissed patents with their kids in pub. Maybe that's area dependent.

Marblessolveeverything · 15/04/2024 14:17

I don't think children should be in pubs. I want the pub to be an adult only place. I hate seeing people knocking back pints while children as re sitting playing devices on full volume, nope.

I do judge adults who drink in a pub with children. But family background is in the trade and there were a lot of very badly treated children in the 90s that influence my view.

Harrysarseinthedogbowl · 15/04/2024 14:19

TheCadoganArms · 15/04/2024 11:15

My local pub has a similar ban on children (from 6pm). I believe there is more friction these days as there has, in my experience, been an erosion of what were traditional adult only places, especially pubs, over the last few decades by some parents who think every space should in some way cater for them and that any noise or disruption caused by their kids is something everyone else should just tolerate. Not wanting kids in my local pub (thankfully the landlord agrees) I imagine is just catering for people who just want to enjoy a pint/wine in peace without the soundtrack of Frozen playing or listening to some tantrum. Anyway, my pub is a fantastically yea olde wonky old place with low ceilings, stone floors, open fire places, no fruit machines and bags of atmosphere. It is simply not a good environment for children as there are loads of trip hazards, dogs, no garden etc. If you want a child friendly environment there is another pub around the corner with a garden and playground that deliberately caters for families so just go there and leave my boozer alone!

Your pub sounds lovely, apart from the dogs.

Deathbyfluffy · 15/04/2024 14:23

Idontjetwashthefucker · 15/04/2024 11:16

I'd be quite happy with this to be honest, I was in my very busy local on Saturday and there were kids running riot whilst their parents did fuck all to rein them in

This.
Our local had a similar problem - kids either sat on tablets with noise blaring, running around being a pain in the backside or generally being loud and obnoxious when people are trying to enjoy their meal / drink.

It's now child-free and enjoyable again thankfully!
The problem isn't the pub, it's the parents who let their little 'angels' run riot.

girlswillbegirls · 15/04/2024 14:23

KimberleyClark · 15/04/2024 14:03

Most pubs serve coffee and soft drinks too.

Yes but the difference is the amount of people who consume those.

In other countries you bring the kids with you to share the experience of for example your town's festival/ event or just to meet your friends with their children. You bring them for dinner late and of course expect manners and that normal food is eaten by them. In your mind the enjoyment is the festival/ gathering and your kids being part of it. You might drink one glass of wine, water and a coffee. It's enjoyable.

Seeing a pub as "adult space" where people go to get drunk is sad in my opinion.
It's the normalisation of heavy drinking that I find sad.

ARichtGoodDram · 15/04/2024 14:30

One of the pubs local to us has taken the decision to ban children and dogs

The manager himself has said it’ll either be a massively popular decision or it’ll be one they have to reconsider in a couple of months.

The two other pubs locally (one a Wetherspoons) allow children until 8 or 9 and allow dogs

Harrysarseinthedogbowl · 15/04/2024 14:31

DJQuackers · 15/04/2024 13:30

I don't know how the UK became so anti-child, it's become quite a pathetic society.

On the contrary, it's become ridiculously child-centred.

Vod · 15/04/2024 14:32

It might be terrible business, or it might not be, but their call either way. Time will tell.

Either way, it's daft when people talk about fairness in relation to what clientele a venue aims itself at. The pub is entitled to pitch at whatever custom they want, within the law. They've no obligation to provide you with your preferred option OP, and the same is equally true for the people in the thread who think pubs should be adult only.

Lucytheloose · 15/04/2024 14:32

ARichtGoodDram · 15/04/2024 14:30

One of the pubs local to us has taken the decision to ban children and dogs

The manager himself has said it’ll either be a massively popular decision or it’ll be one they have to reconsider in a couple of months.

The two other pubs locally (one a Wetherspoons) allow children until 8 or 9 and allow dogs

I'd go to that pub! I wish them well.

Whatevershallidowithmylife · 15/04/2024 14:33

Never understood why people take their kids to a pub anyway, high risk of seeing drunks, heightened emotions etc

IcedPurple · 15/04/2024 14:33

TayIor · 15/04/2024 10:25

Yeah I think its a crazy business decision, even 7pm is early. We've just done an event this weekend in our pub and it was packed from 1pm right through til kids had to leave at 8pm. Having families in brings a lot of business. They mustn't need the business.

Many people will avoid pubs which allow children. I know that because I am one of those people. "Family friendly restaurants" are bad enough, but "family friendly pubs" are a contradiction in terms for me. Kids may be adorable to their parents, but they aren't to anyone else.

BobbyBiscuits · 15/04/2024 14:33

@smellslikecinnamon yeah, you're not wrong. I wasn't suggesting the pubs OP frequents are as bad as that. This was a very rough bit of London in the early 00s full of alkies and think nearly all those pubs have closed down now!
It's actually nearly gone a bit posh. Haha.

Vod · 15/04/2024 14:34

ARichtGoodDram · 15/04/2024 14:30

One of the pubs local to us has taken the decision to ban children and dogs

The manager himself has said it’ll either be a massively popular decision or it’ll be one they have to reconsider in a couple of months.

The two other pubs locally (one a Wetherspoons) allow children until 8 or 9 and allow dogs

Yeah I can see how that could go very well or very badly!

MammaTo · 15/04/2024 14:35

Myself and most of my friends all spent time in pubs as kids. Playing pool with my dad and his friends, bottle of coke and a packet of crisps. It was always good fun, but we was always sent home absolutely no later then 5-6pm, as adults would start to pack out the place.
I think it’s all a balancing act, nobody wants to see kids in the presence of drunken adults past bedtime, but having a pub lunch and a glass or 2 of wine is fine IMO.

fitzwilliamdarcy · 15/04/2024 14:38

Pubs are always given by parents on here as an example of an adult-only space - usually because they’re the ones saying that intolerant adults should stick to adult spaces.

Then in the same breath they’re complaining that pubs aren’t child-friendly enough!

I went in a pub for a meal at Easter and walked straight back out again because the behaviour on show from families was genuinely atrocious. The staff looked done in. I don’t especially like pubs as I don’t drink but I’m generally becoming more and more keen on spaces where children are banned - because of their parents!

TorroFerney · 15/04/2024 14:38

Mrsjayy · 15/04/2024 11:00

I remember in the late 70s early 80s we would be sat in a pub on a saturday with a packet of crisps and a Lemonade apparently it was after a walk but we would basically just walk to the pub !

You were lucky to be in the pub. I was often in the car as no kids allowed or there may be a , usually very depressing, family room.

Devonshiregal · 15/04/2024 14:39

TayIor · 15/04/2024 10:25

Yeah I think its a crazy business decision, even 7pm is early. We've just done an event this weekend in our pub and it was packed from 1pm right through til kids had to leave at 8pm. Having families in brings a lot of business. They mustn't need the business.

Nope. It brings a lot of trouble and some cheap small plate meals for the kids. You have to do more work more often than not and make less. Also 7pm is usual licensing terms.

And you might think it’s fun having a room full of screaming children while you’re trying to carry hot food and hot drinks across a packed room but I can assure you 99% of hospitality staff and owners do not. Also, perhaps you’re one of the wonderful ones who don’t let their kids jig up and down, run around inside and out, run behind the bar, stand by doors, drop food all over the floor and leave snot rags for the staff to clean up but again, I can assure you, that there are a surprising amount of parents who simply ‘let go’ of their parental responsibilities as soon as they enter the building, preferring to drink their drinks and enjoy their “break” rather than chase around after their kids. So who has to do the telling off and getting kids to stop climbing the fire escapes - oh yes, the staff. Annnnd who then yells at said staff for performing these unpaid childcare services? Oh yes, the parents!

If you come to a pub and sit down for an hour and a half then leave, all quietly and respectfully then that is wonderful. But LOTS don’t. And a 5pound plate of fish diners, chips and beans does not a profit turn.

So yes, I can understand why a landlord might just say take your kids elsewhere on a Saturday evening please.

Woahthehorsey · 15/04/2024 14:39

It's often related to their licence or insurance, rather than a decision they've specifically made.

It could be the police have had to attend on a couple of occasions and that has had a knock on effect to their licence.

Yes it's annoying, but it isn't necessarily their own decision

TorroFerney · 15/04/2024 14:40

Allfur · 15/04/2024 11:37

Nah, let's go further than that, bring back the good old days when pubs were just for the men , escaping their wives and families

That was my childhood! My dad went every single day. But sure thats The same in some pubs today.

Mrsjayy · 15/04/2024 14:41

TorroFerney · 15/04/2024 14:38

You were lucky to be in the pub. I was often in the car as no kids allowed or there may be a , usually very depressing, family room.

Urgh yeah the "family room" was grim where we went had outside seating in summer that's where we sat

IcedPurple · 15/04/2024 14:41

In other countries you bring the kids with you to share the experience of for example your town's festival/ event or just to meet your friends with their children. You bring them for dinner late and of course expect manners and that normal food is eaten by them. In your mind the enjoyment is the festival/ gathering and your kids being part of it. You might drink one glass of wine, water and a coffee. It's enjoyable.

It may be 'enjoyable' for the children's parents, but not for those who have their evening ruined by other people's kids. You may think your children are incredibly well behaved, but that's because you've grown used to their behaviour. They will still be annoying to everyone else.

Sometimes people just want to spend time with grown ups. I bet they do in 'other countries' too.

Deathbyfluffy · 15/04/2024 14:43

Anonymous2025 · 15/04/2024 14:15

I honestly will never grasp how unfriendly to children the U.K. is , even after decades of living here .

It's a drinking venue, not a creche. Take your kids to some God-awful Wacky Warehouse chain pub if it's that important to you.

PamPamPamPam · 15/04/2024 14:44

ARichtGoodDram · 15/04/2024 14:30

One of the pubs local to us has taken the decision to ban children and dogs

The manager himself has said it’ll either be a massively popular decision or it’ll be one they have to reconsider in a couple of months.

The two other pubs locally (one a Wetherspoons) allow children until 8 or 9 and allow dogs

I would love that! Don't get me started on the fact that dogs seem to be allowed into every single venue now-it's so annoying.

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