New BrewDog owner pumps in £50m to steady Scottish beer giant

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The new owner of BrewDog has revealed it has already spent about £50m to stabilise the Scottish brewer and retailer and get the business back on an even keel. The investment marks the latest chapter in the turbulent recent history of the Ellon‑based brand, which has gone from craft beer poster child to cautionary tale amid mounting losses and a dramatic collapse in valuation.

BrewDog, once touted as a £1bn‑plus disrupter that aimed to revolutionise the beer industry, has endured several years of escalating costs, write‑downs and operating losses.

In 2023 alone, the company reported a pre‑tax loss of £59.2m despite revenues rising to £354.6m, underlining the pressure on its bar estate and brewing operations. Those financial headwinds ultimately culminated in a sale to Tilray Brands earlier this year for just £33m, a stark contrast to the multibillion‑pound valuations once floated.

Since acquiring BrewDog, Tilray has moved quickly to shore up the business, with chief executive Irwin Simon describing a clear focus on stabilisation before any ambitious growth plans.

As part of that strategy, the new owner has added a number of former BrewDog bars back into the fold, including sites in Bristol, Newcastle, Aberdeen, Glasgow and the Manchester DogHouse hotel, taking the UK estate to at least 16 pubs. Simon has stressed that the UK remains the “foundation” of the operation, with efforts centred on reassuring staff, re‑engaging customers and rebuilding relationships with suppliers.

The £50m outlay is being positioned as essential emergency capital to keep the company trading, tackle legacy issues and restart investment in core infrastructure. BrewDog’s new owners have previously highlighted the lack of liquidity they found on arrival, claiming the brewer had effectively run out of money to pay staff before the rescue deal was struck. Against that backdrop, the fresh injection is designed to cover immediate obligations while funding operational improvements and a reset of the brand’s pub portfolio.

The situation is particularly bruising for BrewDog’s 220,000 “Equity for Punks” crowdfunding investors, who collectively put around £75m into the business across multiple funding rounds. Those small shareholders, lured by the promise of owning a slice of the fast‑growing brewer, have seen their stakes rendered virtually worthless by the cut‑price sale.

BrewDog’s new owner has sought to soften the blow by preserving some perks, such as birthday beers, but the collapse has already become a textbook example of the risks that come with mixing fandom, marketing and investment.

As reported in The Times, Tilray Brands chief executive Irwin Simon said: “It’s four months into it and I am real happy we acquired this. It’s a phenomenal brand, phenomenal assets, phenomenal opportunities.

“We probably put another £50million back into this business from a cash flow and an investment standpoint.

“We were the ones funding payroll and inventories, ingredients and stuff like that. It’s in a good place but there’s still a lot of work to do.”

For Scottish hospitality, BrewDog’s future still matters. The brand remains a high‑profile employer with brewing operations in Ellon and a presence in key city centres including Edinburgh, Glasgow and Aberdeen. Tilray’s £50m stabilisation push suggests it sees long‑term value in the business, provided it can move on from the controversies surrounding its founders and rebuild trust with drinkers, employees and former “punks.”

With the new owner talking up a back‑to‑basics approach focused on paying suppliers, supporting teams and listening to customers, the next few years will prove whether BrewDog can reclaim its place as a flagship of Scotland’s modern beer scene, or whether this investment represents a last roll of the dice.

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