---
title: The Under-16 Energy Drink Ban Is Confirmed
description: England bans energy drink sales to under-16s from 6 April 2027. Restaurants,
  cafes and pubs are in scope; vending machines lose them entirely.
source: Duty Room
source_url: https://dutyroom.com
published_on: '2026-07-16'
updated_on: '2026-07-16'
market: uk
sectors:
- pubs
- restaurants
- hotels
canonical_url: https://dutyroom.com/uk/alerts/energy-drink-under-16-ban
---

# The Under-16 Energy Drink Ban Is Confirmed

England bans energy drink sales to under-16s from 6 April 2027. Restaurants, cafes and pubs are in scope; vending machines lose them entirely.

A 15-year-old can buy a can of Monster from your fridge today. From 6 April 2027, that sale is set to become unlawful in England.

The [consultation outcome](https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/banning-the-sale-of-high-caffeine-energy-drinks-to-children/outcome/banning-the-sale-of-high-caffeine-energy-drinks-to-children-consultation-outcome) published on 16 July 2026 keeps the shape proposed last autumn: any drink over 150mg of caffeine per litre is covered, apart from tea and coffee. Standard cans of Red Bull, Monster, Relentless and Prime Energy all come in at more than double that threshold. None of it is law yet; the regulations haven't been laid, and the April 2027 date is subject to parliamentary scrutiny.

## Cafes and pubs count as retailers

Every retailer in England is covered, "including in-store, online and in the out-of-home sector". The consultation scope named restaurants, cafes, pubs, takeaways and delivery services alongside shops.

The government won't prescribe how age gets verified online. Retailers "will remain responsible for ensuring compliance". On licensed premises the in-person check is familiar ground: our [Challenge 25 briefing](https://dutyroom.com/uk/briefings/what-is-challenge-25) explains the ID-and-refusals routine the trade already runs for alcohol.

## Vending machines lose them entirely

Put the same drink in a vending machine and the rule is total: no sales, to buyers of any age. The government judged machine age checks too patchy to rely on.

Liability would sit with "the person who controls or manages the premises where the vending machine is located", not with a vending company that merely owns or stocks it. A third-party machine in a hotel corridor or a leisure-centre lobby would be the site's responsibility once the regulations take effect.

## Enforcement and records

Enforcement would fall to local authorities, with trading standards expected to lead and test-purchase powers still needing Home Office agreement. The proposed fixed monetary penalties are £1,500 for a business with fewer than 50 employees and £2,500 at 50 or more, and prosecution under the Food Safety Act 1990 remains available.

Implementation guidance for retailers is still to come. What an operator can do without it: check which fridge lines clear 150mg per litre, and whose name is on the vending contract. Duty Room's [licensing overview](https://dutyroom.com/uk/licensing) shows how refusals and staff-training records stay organised per site.

---

Published by [Duty Room](https://dutyroom.com/uk/), software for organizing, tracking, and evidencing operational compliance.