Yet pubs were not lined up as targets in the Budget, like millionaires in rich homes or unscrupulous gambling firms. The Chancellor said she was "backing the great British pub".
And she has cut one of the elements of business rates, the so-called 'multiplier'.
When tax rates are worked out, the official rateable value is then adjusted by a 'multiplier'. It was 50% for pubs and hospitality firms. From 2026 it will fall to 40%.
"That's great, but it's not the whole story," Wesley Birch tells me.
Mr Birch has two pubs near Stroud, and a catering firm. We meet in The Ship Inn and chat by a roaring log fire.
"The problem is my rateable value has more than doubled," he explains. He is typical of publicans, who have seen the latest official valuations of their pubs soar.
This was expected, as it is based on the trading situation in 2024. The previous valuation was taken in 2021, at the height of Covid lockdowns, social distancing and pubs losing money hand over fist.
The government knew the valuations would increase the baseline for hospitality business rates. It has taken two steps to reduce the pain a little. Cutting the multiplier to 40% is one, and the other is to phase in the increase.
Treasury officials told me pubs, cafes and hotels will not have to pay the whole increase in the first year.
The spokesperson explained: "Most properties seeing increases will see them capped at 15% or less next year."
But the government accepts the business rates will, over three years, go up.
The pub trade is braced for big increases.
Allen Simpson, chief executive of UK Hospitality, told me pubs will, on average, see their business rates by 76%, around £12,000 for a typical small pub.
"And we will for sure see business losses, and closures, as a result."