Article

Where do adults see alcohol marketing? Insight from a cross-sectional survey in the United Kingdom

Details

Citation

Critchlow N, MacKintosh AM & Ford A (2025) Where do adults see alcohol marketing? Insight from a cross-sectional survey in the United Kingdom. Journal of Public Health. https://doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdaf118

Abstract
Background: There is limited insight about the reach of alcohol marketing among adults in the United Kingdom (UK). We therefore examined awareness across a range of marketing activities and sources and how this differed by degree of alcohol use. Method: An online cross-sectional survey with a nonprobability adult sample (18+) in the UK (n = 6021). Participants self-reported past-month awareness of alcohol marketing and special price deals from companies/brands, off-trade shops (e.g. supermarkets), online retailers, and on-trade venues (e.g. pubs/bars). Alcohol use was assessed using the AUDIT-C (coded: nondrinkers, lower-risk drinkers, higher-risk drinkers, not stated). Results: For alcohol companies/brands, 65.9% had seen advertising (e.g. on TV) and 79.5% had seen wider marketing (e.g. sponsorship). For off-trade shops, 86.8% had seen marketing (e.g. product displays) and 76.6% had seen special price deals (e.g. multi-buy discounts). For online retailers, 30.8% had seen marketing (e.g. leaflets/flyers) and 52.4% had seen special price offers. For on-trade venues, 69.0% had seen marketing (e.g. posters/leaflets/flyers) and 52.1% had seen special price offers. The odds of reporting awareness were generally lower among nondrinkers and higher among higher-risk drinkers (vs. lower-risk). Conclusion: Adults see alcohol marketing through various activities and sources, with awareness generally increasing with degree of alcohol use.

Keywords
Alcohol marketing; alcohol advertising; alcohol promotion; alcohol pricing; surveys; adults; alcohol use

Journal
Journal of Public Health

StatusEarly Online
FundersDepartment of Health
Publication date online30/09/2025
Date accepted by journal01/09/2025
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37451
ISSN1741-3842
eISSN1741-3850

People (3)

Dr Nathan Critchlow

Dr Nathan Critchlow

Research Fellow, Institute for Social Marketing

Dr Allison Ford

Dr Allison Ford

Associate Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Ms Anne Marie MacKintosh

Ms Anne Marie MacKintosh

Associate Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

Projects (1)

Files (1)