Dismay at Closure of Popular Town Centre Coffee Shop


Artisan 'couldn't make the numbers work' after rent and rates increases


Artisan on New Broadway will serve its last customer next month. Picture: Instagram

January 29, 2026

Artisan Coffee, one of Ealing’s most popular independent cafés, will close its New Broadway branch on 8 February after more than twelve years serving the local community. The announcement has left many residents saddened, with regular customers describing the café as a vital social space that brought people together in the heart of the town.

The closure follows a series of steep cost increases that the business says it can no longer absorb. According to Edwin Harrison, a director of Naked Coffee Limited, which owns the Artisan Coffee chain, the café is facing a £9,000 rise in business rates next year, alongside a £25,000 rent increase demanded by the landlord. These pressures come on top of previous national insurance rises and other operating costs that have climbed sharply in recent years.

Mr Harrison said the decision had been devastating for the team but they just ‘couldn’t make the numbers work’ . He explained that despite strong customer loyalty and consistently high sales, the financial pressures had made the business unsustainable. He added that the café had been a well‑loved part of Ealing for more than a decade, and that the team was deeply saddened to be leaving.

Artisan Coffee began in Putney in 2011 and quickly became known for its focus on high‑quality beans, skilled baristas and welcoming spaces designed for creativity and conversation. The Ealing branch was one of the chain’s earliest and most successful locations, attracting a loyal following of families, remote workers, students and weekend visitors. Over time, the brand expanded to several sites across London and helped shape the capital’s independent coffee culture.

The closure reflects the wider challenges facing hospitality businesses across the UK. Independent cafés and restaurants have been hit particularly hard by rising rents, higher business rates, increased staffing costs and energy bills that remain significantly above pre‑pandemic levels. Many operators have warned that margins have become impossibly tight, and insolvencies in the sector have reached record highs over the past two years.

The situation has also reignited debate about the government’s approach to business rates relief. The Chancellor recently announced that pubs are to receive dedicated relief in recognition of their role as community assets, but cafés and restaurants do not benefit from the same support. Hospitality trade bodies have long argued that this creates an uneven playing field, especially when cafés often serve similar community functions and face identical cost pressures. Many independent operators say that the lack of equivalent relief has accelerated closures on high streets already struggling with reduced footfall and rising vacancies.

For Ealing, the loss of Artisan Coffee is another blow to a town centre where several units remain empty and where residents have expressed concern about the decline in local retail and hospitality. One customer described the closure as “very sad news” and said that Ealing “is not like it used to be,” pointing to the growing number of shuttered shops.

Like Reading Articles Like This? Help Us Produce More

This site remains committed to providing local community news and public interest journalism.

Articles such as the one above are integral to what we do. We aim to feature as much as possible on local societies, charities based in the area, fundraising efforts by residents, community-based initiatives and even helping people find missing pets.

We’ve always done that and won’t be changing, in fact we’d like to do more.

However, the readership that these stories generates is often below that needed to cover the cost of producing them. Our financial resources are limited and the local media environment is intensely competitive so there is a constraint on what we can do.

We are therefore asking our readers to consider offering financial support to these efforts. Any money given will help support community and public interest news and the expansion of our coverage in this area.

A suggested monthly payment is £8 but we would be grateful for any amount for instance if you think this site offers the equivalent value of a subscription to a daily printed newspaper you may wish to consider £20 per month. If neither of these amounts is suitable for you then contact info@neighbournet.com and we can set up an alternative. All payments are made through a secure web site.

One-off donations are also appreciated. Choose The Amount You Wish To Contribute.

If you do support us in this way we’d be interested to hear what kind of articles you would like to see more of on the site – send your suggestions to the editor.

For businesses we offer the chance to be a corporate sponsor of community content on the site. For £30 plus VAT per month you will be the designated sponsor of at least one article a month with your logo appearing if supplied. If there is a specific community group or initiative you’d like to support we can make sure your sponsorship is featured on related content for a one off payment of £50 plus VAT. All payments are made through a secure web site.