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COPC Coppa Collective News Story

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Consumer CyclicalsAdventurousMicro CapTurnaround

Half-Year Results




 

RNS Number : 4707J
Coppa Collective PLC
24 June 2026
 

The information communicated within this announcement is deemed to constitute inside information as stipulated under the Market Abuse Regulations (EU) No. 596/2014 as it forms part of UK domestic law by virtue of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018 ("MAR"), and is disclosed in accordance with the Company's obligations under Article 17 of MAR. Upon the publication of this announcement, this inside information is now considered to be in the public domain.

 

24 June 2026

Coppa Collective plc

 

("Coppa Collective" or "the Company" and with its subsidiaries "the Group")

 

Half-Year Results

 

Continued growth, improved profitability and a broader group

 

Coppa Collective plc, a premium, multi-format hospitality group, announces its results for the 26-week period ended 29 March 2026 (the "Period").

 

Financial Highlights

 

·   

Coppa Club like-for-like ("LFL") sales growth of 3.2%, ahead of the market¹

·   

Group LFL sales growth of 1.8%², with Group revenue of £25.0m (H1 2025: £24.7m)

·   

Gross profit up 20.6% to £3.1m (H1 2025: £2.6m)

·   

Adjusted EBITDA³ of £0.3m (H1 2025: £0.1m)

·   

Loss before tax narrowed to £1.7m (H1 2025: £2.2m)

·   

Cash at bank of £2.6m (H1 2025: £6.0m), after funding the £11.25m acquisition of The Linwood Collection

  

Operational Highlights

 

·   

Acquisition of The Linwood Collection completed, establishing a premium third brand and taking the Group to 24 locations4

·   

Group renamed Coppa Collective plc, reflecting its evolution into a broader, multi-brand hospitality group

·   

Investment in digital marketing, with a new loyalty app and programme of website redesigns underway

 

Post-Period Highlights

 

·   

Estate further simplified around core brands, with 31 Below converted to Coppa Club Marylebone and the conversion of Tavolino into Coppa Club London Bridge underway ahead of an end-July relaunch

·   

Broader food offer rolled out across Noci, with an encouraging early response

·   

Active pipeline of selective expansion opportunities across organic growth and acquisition

 

¹ The market refers to the Restaurant channel of the NIQ RSM Hospitality Business Tracker, which averaged -0.2% over the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026.

² Excludes Tavolino, where significant landlord works have reduced trading capacity during the Period and will continue until completion later in H2 2026.

³Adjusted EBITDA is EBITDA before pre-opening costs, share-based payments, gains and losses on property and restructuring costs, and is reported by the Group before the impact of IFRS 16.

4 Including The Wellington Arms, which completed post Period

 

 

Mark Loughborough, CEO of Coppa Collective, said: 

 

"The pressures facing the wider hospitality sector are well-publicised, so for our like-for-like growth to outpace the benchmark is a meaningful achievement. We turned that growth into improved profitability, thanks to our incredible people and the hard work that has gone on behind the scenes over recent periods to build a leaner, more resilient platform."

 

"At the same time, we reshaped the Group for its next stage, adding The Linwood Collection and adopting a new identity as Coppa Collective. Coppa Club remains the engine of the business - its range lets every site earn its keep right through the day, and that adaptability is exactly what a demanding market rewards. We have a broader portfolio, concentrated around our strongest formats, and a compelling pipeline of expansion opportunities."

 

"Looking ahead to the important summer months, our focus is on execution: getting the best out of every venue through the season, looking after our guests and teams, and maintaining the cost discipline that has underpinned our progress. Each period leaves us better placed than the last, and I'm confident in the direction we're heading."

 

Contacts:

 

Coppa Collective plc

Via Alma

Mark Loughborough (Chief Executive Officer)


Sharon Badelek (Chief Financial Officer)

 


 

Zeus (Sole Broker & NOMAD)

+44 (0)20 3829 5000

Harry Ansell (Broking)

 

Antonio Bossi (NOMAD)

 

Darshan Patel

 

George Duxberry

 


 



Alma Strategic Communications

+44 (0)20 3405 0205

David Ison

coppa@almastrategic.com

Rebecca Sanders-Hewett


Will Merison


 

About Coppa Collective plc

 

Coppa Collective is a premium, multi-format hospitality group operating in the United Kingdom.

 

The Group operates three core brands across 24 locations:

 

·   

Coppa Club, a multi-use, all-day concept that combines restaurant, terrace, café, lounge, bar and workspaces.

·   

The Linwood Collection, a group of premium pubs with rooms.

·   

Noci, a modern pasta-led concept which serves very high-quality dishes at reasonable prices.

 

For more information visit www.coppacollective.co.uk.

Chief Executive Officer's Review

 

Outgrowing the market whilst strengthening the business

 

The first half was a period of good progress for Coppa Collective. We grew ahead of the market, improved profitability and continued to strengthen the business for the future.

 

Coppa Club led the way, with like-for-like sales increasing by 3.2%, ahead of the wider restaurant market and demonstrating the continued appeal of its all-day, multi-use format. Group like-for-like sales increased by 1.8%, excluding Tavolino, where landlord works reduced trading capacity throughout the Period.

 

Towards the end of March, we completed the acquisition of The Linwood Collection, establishing a third operating brand and broadening the Group's earnings base. We also adopted a new identity as Coppa Collective plc, reflecting our evolution from a collection of individual brands into a broader hospitality group united by a common philosophy: distinctive venues, memorable guest experiences and disciplined capital allocation.

 

As a result, we enter the second half as a broader and more focused business than we were six months ago. Whilst the market remains challenging and trading conditions continue to fluctuate; our strategy remains unchanged. Our focus is on operational excellence, disciplined growth and creating experiences that encourage guests to return time and again.

 

Trading momentum led by Coppa Club

 

Group revenue rose to £25.0m (H1 2025: £24.7m), while improved operational control and procurement discipline supported improved profitability. Gross profit increased by over 20% to £3.1m, with gross margin up around two percentage points, and adjusted EBITDA increased to £0.3m (H1 2025: £0.1m). The loss before tax narrowed to £1.7m (H1 2025: £2.2m). The Group ended the Period with £2.6m of cash, having funded the £11.25m acquisition of The Linwood Collection during the half.

 

Coppa Club was the clear driver of first-half trading. Its strength is flexibility. A single site moves through the day from coffee and breakfast to lunch, work, drinks, dinner and private events, giving each venue multiple opportunities to trade and allowing our teams to respond to local demand. Performance was broad-based, with a number of sites delivering strong double-digit like-for-like growth. It remains our largest brand, our most scalable growth platform and a genuinely distinctive proposition within UK hospitality.

 

Noci remains the smaller, earlier-stage part of the Group. As we reported in the half-year trading update, like-for-like sales were modestly behind last year during the Period. Since then, we have rolled out a wider food offer across the estate, evolving Noci from a pasta-led proposition towards a fuller modern Italian concept. Early indicators are encouraging, with non-pasta dishes accounting for a higher proportion of main course revenue and average spend per main course increasing.

 

A premium third brand: The Linwood Collection

 

The Linwood Collection gives us a position in premium pubs with rooms, a format we know well and like. These are high-quality venues with established reputations, loyal guests and a real sense of place.

 

Trading since acquisition has been encouraging and the operational synergies identified during due diligence are beginning to come through as anticipated. Our focus remains on preserving the individuality of each venue whilst leveraging the benefits of greater scale, enhanced purchasing power and stronger operational systems across the Group.

 

The potential acquisition of The Queen's Head remains subject to the ongoing Asset of Community Value process and discussions continue with the relevant stakeholders. The Company will provide further updates as and when appropriate.

 

Simplifying the estate and a healthy pipeline of expansion opportunities

 

We continue to see attractive ways to grow the estate, through new sites and selective acquisitions. We are active in the market and looking hard at opportunities that could add real quality, but we will remain disciplined. The venue, the guest appeal, the terms and the returns all have to be right.

 

Scale for its own sake has never been our objective. We will only invest where we believe a venue, brand or acquisition can strengthen the Group and create value over the long term.

 

We are spending time on several opportunities, including potential acquisitions, and we like what we are seeing. Not every conversation becomes a deal, and we will not force the pace, but the pipeline gives us confidence that there are high-quality additions available that can move the Group forward.

 

Post-Period, we completed the conversion of 31 Below to Coppa Club Marylebone. This is a good example of how we are simplifying the estate around fewer, stronger formats and putting more weight behind the brands with the greatest opportunity. Early guest response has been encouraging and the site is performing in line with our expectations at this stage, whilst giving Coppa Club another presence in central London.

 

At Tavolino, with the landlord construction work underway, we are taking the opportunity to convert the site to Coppa Club London Bridge. We are targeting completion and relaunch for the end of July; around the time the wider works conclude. This is an important project for the Group and will create one of the most prominent Coppa Club locations within the estate, with a clearer proposition and a more natural place within the portfolio.

 

Behind the scenes innovation: digital marketing

 

Not every improvement is a new opening or a refurbishment. A great deal of the work that matters most is making it easier for guests to find us, book with us and come back more often.

 

Digital marketing and guest engagement have been a real focus this period. We launched a new website for The Swan, built around the way people discover, research and book hospitality experiences today. Early results have been encouraging, with the new website supporting growth in direct room revenue, stronger room rates, increased restaurant bookings and a higher level of wedding enquiries.

 

We are now applying these learnings across the wider estate, with further venue websites in development, all designed to improve discoverability, simplify the booking journey and increase direct customer engagement.

 

Our new loyalty app is giving us a more direct relationship with guests. Early data shows app users visit more often than non-app users, providing us with a better way to drive repeat visits, understand customer behaviour and communicate more effectively with our guests.

 

The point is simple: build lasting relationships with our guests, understand them better and give them more reasons to return.

 

Continued cost discipline

 

Cost pressure remains a fact of life across hospitality, in labour, food, utilities and other operating inputs, and we continue to manage it closely. This includes monitoring the potential indirect effects of global developments, particularly in food and logistics markets, although we have seen no material change since the half-year trading update.

 

More broadly, we maintain a tight grip on the cost base through labour scheduling, purchasing, menu engineering, waste reduction and operational efficiency. Despite the well-publicised inflationary pressures facing the sector, we have maintained margins broadly in line with our budgeted expectations. This reflects the benefits of disciplined cost control, purchasing efficiencies and continued focus on operational execution across the estate.

 

Current trading and outlook

 

Trading since the half-year update has reflected the impact of the landlord works and conversion of Tavolino to Coppa Club London Bridge, both of which are expected to complete by the end of July, with more variable weather across the period compared with the prior year also playing a part. Away from these site-specific factors, the Group continues to see resilient consumer demand, albeit against a broader hospitality backdrop that remains inconsistent. The second half remains weighted towards the summer months, the Company's peak trading period, much of which remains ahead.

 

The increasing breadth of the Group also provides greater balance than in previous years. Alongside our destination and terrace-led venues, we now benefit from a broader mix of urban restaurants and premium pubs with rooms, creating multiple avenues for growth and reducing reliance on any single trading environment.

 

Our focus remains firmly on execution: delivering great guest experiences, driving operational consistency, maintaining cost discipline and ensuring each venue performs to its potential.

 

Alongside this, we continue to assess new sites and acquisitions. We remain active in the market but selective in our approach. Any investment we make must strengthen the Group and create value over the long term.

 

The Group is stronger, broader and more focused than it was a year ago. We have improved profitability, broadened the business through the acquisition of The Linwood Collection, continued to simplify the estate around our strongest brands and invested in the digital platforms that will support future growth.

 

Whilst there remains much work to do, I remain confident in the direction of the Group and would like to thank all of our teams for their hard work, commitment and contribution throughout the Period.



 

Coppa Collective PLC

Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income

for the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

 

 


26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

26 weeks ended 30 March 2025

 

52 weeks ended 28 September 2025

 


Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

Note

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 







Revenue


25,022


24,657


52,376

Cost of sales


(21,888)


(22,058)


(46,707)

Gross profit

 

3,134

 

2,599

 

5,669

Central staff costs


(2,179)


(1,879)


(4,077)

Share-based payments

11

(202)


(366)


(553)

Loss on disposal of assets and leases


-


-


(5)

Impairment of property, plant and equipment


-


-


(126)

Reversal of impairment on property, plant and equipment


-


-


542

Other income

 

-


-


211

Other expenses

 

(1,452)


(1,619)


(2,446)

Operating loss

 

(699)

 

(1,265)

 

(785)

Finance income

4

64


103


204

Financing costs

4

(1,052)


(1,077)


(2,152)

Loss before tax

 

(1,687)

 

(2,239)

 

(2,733)

Tax


-

 

-

 

-

Loss for the period

 

(1,687)

 

(2,239)

 

(2,733)

 







Earnings per share

 






Basic loss per share (pence)

5

(1.0)


(1.3)


(1.6)

Diluted loss per share (pence)

5

(1.0)


(1.3)


(1.6)

 



 

Coppa Collective PLC

Consolidated Statement of Financial Position

As at 29 March 2026

 



29 March 2026

 

30 March 2025

 

28 September 2025

 


Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

Note

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 







Non-current assets

 






Intangible assets

6

11,096


11,090


11,090

Right-of-use assets

7

21,485


23,893


22,870

Other property, plant and equipment

7

35,414


26,049


25,335



67,995


61,032


59,295

Current assets

 






Inventories


1,285


1,172


1,194

Trade receivables

8

94


218


83

Other receivables

8

3,416


1,891


1,774

Cash and bank balances


2,575


6,021


7,977



7,370


9,302


11,028

Total assets

 

75,365


70,334


70,323








Current liabilities

 






Trade and other payables

9

(9,101)


(9,062)


(14,689)

Borrowings

10

(7,756)


(5,010)


(3,390)

Net current (liabilities) / assets

 

(9,487)


(4,770)


(7,051)

Total assets less current liabilities

 

58,508


56,262


52,244








Non-current liabilities

 






Borrowings

10

(32,683)


(28,458)


(24,934)

Provisions


-


(187)


-

Total non-current liabilities

 

(32,683) 


(28,645)


(24,934)  

Total liabilities

 

(49,540)


(42,717)


(43,013)

Net assets

 

25,825

 

27,617

 

27,310

 







Equity

 






Share capital


1,750


1,750


1,750

Share premium


72,540


72,540


72,540

Merger reserve


64,736


64,736


64,736

Other reserves

 

(5,012)


(5,012)


(5,012)

Retained earnings


(108,189)


(106,397)


(106,704)

Total shareholder funds

 

25,825

 

27,617

 

27,310

 



 

Coppa Collective PLC

Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity

for the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

 


Called-up share capital

 

Share premium account

 

Merger reserve

 

Employee benefit trust reserve

 

Retained earnings

 

Total

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 












At 29 September 2024

1,750


72,540


64,736


(5,012)


(104,524)


29,490

Share-based payments

-


-


-


-


366


366

Loss for the period

-


-


-


-


(2,239)


(2,239)

At 30 March 2025

1,750


72,540


64,736


(5,012)


(106,397)


27,617













At 30 March 2025

1,750


72,540


64,736


(5,012)


(106,397)


27,617

Share-based payments

-


-


-


-


187


187

Loss for the period

-


-


-


-


(494)


(494)

At 28 September 2025

1,750


72,540


64,736


(5,012)


(106,704)


27,310













At 28 September 2025

1,750


72,540


64,736


(5,012)


(106,704)


27,310

Share-based payments

-


-


-


-


202


202

Loss for the period

-


-


-


-


(1,687)


(1,687)

At 29 March 2026

1,750


72,540


64,736


(5,012)


(108,189)


25,825



 

Coppa Collective PLC

Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows

for the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026



26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

26 weeks ended 30 March 2025

 

52 weeks ended 28 September 2025

 


Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 







Cash flows from operating activities

 






Loss for the period


(1,687)


(2,239)


(2,733)

Adjustments to cash flows from non-cash items:







Impairment of property, plant and equipment


-


-


126

Reversal of impairment of property, plant and equipment


-


-


(542)

Depreciation and amortisation


2,956


2,957


5,953

(Profit) / Loss on disposal and surrender of leases


-


-


5

Share-based payments


202


366


553

Finance income


(64)


(103)


(204)

Finance costs


1,052


1,077


2,152



2,459


2,058


5,310

Working capital adjustments:







Increase in inventories


(90)


(23)


(48)

(Increase) / decrease in trade and other receivables


(1,653)


1,450


1,723

(Increase) / decrease in accruals, trade and other payables


(1,587)


(633)


963

Decrease in provisions


-


-


(187)

Net cash flow from operating activities

 

(871)


2,852


7,761

Cash flows from investing activities

 






Interest received


64


103


204

Purchases of property plant and equipment


(718)


(789)


(1,632)

Purchases of intangible assets


(6)


-


-

Business combinations


(10,932)


-


-

Net cash flows from investing activities


(11,592)


(686)


(1,428)

Cash flows from financing activities







Interest paid

 

(1,193)


(952)


(1,898)

Proceeds from borrowings


9,500


-


-

Principal elements of lease payments


(1,246)


(1,022)


(2,287)

Net cash flows from financing activities


7,061


(1,974)


(4,185)

(Decrease) / increase in cash


(5,402)


192


2,148

Opening cash at bank and in hand


7,977


5,829


5,829

Closing cash at bank and in hand


2,575

 

6,021


7,977








 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

Coppa Collective PLC

Notes to the Financial Statements

for the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

1 General information

Coppa Collective PLC, 'the Company', and its subsidiaries (together 'the Group') are engaged in the operation of restaurants and hotels in London and the South of England.

The company is a public company limited by shares whose shares are publicly traded on AIM, a market of the London Stock Exchange and is incorporated in the United Kingdom under the Companies Act 2006 and are registered in England and Wales.

The registered address of the Company is 20 St Thomas Street, London, SE1 9RS.

 

2 Basis of preparation

The unaudited interim financial information for the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026 has been prepared under the recognition and measurement principles of International Financial Reporting Standards ("IFRS") based on the accounting policies consistent with those used in the financial statements for the period ended 28 September 2025, but does not contain all the information necessary for full compliance with IFRS.

The unaudited interim financial information was approved and authorised for issue by the Board on 23 June 2026. The unaudited interim financial information for the 26 weeks ended 29 March 2026 does not constitute statutory accounts within the meaning of section 434 of the Companies Act 2006 and should be read in conjunction with the statutory accounts for the period ended 28 September 2025. The information for the 52 weeks ended 28 September 2025 has been extracted from the statutory accounts for that year which have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The audit report on these statutory accounts was unqualified, did not contain an emphasis of matter paragraph, and did not contain a statement under sections 498(2)-(3) of the Companies Act 2006.

The interim financial statements are presented in Pounds Sterling because that is the currency of the primary economic environment in which the company operates. All values are rounded to the nearest one thousand Pounds (£'000) except when otherwise indicated.

Changes in accounting policies and disclosures:

There were no changes in accounting policies and disclosures during the period.

 

3 Segmental reporting

26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

Restaurant segment

 

Hotel segment

 

Other unallocated

 

Total

 

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

Revenue

23,393


1,598


31


25,022









Trading sites EBITDA (IAS 17)

3,759

 

153

 

(3,644)

 

268

Impact of IFRS 16

1,827


399


-


2,226

Total EBITDA (IFRS 16)

5,586


552


(3,644)


2,494

Depreciation & Amortisation

-

 

-

 

(2,956)

 

(2,956)

Net financing costs

-


-


(988)


(988)

Exceptional costs

-


-


(35)


(35)

Share based payments

-


-


(202)


(202)

Profit / (loss) before tax

5,586


552


(7,825)


(1,687)

Tax

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

Profit / (loss) for the period

5,586

 

552

 

(7,825)

 

(1,687)

 

26 weeks ended 30 March 2025

Restaurant segment

 

Hotel segment

 

Other unallocated

 

Total

 

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

Revenue

23,090


1,543


24


24,657









Trading sites EBITDA (IAS 17)

3,415

 

116

 

(3,465)

 

66

Impact of IFRS 16

1,682


381


-


2,063

Total EBITDA (IFRS 16)

5,097


497


(3,465)


2,129

Depreciation & Amortisation

-

 

-

 

(2,957)

 

(2,957)

Financing costs

-


-


(974)


(974)

Exceptional costs

-


-


(71)


(71)

Share based payments


-


(366)


(366)

Profit / (loss) before tax

5,097


497


(7,833)


(2,239)

Tax

 

-  

 

-  

 

-  

Profit / (loss) for the period

5,097

 

497

 

(7,833)

 

(2,239)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



3 Segmental reporting (continued)

 

52 weeks ended 28 September 2025

Restaurant segment

 

Hotel segment

 

Other unallocated

 

Total

 

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

Revenue

48,247


4,088


41


52,376









Trading site EBITDA (IAS 17)

6,534

 

666

 

(5,845)

 

1,355

Exceptional costs

-


-


(206)


(206)

Pre Opening costs

(22)


-




(22)

Impact of IFRS 16

3,357


826


-


4,183

Profit on disposal of assets and leases

-


-


(5)


(5)

Share-based payments

-


-


(553)


(553)

Total EBITDA

9,869

 

1,492

 

(6,609)

 

4,752

Depreciation & Amortisation

(4,598)


(1,355)


-


(5,953)

Impairment of property, plant and equipment

(126)


-


-


(126)

Reversal of impairment of property, plant and equipment

542


-


-


542

Financing costs

-


-


(1,948)


(1,948)

Profit / (Loss) before tax

5,687

 

137

 

(8,557)

 

(2,733)

Tax

-

 

-

 

-

 

-

Loss for the period

5,687

 

137

 

(8,557)

 

(2,733)

 



 

4 Financing costs


26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

26 weeks ended 30 March 2025

 

52 weeks ended 28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 






Interest income on bank deposits

64


103


204

Total finance income

64

 

103

 

204

Financing costs on bank overdraft and borrowings

162


125


256

Lease liability interest

890


952


1,896

Total financing costs

1,052

 

1,077

 

2,152

Net financing costs

988

 

974

 

1,948







 

 

5 Earnings per share

 

Basic loss per share is calculated by dividing the profit attributable to equity shareholders by the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the year. There were no potentially dilutive ordinary shares outstanding as at the reporting date.


26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

26 weeks ended 30 March 2025

 

52 weeks ended 28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 






Loss for the period after tax (£ 000)

(1,687)


(2,239)


(2,733)

Basic and diluted weighted average number of shares

175,045,265


168,180,186


175,045,265

Basic loss per share (pence)

(1.0)


(1.3)


(1.6)

Diluted loss per share (pence)

(1.0)


(1.3)


(1.6)

 



 

6 Intangible assets

 


Brand

 

Goodwill

 

Trademarks, patents & licenses

 

Total

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 








Cost or valuation

 







At 29 September 2024

2,912


26,019


25


28,956









Additions

-  


-  


-  


-  

At 30 March 2025

2,912


26,019


25


28,956









Additions

-  


-  


-  


-  

At 28 September 2025

2,912


26,019


25


28,956









Additions

-  


-  


6  


At 29 March 2026

2,912


26,019


31


28,962









Amortisation

 







At 29 September 2024

2,912


14,954


-


17,866









Amortisation

-


-


-


-

At 30 March 2025

2,912


14,954


-


17,866









Amortisation

-


-


-


-

At 28 September 2025

2,912


14,954


-


17,866









Amortisation

-


-


-


-

At 29 March 2026

2,912


14,954


-


17,866









Carrying amount

 







At 30 March 2025

-


11,065


25


11,090

At 28 September 2025

-


11,065


25


11,090

At 29 March 2026

-


11,065


31


11,096

 

Brand relates to registered brand names and is amortised over an estimated useful economic life of four years.

Goodwill is not amortised, but an impairment test is performed annually by comparing the carrying amount of the goodwill to its recoverable amount. The recoverable amount is represented by the greater of the individual CGU's fair value less costs of disposal and its value-in-use.

 

7 Property, plant and equipment


Right of use assets

 

Freehold property

 

Leasehold improve- ments

 

Furniture, fittings and equipment

 

Work in progress

 

IT equipment

 

Total

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 














Cost or valuation

 













At 29 September 2024

39,069


2,294


24,143


11,882


166


2,450


80,004

Additions

-


-


4


-


779


6


789

Disposals

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Lease modifications

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Transfers

-


-


303


435


(751)


13


-

At 30 March 2025

39,069


2,294


24,450


12,317


194


2,469


80,793















Additions

-


-


(2)


15


827


3


843

Lease modifications

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Disposals

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Transfers

-


-


249


325


(718)


144


-

At 28 September 2025

39,069


2,294


24,697


12,657


303


2,616


81,636















Additions

-


-


108


588


2


20


718

Acquired in business combination

-


10,134


-


798


-


-


10,932

Disposals

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Lease modifications

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Transfers

-


-


55


91


(146)


-


-

At 29 March 2026

39,069


12,428


24,860


14,134


159


2,636


93,286















Depreciation

 













At 29 September 2024

13,790


178


4,758


7,301


-


1,867


27,894

Charge for the period

1,386


19


716


721


-


115


2,957

Eliminated on disposal

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

At 30 March 2025

15,176


197


5,474


8,022


-


1,982


30,851















Charge for the period

1,390


20


738


729


-


119


2,996

Eliminated on disposal

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

Impairment loss

61


-


65


-


-


-


126

Impairment loss reversal

(428)


-


(114)


-


-


-


(542)

At 28 September 2025

16,199


217


6,163


8,751


-


2,101


33,431















Charge for the period

1,385


3


760


715


-


93


2,956

Eliminated on disposal

-


-


-


-


-


-


-

At 29 March 2026

17,584


220


6,923


9,466


-


2,194


36,387















Carrying amount

 













At 30 March 2025

23,893


2,097


18,976


4,295


194


487


49,942

At 28 September 2025

22,870


2,077


18,534


3,906


303


515


48,205

At 29 March 2026

21,485


12,208


17,937


4,668


159


442


56,899

8 Trade and other receivables

 


29 March 2026

 

30 March 2025

 

28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 






Trade receivables

94


218


83

Prepayments

759


738


580

Other debtors

2,657


1,153


1,194


3,510


2,109


1,857

 

All of the trade receivables were non-interest bearing, receivable under normal commercial terms, and the Directors do not consider there to be any material expected credit loss. The Directors consider that the carrying value of trade and other receivables approximates to their fair value.

 

 

9 Trade and other payables

 


29 March 2026

 

30 March 2025

 

28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 






Trade payables

1,932


1,460


2,762

Accrued expenses

3,526


4,076


4,216

Social security and other taxes

1,491


1,483


1,658

Other payables

2,152


2,043


1,923

Lease liabilities due in less than one year

-


-


4,130


9,101


9,062


14,689

 

10 Loans and borrowings


29 March 2026

 

30 March 2025

 

28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

Current borrowings

 





Borrowings from related parties

3,390


3,140


3,390

Lease liabilities

4,366


1,870


-


7,756


5,010


3,390














29 March 2026

 

30 March 2025

 

28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Audited

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

Non-current interest bearing loans and borrowings

 





Borrowings from related parties

-


-


-

Term loan and revolving credit facility

9,225


-


-

Lease liabilities

23,458


28,458


24,934


32,683


28,458


24,934

 

 

10 Loans and borrowings (continued)

Borrowings from related parties classed as payable within 12 months includes one deep discounted bond instrument issued by Coppa Collective Property Holding Limited.

The deep discounted bond instrument issued by Coppa Collective Property Holding Limited was rolled in 2025 with a new redemption date of 14 July 2026. The nominal value at 29 March 2026 is £3,390,000.

During the year, the Group entered into a new senior debt facility comprising an £8,000,000 Term Loan and a Revolving Credit Facility ("RCF"). The Term Loan is repayable over a four-year period and was utilised to support the acquisition and integration of the Linwood Collection. The RCF has a seven-year term and provides additional liquidity and flexibility to support working capital requirements, capital expenditure, and future growth initiatives.

The facilities are subject to customary security arrangements and financial covenants. At the balance sheet date, the Group was in compliance with all covenant requirements.

 

 

11 Share based payments

 

As at 29 March 2026, the Group maintained one separate share based payment scheme for employee remuneration (2025: one):

 

·      Coppa Collective Company Share Option Plan ("CSOP")

 

In accordance with IFRS 2 "Share-based Payment", the value of the awards is measured at fair value at the date of the grant. The fair value is expensed on a straight-line basis over the vesting period, based on management's estimate of the number of shares that will eventually vest. A charge of £202,000 (2025: £366,000) has been recognised in the income statement by the Group in the 26-week period ended 29 March 2026.

During the period, 1,750,000 options were granted into the CSOP scheme to certain directors and PDMRs of the Company. Nil options were cancelled.




12 EBITDA Reconciliation


26 weeks ended 29 March 2026

 

26 weeks ended 30 March 2025

 

52 weeks ended 28 September 2025

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

Unaudited

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 

£ 000

 






Revenue

25,022


24,657


52,376

Loss before tax

(1,687)


(2,239)


(2,733)

Net financing costs

988


974


1,948

Impairment

-


-


126

Reversal of impairment

-


-


(542)

Depreciation and amortisation

2,956


2,957


5,953

EBITDA before exceptional costs

2,257


1,692


4,752

Pre-opening costs

-

 

-

 

22

Share-based payments

202


366


553

Profit on disposal of assets and leases

-


-


5

Exceptional costs

35


71


206

Adjusted EBITDA (IFRS 16)

2,494

 

2,129

 

5,538

Adjustment for rent expense

(2,226)


(2,063)


(4,183)

Adjusted EBITDA before impact of IFRS 16

268

 

66

 

1,355

 

 

 

 

 

 

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