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REG - Hollywood Bowl Group - Half-year Results

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RNS Number : 7663F  Hollywood Bowl Group plc  27 May 2026

27 May 2026

Hollywood Bowl Group plc

("Hollywood Bowl", the "Company" or the "Group")

 

Interim Results for the Six Months ended 31 March 2026

 

Strong H1 performance driven by continued focus on the quality of our
proposition, and robust demand for affordable leisure experiences

 

Hollywood Bowl Group plc, the UK and Canada's largest ten-pin bowling
operator, announces its results for the six months ended 31 March 2026 ("H1
FY26").

 

 

 Financial Summary                          H1 FY26   H1 FY25   Variance
 Revenue                                    £141.5m   £129.2m   9.5%
 Like-for-like revenue growth total(( i ))  2.3%      1.6%      +0.7%pt
      LFL - UK                              2.6%      1.3%      +1.3%pt
      LFL - Canada                          0.5%      3.7%      (3.2%pt)
 Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent(( ii ))   £42.2m    £38.8m    8.9%
 Group Adjusted PBT(( iii ))                £32.1m    £29.7m    8.1%
 Adjusted EPS(( iv ))                       14.51p    13.04p    11.3%
 Dividend per share                         4.52p     4.10p     10.2%
 Reported Profit before tax                 £27.2m    £28.3m    (3.9%)
 Reported Profit after tax                  £19.5m    £20.6m    (5.3%)
 Net cash                                   £26.0m    £22.7m    14.3%
 EPS                                        11.70p    12.00p    (2.5%)

 

·    Continued strong growth in revenue and Adjusted EBITDA after rent
(pre IFRS16)

o  Group revenue of £141.5m up 9.5% (H1 FY25: £129.2m)

o  Group Adjusted EBITDA growth of 8.9% to £42.2m (H1 FY25: £38.8m)

 

·    Group like-for-like (LFL) revenue growth of 2.3%

o  UK LFL up 2.6% with spend per game ("SPG") up 7.6%, growing in all
categories

o  Canada LFL up 0.5% on a constant currency basis impacted by snowstorms

 

·    Group Adjusted Profit before tax up 8.1% to £32.1m (H1 FY25:
£29.7m)

o  Strong conversion of increased revenue through to increased profit

o  Adjusting items of £3.3m from impairment and earn-out; adjusted for
IFRS16

o  Reported Profit after tax down (5.3%) to £19.5m (H1 FY25: £20.6m)

 

·    Robust balance sheet and disciplined capital allocation support
strong cash generation

o  Maintained strong cost control across the Group

o  £8.5m capex in H1 FY26, increasing in H2 FY26

o  Closing net cash balance of £26.0m with undrawn RCF of £25.0m

o  £5m Buyback programme for H2 FY26

 

·    Proposed interim dividend of 4.52p, up 10.2% on H1 FY25

 

Targeted investment across UK and Canada delivering growth

 

·    UK business benefiting from track record of strategic investment

o  Prime location strategy driving returns - new centres exceeding
expectations

o  Norwich refurbishment completed with continued investment in maintenance

o  Remain confident in target of 95 centres by 2035

 

·    Canadian expansion continues at pace

o  Largest branded operator in Canada with 16 centres

o  New CEO, Canada, supporting team on delivering operational improvements

o  New prime location in Edmonton opened in the period and trading well

o  Refurbishment programme across legacy estate almost complete

o  Targeting 35 centres in Canada by 2032 - acceleration on original 2035
target

 

Resilient business model and clear strategy supporting performance

 

·    Proactive operational levers improving yield and revenue performance

o  Dynamic pricing continues to improve yield and capacity management

o  AI optimisation marketing driving increased conversion rates and order
values

 

·    Value proposition remains at heart of robust demand and increased
spend

o  Affordable proposition; family of four can bowl for £26 UK and CA$32
Canada

o  Ongoing investment in F&B and amusements enhancing proposition and
spend

 

·    Disciplined cost control and insulation against inflationary
pressures

o  UK labour to revenue ratio of less than 20%

o  c.70% of Group revenues not subject to cost-of-goods inflation

o  76% of electricity hedged to the end of FY29, supported by solar

 

Outlook

 

·    The Group remains confident in delivering on expectations for FY26

·    Two new UK centres and one Canadian centre due to open in H2 FY26

·    Accelerated new centre pipeline for FY27

·    Differentiated proposition and strategy ensures the Group, with its
cash generative model, continues to be well-positioned to deliver long-term
shareholder value

 

Stephen Burns, Chief Executive Officer, commented:

"Our strong performance in the first half has been driven by continued demand
from customers for our high-quality and affordable leisure experiences. Our
clear strategy and targeted investment programme are delivering. Multiple
strategic initiatives are underpinning increased spend per game across our
estate, and our new and refurbished centres in the UK and Canada are driving
robust returns.

"Looking ahead, we are confident in delivering on expectations for FY26, as
customer appeal for our value offer remains robust, and we continue to
maintain a tight grip on costs. We have an exciting pipeline of centres for H2
and expect this to accelerate in FY27 and beyond, positioning us for
sustainable profitable growth over the long-term"

 

(( 1 )) Like-for-like (LFL) revenue is from centres which have traded in both
periods and have comparable days in each period. LFL revenue excludes revenues
from our non-centre business Striker which acts as a wholesaler and installer
for bowling equipment in Canada. Canada LFL revenues are reported on a
constant currency basis.

(( 1 )) Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent shows earnings before interest,
depreciation and amortisation with an expense applied for property rent from
leases. This rent replaces the depreciation and interest costs of the Right-
of-Use property assets (ROU). This profit is before Adjusting items which
management deem to be one-off in nature. The group has previously named this
APM as EBITDA pre-IFRS16.

(( 1 )) Group Adjusted PBT is the Profit before tax subject to Adjusting items
which management consider to be one-off in nature and using property rent
instead of ROU Asset depreciation and interest costs under IFRS16. Adjusting
items for H1 FY26 are £3.3m of costs, comprising: £0.5m cost for contingent
consideration of the Canadian business and a £2.8m non-cash cost for the
impairment of an under-performing centre. Adjusting items for H1 FY25 were
£0.4m of income, comprising £1.2m cost relating to contingent consideration
on the Canadian acquisition and £1.6m of net income from a Covid-19 related
insurance claim. Property rent is £1.6m lower than the ROU depreciation and
interest charge (H1 FY26: £1.8m lower)

(( 1 )) Adjusted EPS uses Group Adjusted PBT and applies the reported tax
charge, less tax specifically related to the Adjusting items. This Group
Adjusted Profit after tax is then attributed over the weighted average number
of shares in issue to generate an earnings per share.

 

 

 

Enquiries:

Hollywood Bowl Group PLC - via Headland

 

Stephen Burns, Chief Executive Officer

Antony Smith, Chief Financial Officer

Mat Hart, Group Business Development Director

 

Headland

Rosh Field / Antonia Pollock

hollywoodbowl@headlandconsultancy.com

+44 (0)20 3805 4822

 

 

 

Chief Executive Officer's Review

The Group delivered an excellent first half performance, achieving record
revenues of £141.5m, a 9.5% increase on the prior year, with like-for-like
("LFL") revenues up 2.3%. This result is a direct reflection of the returns
generated from our investment strategy, the quality of our proposition, the
discipline of our operational model and the commitment of our teams across
both our UK and Canadian territories. Against a challenging backdrop, the
resilience of our business model, and ongoing appeal of our value offer for
customers is clear.

UK revenue grew 9.4% to £118.4m, with LFL revenue up 2.6%, representing a
strong performance that reflects both our continued investment in the customer
experience and the robust appeal of affordable, experience-led leisure. In
Canada, revenue increased 12.8% to CA$42.9m (£23.2m), with LFL revenue up
0.5%, on a constant currency basis, demonstrating meaningful progress as we
apply our proven playbook in a highly fragmented and underserved market.

Group adjusted EBITDA after rent increased to £42.2m, up 8.8% on the prior
year. Group adjusted PBT increased to £32.1m, up 8.1% on the prior year, a
result that reflects disciplined cost management, and the structural
resilience of our business model and strong conversion of increased revenues
to profits.

Reported profit after tax for the period was £19.5m (H1 FY25: £20.6m). The
strong trading performance of the business, combined with the highly
cash-generative nature of our model, resulted in net cash of £26.0m at the
period end, after payment of the FY25 final ordinary dividend of £15.3m.

In line with our capital allocation policy, the Board has declared an interim
dividend of 4.52 pence per share; representing 34% of the FY25 final ordinary
dividend and 10% growth on the comparable period last year, with a record date
of 26th June 2026. In addition, we will be undertaking a £5m share Buyback
programme in the second half of FY26. This reflects our confidence in the
ongoing strength of the business and our commitment to delivering attractive
returns for shareholders.

Revenue Performance

Our revenue performance in the first half demonstrates the effectiveness of
our strategy across both territories. We remain firmly focused on driving
revenue through complementary investment levers: enhancing the customer
experience, improving the quality of our centres, and expanding our estate
through prime location new centre openings, in both the UK and Canada.

Consumers continue to prioritise experiences and shared social occasions over
discretionary retail spend, and bowling's broad, multigenerational appeal
positions the Group, with its prime locations and well-invested proposition,
strongly within the competitive socialising market.

In the UK, total revenue grew 9.4% to £118.4m, with LFL revenue up 2.6%, a
strong result achieved despite ongoing pressure on household budgets. In
Canada, revenue grew 12.8% on a constant currency basis to CA$42.9m (£23.2m),
with LFL revenue up 0.5%, impacted by unseasonably heavy snowfall in certain
key periods.

Our Canadian business accounts for 16% of Group revenue, up from 9% in FY22,
and this is set to increase further in the coming years, reflecting the scale
and momentum we are building in that market.

Value proposition

We are the largest branded bowling operator in both territories, and whilst
the level of competitive socialising operators has increased in a number of
catchments in recent years, our scale, proven operating model and first-mover
advantage continue to translate into meaningful commercial benefits; through
revenue resilience in competitive markets, prime locations, supplier
relationships, customer reach and capital efficiency.

Affordability remains central to our proposition and is increasingly important
as households remain selective with their discretionary spending. A family of
four can bowl at peak times for £26 in the UK and CA$32 in Canada; a
compelling value position that continues to resonate with customers across a
broad demographic base. This accessibility, combined with a consistently
high-quality experience, reinforces brand loyalty and our position as the most
affordable branded bowling operator.

Proactive levers to drive demand

Our increasingly sophisticated approach to yield management continues to be a
key strength and differentiator. Dynamic pricing allows us to balance
value-led accessibility during off-peak periods with carefully controlled
capacity management at peak demand, supporting revenue quality while
protecting the integrity of our value proposition. Each initiative is executed
with precision at a centre and day-part level rather than through a broad,
one-size-fits-all approach.

Digital marketing and our evolving ecommerce platform are playing an
increasingly important role in both revenue performance and demand management.
AI-enhanced improvements to our online booking journey and marketing tools
have supported improved conversion rates, higher average booking values, and
greater effectiveness in demand stimulation. These tools also enable more
personalised customer communication, supporting upsells and cross-sells in a
way that feels relevant and tailored rather than transactional. They also
provide us with richer visibility of customer behaviour to support more
informed decision-making across pricing, promotion and capacity planning.

Investing in growth

Our diversified product mix continues to underpin revenue quality and
spend-per-game performance, which increased to £12.77 in the UK, up 7.6%, and
CA$19.10 in Canada, up 9.7%. Ongoing investment to refresh and innovate within
our second largest category - amusements - continues to enhance the overall
customer experience while supporting incremental spend, with amusement spend
per game increasing to £3.69 in the UK, up 12.7%, and CA$3.34 in Canada, up
17.6%. Selective trials of new ancillary products including E-Darts, alongside
improvements in payment technology, ensure that our total customer proposition
evolves to changing customer expectations, and remains dynamic, engaging and
relevant.

With the support of newly appointed Canadian CEO, our Canadian management team
are making tangible impacts on operational performance, with our full range of
demand generation and operational levers increasingly being deployed to good
effect across both territories.

Cost Control

Disciplined cost control is a core organisational priority and continues to
support margin resilience and strong cash generation. In a period
characterised by persistent inflationary pressure, including labour and
utilities costs, we have proactively managed these headwinds through detailed
operational management and a business model that is structurally
well-insulated against external cost volatility.

Approximately 70% of Group revenues are not subject to cost-of-goods
inflation, providing meaningful protection. Energy commodity costs are largely
hedged, with 76% of electricity requirements secured through to the end of
FY29; including 12% from on-site solar, significantly reducing our exposure to
market volatility and providing excellent forward visibility on a key cost
line.

Labour productivity continues to be managed at a granular, centre-level basis,
ensuring service standards are delivered while controlling payroll costs, with
UK centre payroll remaining below 20% of UK revenue and Canada below 26%.
Ongoing investment in team member training, engagement and operational
capability has supported the consistent delivery of our leading customer
experience, and we are proud to have achieved record levels of both customer
satisfaction and team member engagement, maintaining our Sunday Times Best
Places to Work award and our Great Place to Work accreditation in Canada.
These achievements are a direct reflection of the quality of our teams and the
culture we have built across the Group.

Strategic Progress

Our growth strategy is progressing well, with strong momentum across both
territories.

Canada

In Canada, our expansion programme continues at pace, with a clear focus on
opening high-quality greenfield locations in prime, high-footfall
destinations. Our three most recently opened centres; Kanata, Creekside and
Edmonton, the latter opening in H1 of this year, are all performing well and
are progressively improving average estate returns as the portfolio evolves
from the platform Splitsville estate we acquired in FY22. The refurbishment
programme across the legacy estate is now largely complete. Our new centre
pipeline in Canada continues to develop well, and we remain on track to open
one centre in H2, with five planned to open in FY27 and 40 further potential
locations identified. The Canadian market remains highly fragmented, and as
the largest branded operator, we are well positioned to capture future growth
opportunities subject to them meeting our strict investment criteria. We are
now targeting an estate size of 35 centres by 2032, an acceleration on our
original target of 2035, reflecting both the strength of our pipeline and the
confidence we have in the market opportunity.

UK

In the UK, our new centres continue to perform well. Our completely rebuilt
Liverpool Edge Lane centre reopened in FY26 in addition to our new Reading
centre, and both have exceeded expectations since launch, a further
endorsement of our site selection discipline and our ability to deliver an
excellent customer experience from day one. Our UK pipeline remains robust,
with two openings planned for H2, four centres committed across FY27 and FY28
and a further 20 potential locations identified. We remain confident in
reaching a UK estate size of 95 centres by 2035.

Our new Cardiff centre will open in the second half to extend our presence in
the Cardiff market ahead of the planned closure of our existing centre in
FY31. The new centre will be our largest UK venue to date, positioned in the
city's prime retail destination and featuring E-karting and other new
ancillary products alongside our core bowling offer. We also completed a
refurbishment in Norwich in the half, alongside continued investment in our
maintenance programme across the estate.

Disciplined investment

Our strong cash generation and robust balance sheet provide the financial
flexibility to continue investing in estate growth and deliver value to
shareholders, while ensuring that every investment decision remains grounded
in a clear strategic rationale and robust returns criteria.

Outlook

The Group enters the second half in excellent shape, and with confidence. In
this uncertain environment, our sector-leading proposition remains accessible
and is underpinned by consumer trends supporting demand for affordable
leisure. Our market-leading position and scale continue to provide a clear and
sustainable competitive advantage across both territories.

We are well positioned to manage costs while continuing to invest, supported
by strong cash generation, protection from energy costs, proven operational
discipline and a robust balance sheet that offers significant capital
flexibility. With a high-quality pipeline of new centres in both the UK and
Canada, ongoing investment in our existing estate and a highly disciplined
approach to capital allocation, we remain confident in the outlook for the
full financial year.

The fundamentals of our business are strong, our strategy is clear, and our
teams are executing with skill and purpose. The Group remains well positioned
to deliver sustainable growth and attractive long-term returns for
shareholders.

 

Stephen Burns

Chief Executive Officer

27 May 2026

 

Chief Financial Officer's review

 

Group Financial Results

 

                                                        H1 FY26  H1 FY25  YOY Var
        Revenue                                         141.5    129.2    9.5%
        COGS                                            (23.2)   (21.9)   5.9%
        Centre staff costs                              (29.5)   (24.9)   18.5%
        Gross profit                                    88.8     82.4     7.8%
        Gross profit %                                  62.8%    63.8%    (1.0%pt)
        Administrative expenses                         (39.1)   (34.8)   12.2%
        Corporate costs                                 (15.1)   (12.7)   18.6%
        Operating profit                                34.7     34.9     (0.5%)
        Finance expenses                                (7.5)    (6.6)    13.9%
        Profit before tax                               27.2     28.3     (3.9%)
 APM 1  Add back Adjusting items                        3.3      (0.4)
        Add back property ROU asset dep'n and interest  13.7     12.7
        Less property rent                              (12.1)   (10.9)
 APM 3  Group Adjusted PBT                              32.1     29.7     8.1%

 APM 2  Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent                42.2     38.8     8.9%
        Basic earnings per share (EPS)                  11.70p   12.00p   (2.5%)
 APM 4  Adjusted EPS                                    14.51p   13.04p   11.3%
        Interim ordinary dividend per share             4.52p    4.10p

 

A full reconciliation of APMs can be found at the end of this section of the
report. A summary of the movements and adjustments is as follows:

APM 1 - Adjusting items of £3.3m in FY26 are a (£2.8m) impairment of an
under-performing centre and a (£0.5m) accrual for deferred consideration on
acquisition of the Canadian business. In FY25 there was (£1.2m) of expense in
relation to the Canadian acquisition and net income of +£1.6m benefit from a
Covid insurance claim.

APM 2 - Group Adjusted EBITDA after property rent has previously been reported
as "Group EBITDA pre-IFRS16". It represents EBITDA after accounting for the
rental charges on the Group's leasehold property portfolio rather than using
ROU asset depreciation and finance costs. This is the same as pre-IFRS16

APM 3 - Group Adjusted PBT is the underlying PBT after adjusting items and
replacing ROU asset depreciation and financing costs on the Group's leasehold
properties with the property rent paid on those properties.

APM 4 - Adjusted earnings per share uses the APM 3, the Group Adjusted PBT and
applies a tax rate to the Adjusting items (but no change in tax attributed to
the IFRS16 change to rent) in order to reach a profit after tax number which
is then allocated by the weighted average shares in the same calculation as
basic EPS

 

Summary

 

The first half delivered 9.5% growth in revenue, with costs well controlled.
Profit Before Tax was £27.2m (H1FY25: £28.3m). The Group is reporting £3.3m
of one-off non-cash costs as Adjusting items to help understand the underlying
business performance.

 

Excluding these Adjusting items, and replacing IFRS16 depreciation and
interest with property rent, the Group's Adjusted PBT has increased by 8.1% to
£32.1m in the first half (H1 FY25: £29.7m), demonstrating a strong
drop-through of revenue growth to profit growth.

 

This improved profit, combined with a 2.8% net reduction in the total number
of shares, results in a 11.3% increase in the Adjusted earnings per share
(EPS) to 14.51p (H1 FY25: 13.04p). Reported basic EPS of 11.70p (H1 FY25:
12.00p) showed a modest decline as the one-off non-cash impairment of an
under-performing centre offsets the strong underlying improvement in business
growth.

 

The Group uses certain Alternative Performance Measures (APMs) to incorporate
measures that management and investors frequently use for decision making
purposes. These include adjustments for specific one-off non-recurring items
to help understand the underlying business; accounting for property rent in
place of ROU asset depreciation and interest, a commonly used KPI for business
performance and banking covenants; and reporting like-for-like (LFL) revenues.
Full details of the APMs and how they are calculated are shown at the end of
this report. Where APMs are referred to in this review they are clearly
indicated.

 

 

Revenue

 

                             H1 FY26               H1 FY25               Movement %
 £m                          UK     Canada  Total  UK     Canada  Total  UK    Canada  Total
 Like for like centres       109.7  18.3    128.0  107.0  18.2    125.2  2.6%  0.5%    2.3%
 New centres                 7.7    3.2     10.8   -      -       -                    -
 Closed centres              1.0    -       1.0    1.2    -       1.2                  (17.1%)
 Non centre revenue          -      2.3     2.3    -      2.9     2.9                  (20.0%)
 FX to constant currency     -      (0.6)   (0.6)  -      -       -                    -
 Total reported revenue      118.4  23.2    141.5  108.2  21.1    129.2  9.4%  9.9%    9.5%
 % Bowling revenue           44.6%  44.8%   44.6%  44.7%  43.3%   44.5%

 

The Group delivered strong revenue growth in both territories, with a total
growth in the first half of 9.5% to £141.5m (H1 FY25: £129.2m) and with
similar results in the UK and Canada at +9.4% and +9.9% respectively.

 

Like-for-like (LFL) centres are defined as those centres which have traded
fully in both periods and excludes revenue from the non-centre business
Striker, which installs and distributes bowling equipment in Canada. Canadian
LFL sales are reported on a constant currency basis.

 

The UK delivered strong sales growth for the first half. Total UK revenue was
up 9.4% to £118.4m (H1 FY25: £108.2m). New centres contributed £7.7m of
additional revenue, offset in part by (£0.2m) less revenue from centres which
had closures due to refurbishment works. LFL sales growth was 2.6% which was
an excellent performance in the context of a challenging UK consumer market.
There was a modest reduction in game volumes, but these saw an improving trend
in the second quarter, and in total were more than offset by increasing Spend
per Game (SPG). SPG grew by 7.6% to £12.77 as a function of modest
inflationary price increases; optimising our peak pricing for yield; improved
uptake of add-on sales such as VIP lanes; and a strong amusements mix.

 

The Canadian business also delivered strong revenue growth in the first half,
with sales increasing 9.9% to £23.2m. New centre growth of £3.2m was a
bigger driver than in the UK, contributing almost all of the total sales
growth. LFL sales also remained in growth at 0.5% and this was despite a very
heavy snowfall in the east of the country which closed some centres for
several days. SPG in Canada was £11.44 and saw growth of 10.1% on an LFL
basis as we continue to optimise the model, including success in growing
customer participation in add-on activities when they visit. Sales declined in
our non-centre Striker business by 20%. This was a result of a commercial
decision to focus the Striker installations teams on the Group's own internal
refurbishment programme and fit out of new centres. Whilst this does not
contribute to Striker's revenue or margin, it helps keeps investment costs
lower on these projects.

 

Gross profit

 

Reported gross profit in the first half was 62.8% compared to 63.8% in H1
FY25, a reduction of 1.0%pts. This reduction is principally a function of
centre staffing costs increasing ahead of revenues. Centre staff costs
increased by 18.5%, with 9.5% of this from opening new centres.

 

In addition to this expected increase driven by sales growth, there has been
an accelerated increase in centre labour costs. This reflects the impact of
increased National Insurance costs and a National Living Wage increase above
inflation. Each of these contributed c.£1m of additional labour costs within
the centres, suppressing the gross margin rate by 1%pt.

 

The overall gross margin of 62.8% remains extremely strong however, allowing
for revenue growth to translate well into profit growth. With centre labour
only representing 20.8% of sales, the Group is far less exposed to labour
inflationary pressures than many other businesses in the hospitality and
leisure sector.

 

 

Administrative expenses and corporate costs

 

                                            H1 FY26  H1 FY25  Movement
        Administrative expenses             (39.1)   (34.8)   12.2%
        Corporate costs                     (15.1)   (12.7)   18.6%
        Add back dep'n and amortisation     16.7     15.5     7.9%
 APM 1  Add back Adjusting items            3.0      (0.7)
        Admin expenses per Adjusted EBITDA  (34.5)   (32.7)   5.5%

 

Administrative costs are best considered on the basis that they are presented
for Group Adjusted EBITDA as shown in the table above. This ensures that
movements in rent, Adjusting items and corporate costs can be considered
individually.

 

Administration costs were £34.5m (H1 FY25: £32.7m) which was a 5.5% increase
on last year. The increase is principally a function of the increasing estate
size both in the UK and Canada. New centres added net revenue of £10.6m or
8.2% to the Group and carry additional administrative costs. In addition, UK
inflation for the period was 3.3% with Canadian inflation running a little
lower.

 

Corporate costs for the period were £15.1m (H1 FY25: £12.7m), an increase of
18.6%. This increase reflects 3-5% of inflationary pressures plus three key
business decisions to invest in our capability to drive business growth
faster.

 

The Group has upweighted investment in leadership roles to deliver long-term
growth. This includes the senior leadership team in Canada; increased
participation in long term bonuses for key members of the wider management
team; and new roles in the UK operations team to drive additional revenue
streams and focus on underlying LFL growth.

 

In addition, the Group has increased its investment in marketing both in the
UK and Canada. In part this is to accelerate growth, but is also reflective of
the competitive environment, especially in the UK, where a challenging
consumer landscape means we are having to compete harder for share of wallet.

 

Finally, we have invested in support functions to help accelerate our property
pipeline. This includes property professional fees, training, recruitment and
finance. These targeted investments are helping us to identify and realise
opportunities and bring them to market more quickly.

 

Overall, these corporate costs remain at c.10% of sales. We expect some
continuing investment in this area as we drive growth from the underlying
business and add centres to our portfolio both in the UK and Canada.

 

Adjusting items

 

The Group is reporting two cost elements in the first half which we consider
to be one-off in nature. Therefore, these should be excluded from the
underlying profit of the business. In total we recognise (£3.3m) of Adjusting
items (H1 FY25: income of £0.4m).

 

The first element is the ongoing treatment of the earn out consideration in
respect of the Teaquinn Holdings acquisition in FY22. In the period, there was
a cost of £0.5m (H1 FY25: £1.2m) which is lower than last year. As we get
closer to the calculation date in September 2026, we are able to narrow down
the cost expectations more accurately.

 

The second element is a non-cash impairment of the assets of one of our
centres in the UK. The centre has opened within the past 3 years and therefore
has a high NBV of assets and ROU asset. It was the second to open in its local
market and faces intense competition. While the centre is still cash
generative on a CGU basis, it is not performing at the level we had originally
anticipated. As a result, we have taken a one-off non-cash impairment of
£2.0m on the PPE and a further £0.8m on the ROU asset. While we remain
confident the centre will remain cash generative over the term of the lease,
the NPV of the cashflows are not sufficient to support the balance sheet asset
valuation.

 

Group Adjusted EBITDA and operating profit

                                                       H1 FY26  H1 FY25  Movement
        Operating profit                               34.7     34.9     -0.5%
        Add depreciation                               16.1     14.9     8.0%
        Add amortisation                               0.6      0.6      10.2%
        Add gain/loss on PPE                           (0.0)    0.0
 APM 1  Add Adjusting items before tax & interest      3.0      (0.7)
        Less rent                                      (12.1)   (10.9)   11.2%
 APM 2  Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent               42.2     38.8     8.9%

 

 

Group operating profit was slightly down versus last year at £34.7m (H1 FY25:
£34.9m). This was however after taking a £2.8m non-cash asset impairment and
compared to the previous year where the Group received a net £1.6m of benefit
from a Covid related insurance claim. Excluding these Adjusting items, the
operating profit has increased.

 

Management use Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent to assess the underlying
business performance, and this was up 8.9% in the first half to £42.2m (H1
FY25: £38.8m). The principal driver of this growth in EBITDA is the revenue
generated by our new centres in the UK and Canada which was delivered on a
highly consistent year-on-year cost base. The result is that sales growth
translates into profit growth.

 

Financing and ROU asset profit impact

 

Total finance expenses of £7.5m (H1 FY25: £6.6m) increased by 13.9% in the
period. The majority of this financing charge, £7.2m (H1 FY25: £6.6m), is a
function of the interest cost of leases under IFRS 16, described below.

 

Of the balancing finance charges, £0.3m (H1 FY25: £0.3m) relates to the
interest element of the earn out on Teaquinn Holdings, which as set out above,
is considered as an Adjusting item and is therefore excluded from the adjusted
numbers.

 

There were no further finance costs in H1 FY26, with the commitment fee on the
undrawn £25m RCF being offset by modest interest income from cash balances
held. Last year the cash balances in H1 were more substantial and resulted in
net interest income of £0.3m.

 

In understanding the property costs, it is important to consider not only the
interest on ROU assets, which forms part of the finance income, but also the
depreciation on the asset which is reported in administration expenses. The
table below shows the relationship between these elements and compares it to
the rental charges that are used for adjustment purposes to arrive at an
EBITDA number.

 

 £m                                         H1 FY26  H1 FY25  Movement
 Interest charge ROU asset                  7.2      6.6      9.6%
 Depreciation ROU asset                     6.5      6.0      6.9%
 Total IFRS16 property charge               13.7     12.7     8.3%
 Property rent                              12.1     10.9     11.2%
 Profit compression as a result of IFRS 16  (1.6)    (1.8)    (9.4%)

 

Total property costs in H1 are £13.7m (H1 FY25: £12.7m), reported in
interest costs and administration costs. They are 8.3% higher than last year,
principally because of new centre openings both in Canada and the UK.

 

Property rent of £12.1m (H1 FY25: £10.9m) in the half was 11.2% higher than
last year, also as a result of new centre openings. This property rent is used
for Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent. Our leases are relatively young in
tenure as a function of expansion and commercially advantageous lease
renewals. Therefore, there is a non-cash (£1.6m) compression of profit in the
half (H1 FY25: £1.8m). This is a result of the computed lease interest and
depreciation being higher than the actual paid rent on our portfolio.

 

The Group has a £25m RCF available from Barclays Bank PLC which is a 3-year
term expiring in May 2028. The facility allows for drawing on request, with a
margin of 1.30%pts above SONIA. At the period end this facility remained fully
undrawn.

Cash flow and investment

 

 

        £m                                        H1 FY26  H1 FY25
        Operating profit                          34.7     34.9
        Add back depreciation & amortisation      16.7     15.5
 APM 1  Add back Adjusting items                  3.3      (0.4)
        Movement in working capital               (4.1)    (1.2)
        Rent                                      (12.1)   (10.9)
        Maintenance capex                         (4.6)    (5.8)
        Tax and interest                          (3.9)    (3.7)
        Free Cash flow before investment          30.0     28.4
        Investment capex                          (3.9)    (14.2)
        Dividends and share buybacks              (15.3)   (20.2)
        Total net cashflow                        10.8     (6.0)

        Opening net cash                          15.2     28.7
        Closing cash                              26.0     22.7

 

The Group continues to generate a strong free cash flow, with £30.0m of free
cash inflow before investment and shareholder returns in the period. This is a
cash conversion of 71% of the £42.2m of Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent.

Total capital expenditure in the first half comprised £4.6m maintenance
investment on existing centres and a further £3.9m of investment capex,
principally on new centres. Capital spend is expected to accelerate in the
second half with a new centre already under construction in the UK and another
about to start. Both expected to open in H2, albeit late in the year. In
Canada we also have a new centre under construction and with three expected to
open in H1 FY27, there will be expenditure in the second half related to these
centres.

Taxation

Total tax charge for H1 was £7.7m (H1 FY25: £7.7m). This represents an
effective tax rate of 28.3% on profit arising in the period.

Earnings per share

Earnings per share of 11.70p (H1 FY25: 12.00) show a (2.5%) decline. Included
in this are the £3.3m non-cash Adjusting items as described above.

Excluding these one-off items, and adjusting for property rent, Adjusted EPS
was 14.51p (H1 FY25: 13.04p), an 11.3% increase. This is a function of both
the 8.1% increase in Group Adjusted PBT and a 2.8% reduction in the weighted
number of shares; a result of the H2 FY25 buyback programme.

Group Adjusted PBT of £32.1m (H1 FY25: £29.7m) is subject to taxation of
£7.9m being the £7.7m reported tax charge plus an additional £0.2m tax
charge arising from the add-back of the £3.3m Adjusting items. In addition,
adjusting for a pre-IFRS16 basis, there is £1.6m to add back as a function of
the profit compression. This results in an Adjusted profit after tax of
£24.2m across a weighted average of 167.1m shares (H1 FY25: £22.4m over
171.9m shares).

Dividend

The Group maintains its commitment to distribute 55% of Adjusted profit after
tax as an ordinary dividend to its shareholders.

In line with the policy set out in May 2025, this takes the form of an interim
dividend of 34% of the prior year's full year dividend, with the balance being
proposed as a final dividend once the full year results are published.

The Group therefore declares an interim ordinary dividend of 4.52p per share.
The ex-dividend date will be 25(th) June 2026 with a record date of 26(th)
June and payment date of 24(th) July 2026.

Additionally, the Group will initiate a Buyback programme of £5m for the
second half.

Going Concern

The Directors are satisfied that the Group has adequate resources to continue
in operation for the foreseeable future, a period of at least 12 months from
the date of this report. Further details may be found in note 2 of the
accompanying financial statements.

 

Antony Smith

Chief Financial Officer

27(th) May 2026

 

 

Notes and reconciliations of Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)

The Group uses certain APMs to assist users of the accounts to understand the
business performance. Where APMs have been used in this report they have been
clearly noted as such. The APMs are aligned to the measures management use
internally and can be reconciled to the reported numbers as set out in the
tables below:

 

 APM 1  Adjusting items                          H1 FY26                               H1 FY25
        Other income (insurance settlement)                      -                     (1.6)
        Contingent consideration                 0.5                                   1.2
        Administrative expenses                                  -                     0.1
        Impairment                               2.8                                                   -
        Adjusting items including interest       3.3                                   (0.4)
        Interest included in Adjusting items     (0.3)                                 (0.3)
        Adjusting items before tax and interest  3.0                                   (0.7)

 

These are items deemed to be adjusted to help understand underlying
profitability of the business.

 

 APM 2  Group Adjusted EBITDA after rent             H1 FY26  H1 FY25  Movement
        Operating profit                             34.7     34.9     (0.5%)
        Add depreciation                             16.1     14.9     8.0%
        Add amortisation                             0.6      0.6      10.2%
        Add gain/loss on PPE                         (0.0)    0.0
 APM 1  Add Adjusting items before tax and interest  3.0      (0.7)
        Less property rent                           (12.1)   (10.9)   11.2%
        Group adjusted EBITDA after rent             42.2     38.8     8.9%

 

Management deem EBITDA to be a critical measure that investors, analysts and
banking covenants use to determine the underlying cash generation and
profitability of a business. EBITDA is a commonly used profit metric to
determine business valuations. The Group has previously described this measure
as Group Adjusted EBITDA pre-IFRS16. We have changed the nomenclature, but
adjustments remain consistent.

 

 

 APM 3  Group Adjusted PBT                           H1 FY26  H1 FY25  Movement
        PBT                                          27.2     28.3     (3.9%)
 APM 1  Add back Adjusting items                     3.3      (0.4)
        Group Adjusted PBT under IFRS16              30.5     28.0     9.2%
        Add depreciation and interest on ROU assets  13.7     12.7
        Less rent                                    (12.1)   (10.9)
        Group Adjusted PBT                           32.1     29.7     8.1%

 

This is used as a fundamental measure of the Group's profitability, removing
the adjusting items as per APM 1 and adjusting for property rent in place of
ROU asset depreciation and interest costs. This measure has previously been
called Group Adjusted PBT pre-IFRS16. Management's short and long-term bonus
targets are linked to Group Adjusted PBT.

 

 APM 4  Adjusted EPS                                  H1 FY26         H1 FY25         Movement
        Profit after tax                              19.5            20.6
 APM 1  Add Adjusting items                           3.3             (0.4)
        Tax impact of Adjusting items                 (0.2)           0.4
        Group Adjusted profit after tax under IFRS16  22.6            20.6            9.6%
        Add depreciation and interest on ROU assets   13.7            12.7
        Less rent                                     (12.1)          (10.9)
        Adjusted profit after tax                     24.2            22.4            8.1%
        Weighted average number of shares               167,076,651     171,939,567
        Adjusted EPS                                  14.51p          13.04p          11.3%

 

The Group's dividend policy is anchored to distribution of 55% of the Group's
Adjusted profit after tax, after removing Adjusting items and adjusting for
IFRS16 profit compression and dividing by the weighted average number of
shares in the period. Management incentives are linked to this measure. No tax
adjustment is made for moving from IFRS16 lease accounting to a rent basis.

Condensed Consolidated Income Statement and Statement of Comprehensive Income

For the six months ended 31 March 2026

 

                                                                                                              Six months ended 31 March 2026                                                    Six months ended 31 March 2025
                                                                                                     Before                                    Adjusting items  Total                   Before                              Adjusting         Total

                                                                                                     adjusting                                 (note 4)         Unaudited               adjusting                           Items             Unaudited

                                                                                                     items                                     Unaudited        £'000                   Items                               (note 4)          £'000

                                                                                                     Unaudited                                 £'000                                    Unaudited                           Unaudited

                                                                                Note                 £'000                                                                              £'000                               £'000
 Revenue                                                                                             141,539                                   -                141,539                 129,249                             -                 129,249
 Cost of goods sold                                                                                  (23,240)                                  -                (23,240)                (21,950)                            -                 (21,950)

 Centre staff costs                                                                                  (29,461)                                  -                (29,461)                (24,869)                            -                 (24,869)

 Gross profit                                                                                        88,838                                    -                88,838                  82,430                              -                 82,430
 Other income                                                                                        -                                         -                -                       -                                   1,613             1,613
 Administrative expenses                                                                             (51,176)                                  (2,962)          (54,138)                (48,209)                            (946)             (49,155)
 Operating profit                                                                                    37,662                                    (2,962)          34,700                  34,221                              667               34,888
 Finance income                                                                      5               329                                       -                329                     555                                 -                 555
 Finance expenses                                                                    5               (7,454)                                   (343)            (7,797)                 (6,818)                             (291)             (7,109)
 Profit before tax                                                                                   30,537                                    (3,305)          27,232                  27,958                              376               28,334
 Tax (charge)/credit                                                                 6               (7,898)                                   212              (7,686)                 (7,310)                             (391)             (7,701)
 Profit for the period attributable to equity shareholders                                           22,639                                    (3,093)          19,546                  20,648                              (15)              20,633
 Other comprehensive income                                                                          519                                       -                519                     (1,219)                             -                 (1,219)

 Retranslation gain/(loss) of foreign currency denominated operations
 Total comprehensive income for the period attributable to equity shareholders                       23,158                                    (3,093)          20,065                  19,429                              (15)              19,414

 Earnings per share
 Basic earnings per share (pence)                                                                                                                               11.70                                                                         12.00
 Diluted earnings per share (pence)                                                                                                                             11.64                                                                         11.93

 Weighted average number of shares - Basic                                                                                                                      167,076,651                                                                   171,939,567
 Dilutive potential ordinary shares                                                                                                                             879,658                                                                       1,040,490
 Weighted average number of shares - Diluted                                                                                                                    167,956,309                                                                   172,980,057
 Reconciliation of operating profit to Group adjusted EBITDA

                                                                                                                                                                                        Six months ended 31 March 2026      Six months ended 31 March 2025

                                                                                                                                                                                        Unaudited                           Unaudited

                                                                                                                                                 Note                                   £'000                               £'000
 Operating profit                                                                                                                                                                       34,700                              34,888
 Adjusting items excluding impairment                                                                                                              4                                    114                                 (667)
 Depreciation of property, plant and equipment                                                                                                     9                                    7,144                               6,746
 Depreciation of right-of-use assets                                                                                                              10                                    8,948                               8,160
 Amortisation of intangible assets                                                                                                                11                                    612                                 556
 Impairment of property, plant and equipment                                                                                                       9                                    1,999                               -
 Impairment of right-of-use assets                                                                                                                10                                    849                                 -
 (Profit)/loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment, right-of-use
 assets and software

                                                                                                                                               9, 10, 11                                (6)                                 20
 Group adjusted EBITDA                                                                                                                                                                  54,360                              49,703

 

Group adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and
amortisation) reflects the underlying trade of the overall business. It is
calculated as operating profit plus depreciation, amortisation, impairment
losses, loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment, right-of-use assets
and software and adjusting items.

 

Management use Group adjusted EBITDA as a key performance measure of the
business and it is considered by management to be a measure investors look at
to reflect the underlying business.

 Reconciliation of net debt             Six months      Six months      Year ended

                                        ended           ended           30 September

                                        31 March 2026   31 March 2025   2025

                                        Unaudited       Unaudited          Audited

                                        £'000           £'000           £'000

 Cash and cash equivalents              (25,994)        (22,738)        (15,189)
 Net (cash) excluding finance leases    (25,994)        (22,738)        (15,189)
 Finance leases                         235,134         231,523         235,793
 Net debt                               209,140         208,785         220,604

 Net debt is defined as borrowings from bank facilities excluding issue costs,
 plus finance leases less cash and cash equivalents.

Condensed Consolidated Statement of Financial Position

As at 31 March 2026

                                                 31 March    31 March    30 September

                                                 2026        2025        2025

                                                 Unaudited   Unaudited   Audited

                                                 £'000       £'000       £'000

                                       Note
 Assets
 Non-current assets
 Property, plant and equipment         9         121,367     114,261     121,737
 Right-of-use assets                   10        183,349     184,927     186,717
 Goodwill and intangible assets        11        99,064      99,596      99,336
 Deferred tax asset                              -           577         849
                                                 403,780     399,361     408,639
 Current assets
 Cash and cash equivalents                       25,994      22,738      15,189
 Trade and other receivables           7         7,335       7,544       9,633
 Corporation tax receivable                      -           -           2,208
 Inventories                                     4,160       3,045       3,553
                                                 37,489      33,327      30,583
 Total assets                                    441,269     432,688     439,222
 LIABILITIES
 Current liabilities
 Trade and other payables              8         36,352      28,725      35,063
 Lease liabilities                     10        15,158      15,155      15,131
 Corporation tax payable                         1,193       1,424       -
                                                 52,703      45,304      50,194
 Non-current liabilities
 Other payables                        8         961         7,907       5,706
 Lease liabilities                     10        219,976     216,368     220,662
 Deferred tax liability                          4,649       4,971       5,552
 Provisions                                      6,077       6,019       5,820
                                                 231,663     235,265     237,740
 Total liabilities                               284,366     280,569     287,934
 NET ASSETS                                      156,903     152,119     151,288
 Equity attributable to shareholders
 Share capital                         12        1,676       1,702       1,668
 Share premium                                   40,141      39,716      39,716
 Merger reserve                                  (49,897)    (49,897)    (49,897)
 Capital redemption reserve                      59          25          59
 Foreign currency translation reserve            (1,932)     (2,409)     (2,451)
 Retained earnings                               166,856     162,982     162,193

 TOTAL EQUITY                                    156,903     152,119     151,288

 

 

                                   Condensed Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity

                                   For the six months ended 31 March 2026
                                                                                      Note   Share                                                      Merger    Foreign                        Retained

capital

earnings

                   Capital redemption reserve             reserve   currency translation reserve
          Total

                                                                                                 £'000

                              £'000

                                                                                                                 £'000                        Share     £'000     £'000                                     £'000

                                                                                                                                              premium

                                                                                                                                              £'000
 Equity at 30 September 2024 (audited)                                                       1,721               1                            39,716    (49,897)  (1,190)                        161,854    152,205
 Shares issued during the period                                                             5                   -                            -         -         -                              -          5
 Share buy back                                                                              (24)                24                           -         -         -                              (6,313)    (6,313)
 Dividends paid                                                                              -                   -                            -         -         -                              (13,904)   (13,904)
 Share-based payments                                                                14      -                   -                            -         -         -                              778        778
 Deferred tax on share-based payments                                                        -                   -                            -         -         -                              (66)       (66)
 Retranslation of foreign currency denominated operations                                    -                   -                            -         -         (1,219)                        -          (1,219)
 Profit for the period                                                                       -                   -                            -         -         -                              20,633     20,633
 Equity at 31 March 2025 (unaudited)                                                         1,702               25                           39,716    (49,897)  (2,409)                        162,982    152,119
 Share buy back                                                      S                       (34)                34                           -         -         -                              (8,838)    (8,838)
 Dividends paid                                                                              -                   -                            -         -         -                              (6,923)    (6,923)
 Share-based payments                                                                14      -                   -                            -         -         -                              1,020      1,020
 Deferred tax on share-based payments                                                        -                   -                            -         -         -                              (24)       (24)
 Retranslation of foreign currency denominated operations                                    -                   -                            -         -         (42)                           -          (42)
 Profit for the period                                                                       -                   -                            -         -         -                              13,976     13,976
 Equity at 30 September 2025(audited)                                                        1,668               59                           39,716    (49,897)  (2,451)                        162,193    151,288
 Shares issued during the period                                                             8                   -                            425       -         -                              (6)        427
 Dividends paid                                                                              -                   -                            -         -         -                              (15,634)   (15,634)
 Share-based payments                                                                14      -                   -                            -         -         -                              754        754
 Deferred tax on share-based payments                                                        -                   -                            -         -         -                              3          3
 Retranslation of foreign currency denominated operations                                    -                   -                            -         -         519                            -          519
 Profit for the period                                                                       -                   -                            -         -         -                              19,546     19,546
 Equity at 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                                                         1,676               59                           40,141    (49,897)  (1,932)                        166,856    156,903

Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows

For the six months ended 31 March 2026

                                                                       Note  Six months      Six months

                                                                             ended           ended

                                                                             31 March 2026   31 March 2025

                                                                             Unaudited       Unaudited

                                                                             £'000           £'000

 Cash flows from operating activities
 Profit before tax                                                           27,232          28,334
 Adjusted by:
 Depreciation of property, plant and equipment (PPE)                   9     7,144           6,746
 Depreciation of right-of-use (ROU) assets                             10    8,948           8,160
 Amortisation of intangible assets                                     11    612             556
 Impairment of PPE and ROU Assets                                      9,10  2,848           -
 Net interest expense                                                  5     7,468           6,554
 (Profit)/loss on disposal of property, plant                                (6)             20

 and equipment, software and ROU Assets
 Share-based payments                                                        754             778
 Operating profit before working capital changes                             55,000          51,148
 Increase in inventories                                                     (608)           (148)
 Decrease in trade and other receivables                                     2,277           1,857
 Decrease in payables and provisions                                         (3,877)         (1,540)
 Cash inflow generated from operations                                       52,792          51,317
 Interest received                                                           308             581
 Corporation tax paid                                                        (4,339)         (4,157)
 Bank interest paid                                                          (58)            (46)
 Lease interest paid                                                         (7,244)         (6,608)
 Net cash inflow from operating activities                                   41,459          41,087
 Cash flows from investing activities
 Purchase of property, plant and equipment                                   (8,208)         (19,669)
 Purchase of intangible assets                                               (264)           (358)
 Proceeds from sale of assets                                                98              -
 Net cash used in investing activities                                       (8,374)         (20,027)
 Cash flows from financing activities

 Payment of capital elements of leases                                       (7,142)         (6,754)
 Share buy back                                                              -               (6,313)
 Issue of shares                                                       12    109             -
 Dividends paid                                                              (15,316)        (13,904)
 Net cash used in financing activities                                       (22,349)        (26,971)
 Net change in cash and cash equivalents for the period                      10,736          (5,911)
 Effect of foreign exchange rates on cash and cash equivalents               69              (53)
 Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the period                    15,189          28,702
 Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the period                          25,994          22,738

 

Notes to the condensed consolidated interim financial statements

 

1. General information

 

The Directors of Hollywood Bowl Group plc (together with its subsidiaries, the
"Group" or "HWB Group") present their interim report and the unaudited
financial statements for the six months ended 31 March 2026 ('Interim
Financial Statements').

 

HWB Group is incorporated and domiciled in England and Wales, under company
registration number 10229630. The registered office of the company is Focus
31, West Wing, Cleveland Road, Hemel Hempstead, HP2 7BW, United Kingdom.

 

The Group's principal activities are that of the operation of ten-pin bowling
and mini-golf centres, and a supplier and installer of bowling equipment as
well as the development of new centres and other associated activities.

 

The interim Financial Statements were approved by the Board of Directors on 27
May 2026.

 

The Group's last annual audited financial statements for the year ended 30
September 2025 have been prepared in accordance with UK-adopted International
Accounting Standards ('IFRS Accounting standards') and the requirements of the
Companies Act 2006, and these Interim Financial statements should be read in
conjunction with them.

 

The comparative figures for the year ended 30 September 2025 are an abridged
version of the Group's last annual financial statements and, together with
other financial information contained in these interim results, do not
constitute statutory financial statements of the Group as defined in section
434 of the Companies Act 2006. A copy of the statutory accounts for the year
ended 30 September 2025 have been delivered to the Registrar of Companies. The
external auditor has reported on those accounts: their report was unqualified
and did not contain a statement under s498 (2) or (3) of the Companies Act
2006.

 

2. Basis of preparation

 

The Interim Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with IAS 34,
'Interim Financial Reporting' and the Disclosures and Transparency Rules of
the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority. They do not include all of
the information required for a complete set of IFRS financial statements.
However, selected explanatory notes are included to explain events and
transactions that are significant to an understanding of the changes in the
Group's financial position and performance since the last financial
statements.

 

The functional currencies of entities in the Group are Pounds Sterling and
Canadian Dollars. The Interim Financial Statements are presented in Pounds
Sterling, rounded to the nearest thousand pounds, except where otherwise
indicated; and under the historical cost convention, except for fair value
items on acquisition.

 

The accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the Interim Financial
Statements are consistent with those applied in the presentation of the
Group's consolidated financial statements for the year ended 30 September
2025. At the date of authorisation of this financial information, certain new
standards, amendments and interpretations to existing standards applicable to
the Group have been published but are not yet effective and have not been
adopted early by the Group. The impact of these standards is not expected to
be material.

 

Basis of consolidation

 

The consolidated financial information incorporates the Financial Statements
of the Company and all of its subsidiary undertakings. The Financial
Statements of all Group companies are adjusted, where necessary, to ensure the
use of consistent accounting policies. Acquisitions are accounted for under
the acquisition method from the date control passes to the Group. On
acquisition, the assets, liabilities and contingent liabilities of a
subsidiary are measured at their fair values at the date of acquisition. Any
excess of the cost of acquisition over the fair values of the identifiable net
assets acquired is recognised as goodwill, or a gain on bargain purchase if
the fair values of the identifiable net assets are greater than the cost of
acquisition. Intragroup balances and any unrealised gains and losses or income
and expenses arising from intragroup transactions are eliminated in preparing
the consolidated financial statements.

 

Going concern

 

The financial position of the Group, its cash flows, performance and position
are described in the financial review section. Details of the Group's
available and drawn facilities are included in note 13. At 31 March 2026, the
Group had a cash balance of £26.0m with an undrawn RCF of £25m with Barclays
Bank plc, and no outstanding loan balances, giving an overall liquidity of
£51.0m.

 

In their consideration of going concern, the Directors have reviewed the
Group's future cash forecasts and profit projections using a base case and a
severe but plausible downside scenario. The Directors are of the opinion that
the Group's forecasts and projections show that the Group is able to operate
within its current facilities and comfortably comply with the covenants
outlined in its RCF.

 

Taking the above, and the principal risks faced by the Group as outlined in
note 15 to these interim financial statements, into consideration, the
Directors are satisfied that the Group has adequate resources to continue in
operation for the foreseeable future, a period of at least twelve months from
the date of this report. Accordingly, the Group continues to adopt the going
concern basis in preparing these interim financial statements.

 

Adjusting items

 

Adjusting items are those that in management's judgement need to be disclosed
by virtue of their size, nature and incidence, in order to draw the attention
of the reader and to show the underlying business performance of the Group
more accurately. Such items are included within the income statement caption
to which they relate and are separately disclosed on the face of the condensed
consolidated income statement and in the notes to these interim Financial
Statements.

 

Summary of other estimates and judgements

The preparation of the Group financial statements requires management to make
judgements, estimates and assumptions in applying the Group's accounting
policies to determine the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and
expenditure. Actual results may differ from these estimates. The estimates and
underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis, with revisions
applied prospectively.

Judgements made by the Directors in the application of these accounting
policies that have a significant effect on the financial statements and
estimates with a significant risk of material adjustment in the next financial
year are set out below.

Key sources of estimation uncertainty

Set out below are areas of estimation uncertainty in the financial
statements.  There are no key judgements other than those related to an area
of estimation uncertainty:

·       Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use asset impairment
reviews

Property, plant and equipment and right-of-use assets are assessed for
impairment when there is an indication that the assets might be impaired by
comparing the carrying value of the assets with their recoverable amounts. The
recoverable amount is determined as being the highest of the value-in-use and
fair value less costs to sell. The recoverable amount of an asset or a CGU is
typically determined based on value-in-use calculations prepared on the basis
of management's assumptions and estimates, but if a potential impairment is
identified then the recoverable amount is also determined using fair value
less costs to sell.

 

The key assumptions in the value-in-use calculations include growth rates of
revenue and costs during the five-year forecast period, discount rates and the
long-term growth rate. Following the impairment charge recorded in the period
of £2,848,000 for one bowling centre, the estimation uncertainty associated
with the remaining carrying amount is significantly reduced, and whilst
estimation uncertainty remains, this is not assessed as being material. As
such, reasonably possible changes to the assumptions in the future for this
centre would not lead to material adjustments to the carrying values. The
remaining carrying amount of property, plant and equipment is £897,000 and
right-of-use assets is £401,000 at this centre.

The key assumption in the fair value less costs to sell calculation, under the
market approach, is the EBITDA multiple.

Further information in respect of the Group's property, plant and equipment
and right-of-use assets is included in notes 9 and 10 respectively.

·       Contingent consideration

Current other payables include contingent consideration in respect of the
acquisition of Teaquinn Holdings Inc. in FY2022. The additional consideration
to be paid is contingent on the future financial performance of Xtreme Bowling
Entertainment Corporation (XBEC) in FY2026. This is based on a multiple of
9.2x XBEC's EBITDA pre-IFRS 16 in the financial period and is capped at
CAD$17m. The contingent consideration has been accounted for as
post-acquisition employee remuneration and recognised over the duration of the
employment contract to FY2026. The key assumptions include a range of possible
outcomes for the value of the contingent consideration based on XBEC's
forecasted EBITDA pre-IFRS 16.

·       Dilapidation provision

A provision is made for future expected dilapidation costs on the opening of
leasehold properties not covered by the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 (LTA) and
is expected to be utilised on lease expiry. This also includes properties
covered by the LTA where we may not extend the lease, after consideration of
the long-term trading and viability of the centre. Properties covered by the
LTA provide security of tenure and we intend to occupy these premises
indefinitely until the landlord serves notice that the centre is to be
redeveloped. As such, no charge for dilapidations can be imposed and no
dilapidation provision is considered necessary as the outflow of economic
benefit is not considered to be probable.

 

Adjusted measures

 

The Group uses a number of non-Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
(non-GAAP) financial measures in addition to those reported in accordance with
IFRS. The Directors believe that these non-GAAP measures, listed below, are
important when assessing the underlying financial and operating performance of
the Group by investors and shareholders. These non-GAAP measures comprise of
like-for-like revenue growth, adjusted profit after tax, adjusted earnings per
share, net cash, Group adjusted operating cash flow, revenue generating capex,
total average spend per game, free cash flow, gross profit on costs of goods
sold, Group adjusted EBITDA and Group adjusted EBITDA margin.

Further explanation on alternative performance measures is provided in the
Chief Financial Officer's review.

 

3. Segmental reporting

 

Management consider that the Group consists of two operating segments, as it
operates within the UK and Canada. No single customer provides more than ten
per cent of the Group's revenue. Within these two operating segments there are
multiple revenue streams which consist of the following:

 

                    Six months ended 31 March 2026                       Six months ended 31 March 2025

                    UK                           Canada      Total       UK                Canada      Total

                    Unaudited                    Unaudited   Unaudited   Unaudited         Unaudited   Unaudited

                    £'000                        £'000       £'000       £'000             £'000       £'000
 Bowling                               52,746    10,379      63,125      48,372   9,117                57,489
 Food and drink                        30,263    6,394       36,657      28,644   5,656                34,300
 Amusements                            34,201    3,612       37,813      29,846   2,928                32,774
 Installation of bowling equipment     -         2,249       2,249       -        2,897                2,897
 Other                                 1,166     529         1,695       1,306    483                  1,789
                    118,376                      23,163      141,539     108,168           21,081      129,249

 

 

                                                                                 Six months ended 31 March 2026         Six months ended 31 March 2025

                                                                                 UK           Canada       Total        UK           Canada       Total

                                                                                 Unaudited    Unaudited    Unaudited    Unaudited    Unaudited    Unaudited

                                                                                 £'000        £'000        £'000        £'000        £'000        £'000
 Revenue                                                                         118,376      23,163       141,539      108,168      21,081       129,249
 Group adjusted EBITDA(1) pre-IFRS16                                             37,929       4,319        42,248
 Group adjusted EBITDA(1)                                                        47,929       6,431        54,360       43,304       6,399        49,703
 Depreciation and amortisation                                                   (13,634)     (3,070)      (16,704)     (12,713)     (2,749)      (15,462)
 Impairment of PPE and ROU Assets                                                (2,848)      -            (2,848)      -            -            -
 (Loss)/gain on property, right-of-use assets, plant and equipment and software  (79)         85           6            (24)         4            (20)
 disposals
 Adjusting items excluding interest                                              -            (114)        (114)        1,563        (896)        667
 Operating profit                                                                31,368       3,332        34,700       32,130       2,758        34,888
 Finance income                                                                  304          25           329          529          26           555
 Finance expense                                                                 (6,163)      (1,634)      (7,797)      (5,653)      (1,456)      (7,109)
 Profit before tax                                                               25,509       1,723        27,232       27,006       1,328        28,334
 PPE asset additions                                                             3,580        4,757        8,337        12,201       7,534        19,735
 Intangible asset additions                                                      255          9            264          358          -            358
 Total assets                                                                    344,187      97,082       441,269      341,902      90,786       432,688
 Total liabilities                                                               233,293      51,073       284,366      227,572      52,997       280,569

(1) Group adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and
amortisation) is calculated as operating profit plus depreciation,
amortisation, impairment losses, loss on disposal of property, plant and
equipment, right-of-use assets and software and adjusting items.

 

4. Adjusting items

 

Adjusting items are disclosed separately in the financial statements where the
Directors consider it necessary to do so to provide further understanding of
the financial performance of the Group. They are material items or expenses
that have been shown separately due to, in the Directors judgement, their
size, nature and incidence:

 

                                                          Six months ended  Six months ended

                                                          31 March 2026     31 March 2025

                                                          Unaudited         Unaudited

                                                          £'000             £'000
 Insurance settlement(1)                                  -                 1,613
 Administrative expenses(2)                               -                 (62)
 Impairment of PPE and ROU Assets(3)                      (2,848)           -
 Contingent consideration - administrative expenses(4)    (114)             (884)
 Adjusting items before interest expense                  (2,962)           667
 Contingent consideration - interest expense(4)           (343)             (291)
 Adjusting items before tax                               (3,305)           376
 Tax charge                                               212               (391)
 Adjusting items after tax                                (3,093)           (15)

 

(1) During the prior year, the Group received a business interruption
insurance settlement.

(2) Administrative expenses related to the closure of Hollywood Bowl Surrey
Quays.

(3) Impairment of PPE of £1,999,000 (31 March 2025: £nil) and ROU Assets of
£849,000 (31 March 2025: £nil)

(4) Contingent consideration of £114,000 (31 March 2025: £884,000) in
administrative expenses and £343,000 (31 March 2025:

  £291,000) of interest expense in relation to the acquisition of Teaquinn
in May 2022.

 

5. Finance income and expenses

                                                                      Six months      Six months

                                                                      ended           ended

                                                                      31 March 2026   31 March 2025

                                                                      Unaudited       Unaudited

                                                                      £'000           £'000
 Interest on bank deposits                                            329             555
 Finance income                                                       329             555

 Interest on bank borrowings                                          82              105
 Unwinding of discount on provisions                                  128             105
 Unwinding of discount on contingent consideration (note 4)           343             291
 Finance costs on lease liabilities                                   7,244           6,608
 Finance expense                                                      7,797           7,109

 

 

6. Taxation

                                                        Six months      Six months

                                                        ended           ended

                                                        31 March 2026   31 March 2025

                                                        Unaudited       Unaudited

                                                        £'000           £'000
 The tax expense is as follows:
 - UK Corporation tax                                   7,099           5,622
 - Foreign tax suffered                                 641             1,160
 Total current tax                                      7,740           6,782

 Deferred tax:
 Origination and reversal of temporary differences      (54)            919
 Total deferred tax                                     (54)            919
 Total tax expense                                      7,686           7,701

 Factors affecting tax charge:

 The income tax expense was recognised based on management's best estimate of
 the weighted average annual income tax rate expected for the full financial
 year applied to the profit before tax for the half year ended 31 March 2026.

 .

Deferred tax

 

Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using the tax rates that are
expected to apply to the periods when the assets are realised or liabilities
settled, based on tax rates enacted or substantively enacted at 31 March 2026.

7. Trade and other receivables

                    Six months      Six months      Year ended

                    ended           ended           30 September

                    31 March 2026   31 March 2025   2025

                    Unaudited       Unaudited       Audited

                    £'000           £'000           £'000
 Trade receivables  979             823             1,815
 Other receivables  172             1,351           155
 Prepayments        6,184           5,370           7,663
                    7,335           7,544           9,633

 

Trade receivables have an ECL against them that is immaterial. There were no
overdue receivables at the end of any period.

 

 

 

8. Trade and other payables

                               Six months      Six months      Year ended

                               ended           ended           30 September

                               31 March 2026   31 March 2025   2025

                               Unaudited       Unaudited       Audited

 Current                       £'000           £'000           £'000
 Trade payables                6,544           6,119           7,166
 Other payables                8,823           4,200           4,927
 Accruals and deferred income  14,277          13,159          16,832
 Taxation and social security  6,708           5,247           6,138
                               36,352          28,725          35,063

 

 

                 Six months      Six months      Year ended

                 ended           ended           30 September

                 31 March 2026   31 March 2025   2025

                 Unaudited       Unaudited       Audited

 Non-current     £'000           £'000           £'000
 Other payables  961             7,907           5,706

 

Accruals and deferred income include a staff bonus accrual of £2,211,000 (31
March 2025: £3,090,000, 30 September 2025: £3,903,000). Deferred income
includes £1,933,000 (31 March 2025: £1,593,000, 30 September 2025:
£1,814,000) of customer deposits received in advance and £1,065,000 (31
March 2025: £1,128,000, 30 September 2025: £2,885,000) relating to bowling
equipment installations, all of which is recognised in the income statement
during the following 12 months.

 

Current other payables include £4,958,000  (31 March 2025: £nil, 30
September 2025: £nil) of contingent consideration and £nil (31 March 2025:
£nil, 30 September 2025: 1,764,000) of deferred consideration in respect of
the acquisition of Teaquinn Holdings Inc.

 

Non-current other payables includes £nil (31 March 2025: £4,974,000, 30
September 2025: £4,475,000) of contingent consideration and £nil (31 March
2025: £1,747,000, 30 September 2025: £nil) of deferred consideration in
respect of the acquisition of Teaquinn Holdings Inc.

 9. Property, plant and equipment

                                              Freehold property     Short leasehold property £'000      Lanes and pinspotters     Plant & machinery, fixtures and fittings          Total

                                              £'000                                                     £'000                     £'000                                             £'000
 Cost
 At 1 October 2024                            6,274                 72,581                              25,693                    63,836                                            168,384
 Additions                                    -                     19,756                              6,824                     8,930                                             35,510
 Disposals                                    -                     (1,622)                             (396)                     (1,365)                                           (3,383)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange      (204)                 (521)                               (139)                     (95)                                              (959)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)               6,070                 90,194                              31,982                    71,306                                            199,552
 Additions                                    -                     4,468                               1,287                     2,582                                             8,337
 Disposals                                    -                     (316)                               -                         (896)                                             (1,212)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange      107                   331                                 88                        55                                                581
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                 6,177                 94,677                              33,357                    73,047                                            207,258
 Accumulated depreciation
 At 1 October 2024                            140                   26,373                              5,433                     34,502                                            66,448
 Depreciation charge                          147                   5,318                               1,203                     6,787                                             13,455
 Impairment charge                            -                     235                                 -                         824                                               1,059
 Disposals                                    -                     (1,572)                             (332)                     (1,144)                                           (3,048)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange      (8)                   (40)                                (24)                      (27)                                              (99)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)               279                   30,314                              6,280                     40,942                                            77,815
 Depreciation charge                          68                    2,870                               676                       3,530                                             7,144
 Impairment charge                            -                     1,835                               -                         164                                               1,999
 Disposals                                    -                     (316)                               -                         (804)                                             (1,120)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange      5                     20                                  13                        15                                                53
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                 352                   34,723                              6,969                     43,847                                            85,891
 Net book value
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                 5,825                 59,954                              26,388                    29,200                                            121,367
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)               5,791                 59,880                              25,702                    30,364                                            121,737

 

Short leasehold property includes £2,801,000 (31 March 2025: £2,747,000; 30
September 2025: £1,660,000) of assets in the course of construction, relating
to the development of new centres.

 

As at 31 March 2026, outstanding capital commitments to fit out new and
refurbish existing sites totalled £4,439,000 (31 March 2025: £10,812,451; 30
September 2025: £345,000).

 

Impairment

Impairment testing is carried out as outlined in the Group's consolidated
financial statements for the year ended 30 September 2025. Detailed impairment
testing, due to the financial performance of certain centres, resulted in the
recognition of an impairment charge in the period of £1,999,000 (30 September
2025: £1,059,000) against property, plant and equipment assets and £849,000
(30 September 2025: £1,229,000) against right-of-use assets for one bowling
centre (30 September 2025: four mini-golf centres and one combined centre
(note 10), which form part of the UK operating segment.

 

 

10. Leases

 

Group as a lessee

 

The Group has lease contracts for property and amusement machines used in its
operations. The Group's obligations under its leases are secured by the
lessor's title to the leased assets. The Group is restricted from assigning
and subleasing the leased assets. There are fourteen (FY2025: ten) lease
contracts that include variable lease payments in the form of revenue-based
rent top-ups.

 

The Group also has certain leases of equipment with lease terms of 12 months
or less and leases of office equipment with low value. The Group applies the
'short-term lease' and 'lease of low-value assets' recognition exemptions for
these leases.

 

Set out below are the carrying amounts of right-of-use assets recognised and
the movements during the period:

 

                                                                           Property  Amusement machines  Total

                                                                           £'000     £'000               £'000
 Cost
 At 1 October 2024                                                         220,809   19,328              240,137
 Additions                                                                 24,254    4,452               28,706
 Modifications and remeasurements                                          4,968     -                   4,968
 Surrenders                                                                -         (1,068)             (1,068)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange                                   (1,236)   -                   (1,236)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)                                            248,795   22,712              271,507
 Additions                                                                 3,248     918                 4,166
 Modifications and remeasurements                                          1,649     -                   1,649
 Surrenders                                                                -         (384)               (384)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange                                   654       -                   654
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                                              254,346   23,246              277,592
 Accumulated depreciation
 At 1 October 2024                                                         57,048    10,322              67,370
 Depreciation charge                                                       13,044    4,006               17,050
 Impairment charge                                                         1,229     -                   1,229
 Surrenders                                                                -         (859)               (859)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)                                            71,321    13,469              84,790
 Depreciation charge                                                       6,757     2,191               8,948
 Impairment charge                                                         849       -                   849
 Surrenders                                                                -         (344)               (344)
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                                              78,927    15,316              94,243
 Net book value
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                                              175,419   7,930               183,349
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)                                            177,474   9,243               186,717

 Impairment testing is carried out as outlined in the Group's consolidated
 financial statements for the year ended 30 September 2025. Detailed impairment
 testing resulted in the recognition of an impairment charge in the period of
 £849,000 (30 September 2025: £1,229,000) against right-of-use assets for one
 bowling centre (30 September 2025: two UK mini-golf centres and one combined
 centre) (note 9).

 

Set out below are the carrying amounts of lease liabilities and the movements
during the period:

 

                                                             Property  Amusement machines  Total

                                                             £'000     £'000               £'000
 Lease liabilities
 At 1 October 2024                                           208,600   9,642               218,242
 Additions                                                   24,254    4,452               28,706
 Modifications and remeasurements                            4,968     -                   4,968
 Accretion of interest                                       13,113    618                 13,731
 Surrenders                                                  -         (241)               (241)
 Payments                                                    (23,816)  (4,475)             (28,291)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange                     (1,322)   -                   (1,322)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)                              225,797   9,996               235,793
 Additions                                                   3,248     918                 4,166
 Modifications and remeasurements                            1,649     -                   1,649
 Accretion of interest                                       6,940     304                 7,244
 Surrenders                                                  -         (43)                (43)
 Payments                                                    (11,914)  (2,472)             (14,386)
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange                     711       -                   711
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)                                226,431   8,703               235,134
 Current                                                     10,933    4,225               15,158
 Non-current                                                 215,498   4,478               219,976
 At 31 March 2026                                            226,431   8,703               235,134
 Current                                                     10,645    4,486               15,131
 Non-current                                                 215,152   5,510               220,662
 At 30 September 2025                                        225,797   9,996               235,793

( )

11. Goodwill and intangible assets

                                          Goodwill   Brand    Trademark £'000   Customer relationships £'000   Software  Total

                                           £'000     £'000                                                     £'000     £'000
 Cost
 At 1 October 2024                        92,713     7,229    798               1,105                          2,903     104,748
 Additions                                -          -        -                 -                              714       714
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange  (5)        (548)    -                 (37)                           -         (590)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)           92,708     6,681    798               1,068                          3,617     104,872
 Additions                                -          -        -                 -                              264       264
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange  3          61       -                 18                             1         83
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)             92,711     6,742    798               1,086                          3,882     105,219
 Accumulated amortisation
 At 1 October 2024                        -          2,662    516               126                            1,121     4,425
 Amortisation charge                      -          569      50                79                             457       1,155
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange  -          (33)     -                 (11)                           -         (44)
 At 30 September 2025 (audited)           -          3,198    566               194                            1,578     5,536

 Amortisation charge                      -          284      25                36                             267       612
 Effects of movement in foreign exchange  -          4        -                 3                              -         7
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)             -          3,486    591               233                            1,845     6,155
 Net book value
 At 31 March 2026 (unaudited)             92,711     3,256    207               853                            2,037     99,064
  At 30 September 2025 (audited)          92,708     3,483    232               874                            2,039     99,336

 

12. Share capital

The share capital of the Group is represented by the share capital of the
Parent Company, Hollywood Bowl Group plc.

During the period, 736,901 ordinary shares (31 March 2025 and 30 September
2025: 531,122 ordinary shares) of £0.01 each were issued under the Group's
LTIP scheme and 44,435 ordinary shares (31 March 2025: nil, 30 September 2025:
1,265 ordinary shares) of £0.01 each were issued under the Group's SAYE
scheme.

 

The ordinary shares are entitled to dividends.

 

13. Loans and borrowings

 

On 8 May 2025, the Group entered into a £25m revolving credit facility (RCF)
with Barclays Bank plc. The RCF has a termination date of 7 May 2028.

 

Interest is charged on any drawn balance based on the reference rate (SONIA),
plus a margin of 1.30 per cent (31 March 2025: 1.65 per cent, 30 September
2025: 1.30 per cent).

 

A commitment fee equal to 35 per cent of the drawn margin is payable on the
undrawn facility balance. The commitment fee rate as at 31 March 2026 was
therefore 0.4550 per cent (31 March 2025: 0.5775 per cent, 30 September 2025:
0.4550 per cent).

 

Issue costs of £125,000 were paid to Barclays Bank plc on commencement of the
RCF. These costs are being amortised over the term of the facility and are
included within prepayments.

 

The terms of the Barclays Bank plc facility include a Group financial
covenants that each quarter the ratio of total net debt to Group adjusted
EBITDA pre-IFRS 16 shall not exceed 1.75:1.

 

The Group operated within the covenants during the period and the previous
period.

 

 

14.  Performance share-based payments - Long-term employee incentive costs

 

The Group had the following performance share-based payment arrangements in
operation during the period:

a) The Hollywood Bowl Group plc Long Term Incentive Plan 2023

b) The Hollywood Bowl Group plc Long Term Incentive Plan 2024

c) The Hollywood Bowl Group plc Long Term Incentive Plan 2025

d) The Hollywood Bowl Group plc Long Term Incentive Plan 2026

 

 

Long Term Incentive Plans

 

HWB Group plc operates Long Term Incentive Plans (LTIPs) for certain key
management. In accordance with IFRS 2 Share-based payment, the values of the
awards are measured at fair value at the date of grant. The exercise price of
the LTIPs is equal to the nominal price of the underlying shares on the date
of grant. The fair value is determined based on the exercise price and number
of shares granted, and is written off on a straight-line basis over the
vesting period, based on management's estimate of the number of shares that
will eventually vest.

 

In accordance with the LTIP schemes outlined in the Group's Remuneration
Policy (Annual Report FY2025), the vesting of these awards is conditional upon
the achievement of an EPS target set at the time of grant and measured at the
end of a 3-year period ending 30 September 2025, 2026, 2027 and 2028 and the
Executive Directors' continued employment at the date of vesting. The LTIPs
also have performance targets based on return on centre invested capital,
emissions ratio for Scope 1 and Scope 2 and (except for LTIP 2025 and 2026)
team member development. LTIP 2025 and 2026 also have a market based
performance condition linked to relative Total Shareholder Return (TSR).
Subject to performance against the targets, the awards will vest three years
after grant and will be subject to a further 2 year holding period.

 

During the six months ended 31 March 2026, 556,532 (31 March 2025 and 30
September 2025: 572,104) share awards were granted under the LTIPs and an
additional 118,013 (31 March 2025 and 30 September 2025: 67,686) shares were
issued to cover the LTIP 2023 dividend equivalents (31 March 2025 and 30
September 2025: LTIP 2022 dividend equivalents).

 

For the six months ended 31 March 2026, the Group has recognised £753,996 of
performance share-based payment expense in the profit or loss account (31
March 2025: £758,312 and 30 September 2025: £1,789,739).

 

The LTIP shares are dilutive for the purposes of calculating diluted earnings
per share.

 

15.  Principal Risks and Uncertainties

 

The Directors have reconsidered the principal risks and uncertainties of the
Group and have determined that those reported in the Annual Report for the
year ended 30 September 2025 remain relevant for the remaining half of the
financial year. These risks are summarised below, and how the Group seeks to
mitigate these risks is set out on pages 43 to 49 of the Annual Report and
Accounts 2025, which can be found at www.hollywoodbowlgroup.com
(http://www.hollywoodbowlgroup.com) .

 

In summary, these include:

 

·      The economic condition in the UK and Canada - results in a decline
in GDP, consumer spending, a fall in revenue and inflation pressure impacting
the Group's strategy.

·      Breach of covenants - could result in a review of banking
arrangements and potential liquidity issues.

·      Expansion and growth - a competitive environment for new centres
resulting in less new Group centre openings. This also includes the impact of
non-bowling centre openings which provide competition for the leisure
discretionary spend.

·      Dependency on the performance of core IT systems - reducing the
ability of the Group to take bookings and resulting in loss of revenue.
Inaccuracy of data could lead to incorrect business decisions being made.

·      Delivery of products and services from third party suppliers which
are key to the customer experience - impacting on the overall offer to the
customer.

·      Management retention and recruitment - lack of direction at centre
level with effect on customer experience. More difficult to execute business
plans and strategy, impacting on revenue and profitability.

·      Health and safety - significant injury / death from accidents or
fire. Major food incident including allergen or fresh food issues. Loss of
trade and reputation, potential closure and litigation.

·      Cyber security and GDPR - risk of cyber-attack/terrorism could
impact the Group's ability to keep trading and prevent customers from booking
online. Data protection or GDPR breach. Theft of customer or staff data,
including but not limited to, email addresses and the ensuing impact on brand
reputation in the case of a breach.

·      Compliance - failure to adhere to regulatory requirements such as
listing rules, taxation, health and safety, planning regulations and other
laws. Potential financial penalties and reputational damage.

·      Climate change - increasing carbon taxes, business interruption and
damage to assets and cost of transitioning operations to net zero.

 

16.  Related Party Transactions

 

There were no related party transactions during the period ending 31 March
2026 or 31 March 2025.

 

Responsibility Statement

 

We confirm that to the best of our knowledge:

 

·      The condensed set of financial statements has been prepared in
accordance with IAS 34 'Interim Financial Reporting'.

·      The interim management report includes a fair review of the
information required by:

(a) DTR 4.2.7R of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules, being an
indication of important events that have occurred during the first six months
of the financial year and their impact on the condensed set of financial
statements; and a description of the principal risks and uncertainties for the
remaining six months of the year; and

(b) DTR 4.2.8R of the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules, being
related party transactions that have taken place in the first six months of
the current financial year and that have materially affected the financial
position or performance of the entity during that period; and any changes in
the related party transactions described in the last annual report that could
do so.

 

This responsibility statement was approved by the Board on 27 May 2026 and is
signed on its behalf by:

 

 

 

Stephen Burns
                                        Antony Smith

CEO                                                                                                     CFO

27 May 2026                                                                                        27 May 2026

 

 

 

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