How to Prepare for a Premises Licence Review Hearing
Practical guide to preparing for a premises licence review hearing: assembling evidence, engaging stakeholders, and presenting the case effectively.
A premises licence review is the most serious enforcement tool available to the licensing authority. Triggered by responsible authorities or interested parties over concerns relating to the four licensing objectives, a review can result in conditions added, hours reduced, or the licence suspended or revoked. Preparation determines the outcome. Operators who walk into review with a strong evidence pack typically retain their licence with manageable conditions; operators who arrive empty-handed often do not.
6 steps to complete
Read the review application carefully
When a review is initiated, the applicant submits a written application setting out their grounds. Read it line by line. Identify which of the four licensing objectives are alleged to be undermined and the specific evidence cited.
Assemble your evidence pack
Pull together: refusals records, capacity logs, sound readings, door supervisor records, incident reports, complaint logs, CCTV references, training records, and any correspondence with responsible authorities. Filter to the date range relevant to the review.
Engage a licensing solicitor
Reviews are adversarial proceedings with technical evidence rules. Engage a specialist licensing solicitor as soon as the review is announced. Their fee is small relative to the value of the licence at risk.
Reach out to responsible authorities
Police, environmental health, and trading standards may have concerns that can be addressed informally before the hearing. Often a written commitment from the operator (additional door staff, extended CCTV retention, a noise management plan update) resolves their representation.
Prepare your operational changes
Voluntarily proposing operational changes shows the committee that you are responsive. Common pre-hearing changes: improved staff training, additional door staff at peak times, voluntary capacity reduction during pinch periods, refreshed signage. Document each commitment.
Attend the hearing with your evidence
The committee hears the applicant's representations, then yours, then any supporting witnesses. Your solicitor presents the evidence pack and your operational commitments. Be prepared to answer questions about specific incidents.
Tips for success
Common mistakes to avoid
Frequently asked questions
Who can call a premises licence review?
Responsible authorities (police, environmental health, trading standards, fire and rescue, child protection, the licensing authority) or interested parties (residents, businesses) over concerns relating to the four licensing objectives.
How long do I have to prepare?
Reviews are advertised for 28 days from the date the application is submitted. The hearing typically follows within 6 weeks. That gives 4 to 8 weeks of preparation.
What outcomes can the committee decide?
Conditions added, hours reduced, the licence suspended for up to 3 months, or revoked. Decisions can be appealed to the magistrates' court within 21 days.
Can I appeal a review outcome?
Yes. Appeals to the magistrates' court within 21 days. The court hears the case afresh. During an appeal the committee's decision is normally suspended.
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