Champion Beer of Britain


The Champion Beer of Britain is an award presented by the Campaign for Real Ale, at its annual Great British Beer Festival in early August.

Qualification and judging

Beers can qualify for the Champion Beer of Britain in three ways:
  • CAMRA tasting panels judge the beers in their geographic area of the UK. The recommendations of these panels are put forward to six regional panels, with the winners of these qualifying for the finals in August.
  • Votes from CAMRA members via a form in What's Brewing, the CAMRA newsletter.
  • Winning one of the 150 Beer Of The Festival awards from CAMRA beer festivals held throughout the year
Nominated beers are then grouped into categories and go through several rounds of blind tasting at the Great British Beer Festival. Category winners are then re-judged to determine the supreme champion — the Supreme Champion Beer of Britain.
Up until 2015, the Supreme Champion was to be announced at the GBBF. In 2016, however, the announcement was made at a special Champion Beer of Britain Awards Dinner held in the evening of 9 August at the Kensington Olympia Hilton Hotel on the first day of the festival. The change was made to raise the profile of the competition. After an outcry from members the process of announcing the winning beers during the trade day afternoon at GBBF was quickly reinstated.
The judges of the competition usually include professional brewers, beer writers, and respected beer enthusiasts. The focus of the judging is whether the judges actually enjoy the beer, as opposed to the American approach of judging a beer's technical merits.
While the award is prestigious, winning has sometimes caused problems for smaller breweries who have been unable to meet the demand for their champion beers caused by the newfound fame and publicity.

Categories

Beers can be split into categories depending on their style or strength, from 2023 the categories were changed:

Category name changes

The Old Ales & Barley Wines category has been renamed over the years. The award was first presented in 1991. In 1992 the category was split into two - Old Ales and Barley Wines. The new Old Ales category was renamed in 1993 to Old Ales & Strong Milds, changed again to Old Ales & Strong Ales in 1994, finally reverting to Old Ales & Strong Milds in 1996.
The Strong Ale category was changed in 1991 to Strong Bitter, with the Strong Milds joining the Old Ales category.

Winter Ales Festival

A winter ales festival has been held since 1991, the winner, since 1996, being named the Champion Winter Beer of Britain
Since 1996 the Old Ales & Strong Milds, Barley Wines and Porters & Stouts have been judged as part of the Champion Winter Beer Of Britain awards at the National Winter Ales Festival. In 2023 Speciality beers also moved to the Winter ales festival.

Results

;KeyBlue background indicates beers that were named Supreme Champion after winning in their category.

Supreme Champion category

From 1990 onwards Gold, Silver and Bronze awards were made instead of just having an overall winner.

IPAs category

YearGoldSilverBronze
2023Bragdy Twt Lol, Diablo DragonsLoch Lomond Brewery, BravehopThornbridge Brewery, Jaipur
2024Anspach & Hobday, The IPAByatt’s Brewery, Mahana IPABragdy Twt Lol, Dreigiau’r Diafol
2025Elusive, Oregon Trailn/an/a

Session Pale, Blond and Golden Ales category

YearGoldSilverBronze
2023Swannay Brewery, Island HoppingOakham Ales, InfernoSalopian Brewery, Oracle
2024Loch Lomond Brewery, Southern SummitOakham Ales, CitraBewdley Brewery, Sunshine
2025Track, Sonoman/an/a

Premium Pale, Blond and Golden Ales category

YearGoldSilverBronze
2023Baker's Dozen Brewing Co., Electric LandladyBlackedge Brewing Co., KiwiSt Austell Brewery, Proper Job
2024Crouch Vale Brewery, AmarilloSt Austell Brewery, Proper JobSwannay Brewery, Orkney IPA
2025Church End, Fallen Angeln/an/a

Defunct award categories

Strong Bitter category (1991–2019)

Successor to the Strong Ale category. Strong Milds were transferred to the Old Ales category.