Versuchen GOLD - Frei
WALLET-BUSTING FESTIVE TREAT
Sunday Express
|November 16, 2025
VISITORS to Christmas markets across Britain will sip winter-warming glühwein and chomp on a bratwurst during the next few weeks - but is it all just a festive rip-off?
Before lockdown, Britain boasted 100 Yuletide markets, but by this weekend almost every town and city will have seasonal stalls selling handcrafted gifts, jewellery, sweets, food, drink and tonnes of sizzling sausages.
But while many call you a Grinch if you moan about a £14.50 hot turkey wrap or a £9 small mug of hot wine, others slam stalls for selling cheap tat and simply sleighing us with their sky-high food and drink prices.
So the Express visited one of the UK's biggest and longest-running Christmas markets, in Manchester, to see if we left with seasonal spirit or a bill to seriously damage our elf.
Now in its 27th year, the Manchester festive markets sprawl over 10 different areas of the city centre and have 274 stalls selling everything from Yorkshire pudding wraps, patatas bravas to Dutch pancakes.
Running until December 22, with some until January 4, for the first time in years the Albert Square markets in front of the under-renovation town hall are also open.
But some have already grumbled over 2025 price hikes, with many vendors increasing lager by 50p to an average of £6.50 a pint, a glass of prosecco up 50p to around £6.50, while many cocktails now cost £1 more at £9.50.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 16, 2025-Ausgabe von Sunday Express.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Sunday Express
Sunday Express
RISE IN PENSION AGE 'WILL SEND 115,000 ELDERLY INTO POVERTY'
Charities call for urgent action as OAPs struggle with soaring bills
3 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
'It was an honour to receive Camilla's letter of support'
FRENCH rape survivor Gisele Pelicot was \"overwhelmed\" after receiving a letter of support from the Queen following her former husband's conviction.
1 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
I can't get you out of my bed, says Kylie
KYLIE Minogue gets red-y for bed in a giant satin bow as celebs marked Valentine's Day by sharing romantic or saucy photographs.
1 min
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
'We took our child to A&E and never saw him again'
A family believes their devastating experience of fostering points to a 'broken system'
4 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
James Breezes in off bench to keep his cup run going
JAMES BREE was Southampton’s cup king once again.
2 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
'Now is not the time to plunge the country into instability'
BRITAIN'S top negotiator with the European Union makes no secret of the fact he voted Remain in the 2016 referendum - but pro-EU hopefuls who want to enlist his help in reversing Brexit are wasting their time. Nick Thomas-Symonds, a 45-year-old father of three, cannot imagine a referendum on rejoining the bloc while he is alive.
4 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
From death's door to a dream wedding and our beautiful little boy
CANCER-stricken nurse Annie Slennett thought she was going to die when she had emergency heart surgery after struggling to breathe.
2 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
MATT WON'T LET IT SLIP AS HE HUNTS FOR MORE ‘BLING’
HE is already a champion but Matt Weston wants to be a legend today as he bids to become the first British double gold medallist at the same Winter Olympics.
1 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
William was in a state of disbelief
WHILE THE start of the year usually represents a gentle beginning to the calendar, royal 2024 was to change all an William was left in extraordinary position. Suddenly, with three children to care for at home and no live-in staff at their Adelaide Cottage home, and with his wife and father in hospital, his future was looking decidedly different.
5 mins
February 15, 2026
Sunday Express
UK makers 'overlooked' as US bags top jet deals
BRITISH aircraft makers are facing an uncertain future due to the government favouring bigger US firms for major contracts such as fighter jets.
2 mins
February 15, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
