Free The Night is calling for a change to Northern Ireland’s licensing system
A campaign calling for reform of Northern Ireland’s licensing system has released an open letter ahead of a legal challenge that is due to begin later this year.
Free The Night has released the letter, which has been signed by members of the creative community alongside venue operators, promoters, business owners and community organisers, with it saying that the current system is holding back nightlife and culture in Northern Ireland while also making it difficult for new businesses, venues and cultural spaces to open.
It comes as a court date has been provisionally set for June 12, 2026, where Free The Night will challenge the Department for Communities’ response to the University of Stirling’s independent review of liquor licensing in Northern Ireland.
So far, the letter has been signed by popular figures from the electronic music scene in Northern Ireland, including David Holmes, Max Cooper, Or:la, Cormac, Loéca and Sneijder, actor and DJ Kristian Nairn; and local businesses including The American Bar, The Black Box, Bullhouse, Frae and Yugo, with many giving their own statements of support.
It calls for six reforms: reform or abolition of the surrender principle; changes to the occasional licensing system; a new licence category for cultural spaces; modernised opening hours; the removal of anti-competitive objection routes; and publication of the evidence used to reject key recommendations from the independent review.
Holly Lester, co-founder of Free The Night said: “Northern Ireland’s outdated licensing laws have held back nightlife and after-dark culture for far too long. They make it harder for new and independent venues to open, limit creative opportunities, stifle innovation, and restrict what communities can build for themselves – serving only a select few existing interests.
“Despite the Stirling University review, which highlighted serious structural problems and made clear recommendations for reform, the Department has refused to act. I am proud to be fronting the case against the Department and to speak loudly and clearly for the creatives, performers, artists, aspiring business owners, and lovers of culture, music, and nightlife across Northern Ireland. We demand better!”
The campaign is now urging supporters across the creative sector and beyond to back the open letter and add to growing calls for meaningful reform.
Alongside the campaign, Free The Night will also mark its fifth birthday with a fundraiser event on Saturday 11 April 2026 at Ulster Sports Club, Belfast, running from 10.30pm to 3.00am. The lineup includes Marion Hawkes B2B Noel Watson, Timmy Stewart B2B Jordan Nocturne, and Hannah B2B Sophie. The event will celebrate five years of Free The Night’s work while raising support for the campaign’s next phase.
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