Markets
Key Facts
—The measure. Ecuador has temporarily cut its special tax on beer to zero for the duration of the World Cup.
—The decree. President Daniel Noboa made it official through Executive Decree 420, in force from June 12 to July 19, 2026.
—The cut. The per-litre levy on industrial beer drops from $13.62 to zero, and a separate 75 percent surcharge falls to zero too.
—The response. Cervecería Nacional, the country’s dominant brewer, trimmed suggested prices on Pilsener, Club and other brands by 25 to 90 cents.
—The shelf. A six-pack of Archer fell from $4.99 to $3.99, and Noboa said beer should drop by more than a fifth.
—The catch. In bars and restaurants the saving is smaller, as old stock was bought with the tax already paid.
For one month of football, Ecuador has turned one of its heaviest consumer taxes off entirely, and the price of a beer is already falling.
Ecuador has scrapped its special tax on beer for the duration of the World Cup, a rare giveaway in a country that has spent the past two years tightening its finances. The move is meant to put more cash into bars, shops and small businesses while the tournament runs.
President Daniel Noboa made it official through Executive Decree 420, which took effect on June 12 and runs until July 19, the day the final is played. The measure covers both mass-market and craft beer, whether made at home or imported.
How big the tax cut is
The tax in question is the ICE, a levy Ecuador places on goods it treats as non-essential, from alcohol to tobacco. For the next few weeks it disappears on beer entirely.
The numbers show how heavy that burden was. The per-litre charge on industrial beer, set against pure alcohol content, falls from about thirteen and a half dollars to nothing, while a separate surcharge worth three-quarters of the price also drops to zero.
The country’s tax agency frames the move as a way to fuel commerce during the tournament, betting that busier bars and restaurants will offset the revenue it gives up. The details sit in the official text published in the national press.
What it means for drinkers in Ecuador
Cervecería Nacional, the country’s dominant brewer, moved within hours, trimming suggested prices on Pilsener, Club and other labels by 25 to 90 cents a unit. On supermarket shelves the effect was quick, with a six-pack of its Archer brand sliding from $4.99 to $3.99.
Noboa had promised drinkers would see beer fall by more than a fifth. In stores the cut is clear, though some of the early discounts also reflect World Cup promotions that were already running before the decree.
The relief is uneven, because bars and restaurants stocked up before the change and already paid the old tax on that inventory, so the full saving will take time to reach a pint poured during a match. For a dollarised economy with no currency of its own to ease, a targeted tax holiday is one of the few quick levers a government has.
For the brewer, the timing is a gift. Cervecería Nacional, owned by the global drinks group AB InBev, sells the lion’s share of Ecuador’s beer, so a cheaper shelf price during the most-watched sporting event on earth points straight at higher volumes.
For the state, the bet is that lost tax on each bottle is repaid by selling far more of them, plus the spending on food, travel and nights out that a month of football tends to bring. Whether the sums balance will only be clear once the tournament ends and the levy returns.
The gesture also carries a political charge. Ecuador has lived through two hard years of subsidy cuts, security crackdowns and a bruising tariff fight with Colombia, so a cheap-beer summer reads as a rare piece of good news the government is happy to hand out.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Ecuador cut its beer tax?
The government wants to lift commerce during the World Cup. By removing the special tax on beer from June 12 to July 19, it hopes busier bars, restaurants and shops will make up for the revenue lost, with the benefit passed on to consumers as lower prices.
How much cheaper is beer now?
Cervecería Nacional cut suggested prices by 25 to 90 cents per unit, and a six-pack of its Archer brand fell from $4.99 to $3.99. President Noboa said beer should drop by more than a fifth, though the saving is largest in supermarkets and smaller in bars.
When does the tax break end?
It runs until July 19, 2026, the day of the World Cup final. After that, Executive Decree 420 expires and the special tax on beer is due to return to its normal rates.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗
