The beer price map in Europe

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Beer price map

Let's toast!

October is one of the favorite months for beer lovers. For, although the origin of the Oktoberfest resides in the German city of Munich, all of Europe toasts in honor of liquid amber.

If just reading these lines has made you want to savor a good cold beer, You can't miss the map drawn up by the Musement activity booking platform.

If in its day we told you how to order a beer in Spain, in which spa to take a beer bath or in which hotel to book to live an immersive experience, today we bring you the guide that you will not lose sight of this October.

THE MAP SO YOU DON'T GET LOST BETWEEN JUGS, BARRELS AND PRICES

The map in question contains: the price of a beer in 46 European cities, the main local beers of each region, the consumption per capita of the country and the right way to ask for 'a beer, please' in more than 40 languages.

a cane please

A cane please!

If after the holidays you are in saving mode, you should know that Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan is the city where beer is cheaper –75 cents–, followed by kyiv (Ukraine) with 81 cents, Chisinau (Moldova) with 83 and Tbilisi (Georgia), where it costs 87 cents.

In the middle of the table we find Zagreb (Croatia), Warsaw (Poland), Andorra la vella (Andorra), Ljubljana (Slovenia) and Riga (Estonia), with prices ranging between two and three euros.

MADRID, THREE EUROS ON AVERAGE

In the range of three to five euros is ** Madrid **, the only Spanish city analysed, where some 3 euros for a beer. We can also drink it for 3 euros in Vilnius (Lithuania) and Valletta (Malta).

By less than four euros, we can still drink a KAPPA beer in Nicosia (Cyprus), a Hasseröder in Berlin (Germany), a Viru in Tallinn (Estonia) or a Schwechater in Vienna (Austria).

Between 4 and 5 euros Brussels, Athens, Amsterdam, Rome and Luxembourg are located.

Beer price map

The definitive map so you don't go bankrupt drinking beer

REYKJAVIK, THE MOST EXPENSIVE

The most expensive city in Europe where to drink beer? ** Reykjavík **, at the “moderate” price of €9.64.

Nor is Olso (€8.95), Paris and Helsinki (€7) and Copenhagen (€6) far behind.

If you are in Iceland and you cannot resist a Lava or a Skyrgosi, you should order it like this: “Einn bjor, takk”, which means: “a beer, please”.

The results obtained by this guide also reveal that the Czech Republic leads the ranking in terms of consumption per capita: no less than 143.3 liters per person per year. They follow closely Austria (106 liters) and Germany (104) .

In Spain Against all odds, we drink about 84.8 liters on average.

To create the map, Musement has relied on various sources such as Numbeo.com to find out the price of local beer (taking 0.5 liters as a reference) and the Kirin Beer University Report Global Beer Consumption by country of 2017.

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