Ryan Giggs nurses £100,000 loss as Manchester restaurant venture collapses owing creditors more than £560,000

Ryan Giggs has become the latest high-profile name to learn that a famous face on the door is no insulation against the brutal economics of Britain’s hospitality sector, after his restaurant business collapsed owing creditors a total of £563,600.
George’s Dining Room and Bar, the Worsley venue long associated with the former Manchester United winger, went into liquidation last year and fresh filings from its liquidators confirm that none of those debts will be recovered. The paperwork makes for bruising reading for a business that once carried the lustre of a Premier League brand.
Giggs himself is among the biggest personal casualties of the failure. The thirteen-time league champion is sitting on a £99,925 shortfall after ploughing his own money into the venture, an investment that has now evaporated alongside the company. For a footballer turned entrepreneur who spent more than a decade backing the concept, it is a sobering reminder that hospitality remains one of the most unforgiving corners of the SME landscape.
The creditor list reads like a familiar post-pandemic casualty report. HMRC is owed £75,616 in unpaid tax, bank lenders are chasing £44,095 in loans and overdraft facilities, and former employees are collectively £28,302 short on wages and related claims. Even the liquidators themselves have been caught out, with a £22,000 fee left unsettled because the business has nothing left in the tank.
In their latest report, the liquidators were unequivocal: “There will be no dividend to the creditors. There have been insufficient realisation with which to pay the liquidators.”
The collapse underscores just how punishing conditions have become for British restaurants, even those with celebrity backing and a loyal local following. Soaring energy bills, stubborn food inflation, the weight of business rates and a squeeze on discretionary consumer spending have combined to drive insolvencies in the sector to levels not seen since the depths of the pandemic. Industry body UKHospitality has repeatedly warned that operators are running out of road, and the George’s Dining Room failure adds another well-known name to a lengthening casualty list.
For Giggs, whose off-pitch portfolio has spanned property, hotels and hospitality, the loss is modest in the context of his broader business interests but symbolically significant. Twelve years after the doors first opened, the restaurant’s demise stands as a case study in the risks facing even the best-capitalised SME operators in a market where margins have all but disappeared.







