The price of popular beers Heineken and Amstel as well as Strongbow cider are to increase due to inflation.
The boss of Heineken, which is the second-largest brewer in the world said it was experiencing raw material and energy price increases "not seen in a generation".
It comes after the founder of Cobra beer also said its prices will rise because of "vicious" cost pressures, reports the Mirror.
Neither has yet said what the cost to drinkers will be.
Heineken said its costs were set to rise by a mid-teens percentage due to the price of barley doubling compared to a year ago.
Aluminium prices have also gone up by around 50 per cent.
The firm's chief executive, Dolf van den Brink, said: "These kind of price increases and inflation, I think we have not seen in a generation."
It comes after a strong year for the company, after lockdown pub closures led to soaring profits.
Heineken said that its net revenues increased by 11.3 per cent to £13.4billion in 2021, with sales of its Heineken-branded beer up by 17.4 per cent.
The brewer's profits rose by 80 per cent, although it said the coming year remained "uncertain" due to "inflationary challenges".
Mr van den Brink said: "It's very hard for us as experts to say whether Heineken's increased production costs are wholly reflected in higher prices for customers."
He added that putting up prices could lead to "softer beer consumption" as drinkers reined in their spending.
Inflation has hit a new 30-year high in the UK, as energy prices, fuel and food costs continued to rise.
The cost of living is now rising faster than wages and is expected to climb above seven per cent this year.
Marmite-maker Unilever, the bakers Greggs and sandwich chain Pret a Manger have all warned on price rises as their costs rises.
The consumer giant - which already raised prices last year - has confirmed that the cost of several of its popular goods will go up, but that it would vary from country to country.
Unilever said: "We don't want to put prices up but we're seeing the highest inflation we've seen in a decade. There will be price increases on some products and in some markets but it will not be uniform across the world."
The company said that it expects "very high" cost inflation of £1.7bn in the first half of 2022 but added that it also forecasts strong growth in sales this year as it raises prices despite sharp decline in its profit margins.
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