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One can drink at any age at home as licensing laws do not mention it. However other laws under childrens act etc may forbid it such as poisioning, drunk in charge of a minor (if the carer) etc etc.
Can again drink at any age in public (unless licensed premises) unless local bye-laws forbade it.
You CAN NOT drink wine in a pub/restaurant until you are 18. The only booze a child from 14-18 can drink is PERRY, CIDER or PORT. This must be bought by an 18+ person and only during the time food is served.
Any more specific questions I will happily answer for you.
redmug is almost spot on.
Over 5 at home, but it's 14 to be in a pub, and 16 to drink alcohol with a meal.
The 2003 Licensing Act now requires a 16 year old to be acccompanied by someone over 18 in order to drink alcohol with a meal. This wasn't necessary under the previous Act.
These are minimum ages by law, and on licensed premises, a Licensee is quite entitled to raise these limits (eg. No-one under 18 allowed at all)
And to clarify;
A 16 year old can consume "beer, wine or cider" with a meal (which must be seated and an area designated for the purpose.
The old Act stated "Beer, Cider, Porter or Perry" not Port. Port is defined as a fortified wine under the Act, and therefore is a no-no for a 16 year old with a meal. Ward-minter is thinking of porter which is a rather unfashionable drink these days, but is/was a beer somewhere between a mild and a stout.
www.ias.org.uk/factsheets./law.pdf
I have answered this question before..
That's out of date now, as it refers to the Licensing Act 1964 (As Amended).
This site (below) explains the 2003 Act, and is explicit about the 16 / 17 year old 'alcohol with a meal' question.
http://www.culture.gov.uk/alcohol_and_entertainment/licensing_act_2003/
and theres also a link to the 2003 Act in its full glory.