Bottle Gas Specialist For Over 20 Years

Beer Gas - For Home and Business 

Beer Gas – For Home and Business is designed for anyone running draught drinks, from busy venues to serious home bar owners. Our cylinders are filled at our own UK depot, ensuring dependable quality and a smooth pour every time.

With our rent-free model you pay a one-off, refundable cylinder deposit and then only pay for the gas when you exchange. Choose your gas mix, select the right cylinder size, add it to your basket and checkout online – it’s that simple.

Shop Beer & Cellar Gas online at Adams Gas. Rent-free cellar gas cylinders filled at our own depot for pubs, bars, restaurants and home bars, with clear delivery options at checkout.

Whether you’re serving pints all weekend in a busy bar or pulling a couple of pints in a home kegerator, you need the right beer gas to get the best from your system. Adams Gas offers a flexible, rent-free way to keep beer, cider and stout flowing without the long-term tie-in of traditional gas rental contracts.

Within this category you’ll find:

  • Pure CO₂ – often used for stout, some craft beers and certain soft drink lines
  • Mixed beer gas blends – commonly used for lagers, ales and ciders to balance carbonation and smooth dispense
  • Cylinder sizes that work for everything from compact home bars to commercial cellars

Key benefits of ordering beer gas online from Adams Gas:

  • Rent-free cylinders – pay a one-off cylinder deposit and then only pay for gas when exchanging empties
  • UK-filled at our own depot for consistent quality and performance
  • Clear online ordering – see prices and delivery options at checkout before you commit

This range is ideal for:

  • Pubs, bars, clubs and restaurants with draught beer and cider
  • Home bars, garden bars and kegerator setups
  • Event bars and mobile bar operators looking for a rent-free gas solution

If you also run separate soda or cocktail lines, you may want to combine your order with products from our CO₂ (Carbon Dioxide) Bottles category, or add Helium Canisters for promotional balloons and special events.

All cylinders must be installed with the correct regulators, keg couplers and line pressures. Always follow the advice of your cellar services provider and consult our Safety & Storage guidance before connecting or moving any gas bottle.

FAQs

As a trusted supplier of gas, we frequently get asked questions about gas safety, the difference between butane and propane, as well as the best uses for our gas products. In this blog, we’ll be answering our most common FAQs.

We stock a wide range of butane gas bottles for residential and commercial use. It’s a versatile gas and can be used in fridges, lighters, and aerosols. Butane is also popular for camping and caravanning because it provides portable heating, as well as the capability to fuel barbecues quickly and efficiently.

Unlike gases such as carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide, butane is not a greenhouse gas and does not affect the ozone layer.

If you find yourself in a situation where a gas cylinder is involved in a fire or close to fire, do not approach or attempt to move the cylinder or operate the valve. Evacuate the area immediately and keep others away.

Contact the Fire & Rescue Service as soon as possible, informing them of your location, as well as the type and quantity of gas involved.

If you’d like to read more about gas safety then please read our blog on how to stay safe when handling gas.

As a gas bottle supplier, we know there are several things that influence how long a gas bottle lasts. These factors include, your burner, low or high heat, the use and frequency of use.

The gas application is a major factor of how long your bottle will last because it determines how much gas you need. A 45kg cooking gas bottle can last around 244 days, depending on the burner you have and the frequency with which you use the gas. If you have a Calor gas propane 6kg bottle and if you consider that 1kg of propane can give around 13.6 kWh of energy – you will be able to use a cooker for about 81.6 hours.

At Adams Gas, we provide many different types of gas, including butane. Each 220g of butane will last for approximately 3 to 4 hours on low heat, meaning you can really get your money’s worth with this type of gas. Our Calor gas butane 15kg bottles could last for up to 238 hours on low heat.

Fire up the BBQ whatever the weather with our range of Calor bottled gases. Not only can you start cooking almost instantly after turning your gas on, you can also carry on cooking for longer.

Propane gas exerts significantly more pressure than butane at the same temperature, meaning it’s ideal for exterior storage and BBQ use all year round.

Butane gas is also great for barbeques as it produces around 12% more energy than propane when the same volume of each gas is burned. While butane is a popular choice for those who light up their BBQ a few times a week, you should consider that butane gas won’t flow when the weather is cold.

Interested to find out more? Read our blog on the differences between propane and butane for bbqs.

With energy, the standing charge is the cost of having a gas and electricity supply, then you pay usage charges on top. The standing charge is the fee you pay to your energy supplier simply because it gives you access to energy.

Transporting gas cylinders in a safe and responsible manner is essential to the safety and welfare of your employees and the general public. Gas Safe recommends that any organisation transporting dangerous goods, such as butane gas bottles, follows the basic legal safety regulations within ADR, which include driver training, vehicle ventilation, safety equipment and basic safety training with gases.

You should always comply with gas safety rules, which include no smoking in, or near to any vehicle that is being used to transport gas bottles, no carrying more than 333kg of gas without an ADR license, no operation of ignition near the gas bottles and no carrying of any unnecessary passengers whilst transporting gas cylinders.

If you’d like to find out more about safety when transporting gas cylinders then please read our blog which outlines full gas safety instructions.

We’re always on hand to answer your questions, so if you have anything you’d like to ask then please get in touch, we’d love to help.