Ten years after the Brexit referendum, reporting across multiple outlets focuses on clearer evidence of how leaving the European Union has affected Britain’s economy. Reuters frames the decade as a period during which the long-term economic consequences are becoming more visible, pointing to “scars” that economists and commentators associate with the post-referendum transition and its aftermath. BBC coverage similarly looks back at the economic impact, describing how the Brexit vote’s effects are increasingly measurable over time. Other pieces referenced by the outlets focus less on the macroeconomy and more on how the Brexit campaign and local political outcomes shaped the public narrative of the vote. Overall, the combined coverage presents a decade-long view in which economic effects are increasingly discussed in terms of performance, uncertainty, and structural change, while public debate continues around whether those outcomes reflect Brexit itself or other factors. The reports collectively indicate that the full economic assessment remains contested, but that the passage of time is making the debate more grounded in longer-term observations rather than solely campaign-era arguments.