How to Read a Spirits Label
Decode ABV, age, additives, origin claims, and category-specific words—before you buy.
Start here
Labels are designed to sell—but they also hide real rules: what grain went in, where it was made, whether color or sweetness was adjusted. Learning to scan a label saves money, sets flavor expectations, and helps you spot marketing smoke.
Think of this as a decoder ring for the words that actually bind what is in the bottle.
Start with the basics
Look for brand, spirit category (whiskey, rum, gin, etc.), ABV/proof, and volume. Then scan for words that signal rules (protected names) versus marketing (storytelling).
Origin and production claims
- “Product of …” / “Distilled in …” usually points to where the spirit was made; wording is regulated differently by country.
- “Bottled by” vs. “Distilled by” can differ: some labels reflect sourcing from another producer.
- Protected names (examples: Scotch whisky, Irish whiskey, Cognac, Tequila) imply specific geographic and production rules. Our companion article on geographic indications goes deeper.
Age statements
If a label gives an age, read whether it applies to the youngest spirit in the blend (common in many categories) or follows a category-specific rule. Some products carry no age statement (NAS) but still include older stocks—age is informative, not a complete measure of quality.
Additives and sweetness
Many jurisdictions allow limited adjustment with caramel color, sugar, or natural flavors in certain categories. If you are comparing two rums or tequilas, checking whether additions are permitted—and whether the producer discloses style choices—helps set expectations.
Category-specific callouts (quick)
- US whiskey: terms like straight, bottled-in-bond, and grain types (bourbon’s majority corn mash bill, rye whiskey’s majority rye) are legal definitions, not vibes.
- Scotch: single malt is malt whisky from one distillery; blended Scotch combines malt and grain whiskies.
- Tequila: labels referencing 100% agave signal a different regulatory path than mixto tequila (which can include other sugars).
- Gin: London Dry describes a production style with juniper-forward character; it is not a geographic requirement.
Deeper dive
A good label reading habit starts with hierarchy. First find the category statement: bourbon, Scotch whisky, rum, tequila, gin, brandy, liqueur, or spirit specialty. Then find origin, ABV, age language, and who distilled versus who bottled. Those four clues usually tell you more than the front-label story.
Some words are regulated promises. Others are mood lighting. Single malt, straight bourbon, 100% agave, and Cognac narrow the production path. Phrases like small batch, reserve, handcrafted, or premium may be meaningful for a producer, but they are not always strict legal definitions.
Terms that matter
- Distilled by: points to the producer of the spirit.
- Bottled by: may indicate the company that packaged or owns the brand.
- Age statement: often the youngest spirit in the blend, depending on category.
- Class/type: the official category language that matters most.
Common trap
Do not assume a romantic place name means the spirit was made there. Look for precise statements like “distilled in,” “product of,” protected appellations, or regulatory category terms.
Try this
Pick two bottles in the same category and ignore the front label for one minute. Read only the back label and mandatory information. Predict which will be sweeter, stronger, older, more oak-driven, or more neutral, then taste to check yourself.