- The wine’s alcohol by volume (ABV) directly determines the UK wine duty rate.
- Higher wine percent alcohol now means higher duty, directly influencing retail prices.
- Understanding alcohol content of wine is becoming essential for both consumers and the wine trade.
From 1 February 2026, the UK Government implemented a new alcohol duty increase across all drinks, including wine, beer and spirits, rising with inflationary measures designed to preserve the real-term value of tax receipts. This follows duty reforms initiated in 2023 and cements the strength-based system that taxes wine according to its alcohol by volume (ABV) – essentially the wine alcohol volume or alcohol percentage wine contained in the bottle rather than a simple flat rate per litre.
Crucially for consumers and the wine trade alike, alcohol content of wine – expressed as alcohol by volume wine – directly influences duty bills and therefore retail prices.
Duty by alcohol strength
The updated system calculates duty based on the pure alcohol in the bottle – meaning that wine percent alcohol (e.g., 12% vs 14% ABV) changes how much tax is levied. Wines between 8.5% and 22% ABV now incur a rate of £30.62 per litre of pure alcohol, with still wines between 3.5% and 8.4% ABV taxed at £26.61. Incremental duty rates continue up the strength ladder.
This structure rewards lower-strength styles slightly – a bottle at 11.5% ABV pays less duty than one at 14.5% ABV – and reflects a policy intention to align tax more closely with alcohol per volume wine.
Recent analysis suggests the 2026 rise, based on Retail Price Index inflation, increases the duty on average wines by roughly 3.5-4.3% on top of the tiered rates already in place.
Why ABV in wine matters
Since duty links to alcohol by volume, producers must account for shifts in average wine alcohol volume when forecasting costs and pricing.
- A 13% ABV wine now pays about £2.88 in excise tax per bottle, up compared to previous years.
- A 14.5% ABV wine pays more, thanks to a higher pure alcohol content translating into more duty per bottle.
For everyday drinkers, this means understanding the alcohol percentage in wine isn’t just about taste or body; it also affects the share of duty baked into your bottle price.
Wine sector reacts
Industry groups have responded with concern:
- The Wine and Spirit Trade Association (WSTA) has warned repeated duty increases – on top of other business costs – strain margins across the retail and on-trade sectors, potentially dampening investment.
- With the UK importing more than 1.7 billion bottles of wine annually, alcohol duty remains a significant revenue source – contributing to £8.5 billion of the £12 billion alcohol duty total – but this essential income must balance industry viability.
Wine businesses, especially independent importers and smaller producers, are adjusting pricing strategies to manage tighter margins while educating customers around alcohol content of wine and its implications for duty and price.
UK vs other markets
The UK’s approach to taxing wine based on alcohol by volume (ABV in wine) contrasts with several other major markets:
- European Union (EU) countries set minimum excise duty standards but can apply national rates above these minima; some member states impose no excise on wine at all, depending on policy direction.
- In the United States, federal excise duty on still wines is based on volume (per wine gallon) and is structured around alcohol by volume (ABV) bands, with additional excise taxes levied at the state level.
- Australia taxes wine at a flat 29% Wine Equalisation Tax on wholesale value rather than strength, with rebate schemes for producers.
These differences highlight how alcohol tax policies vary globally – and how the UK’s strength-based model aligns with broader public health goals while complicating pricing strategies for wines with higher wine percent alcohol.
Consumer impact
The consumer price impact depends on multiple factors beyond duty, including VAT, retailer margin, and distribution costs. But generally:
- Higher ABV wines will carry higher duty contributions, pushing up shelf prices relative to lower-ABV wines.
- Lower-strength and lighter styles may become more appealing to price-sensitive shoppers.
Retailers may increasingly highlight the alcohol content of wine alongside tasting notes and provenance to help consumers make informed choices.
Investment-grade wine, duty, and in-bond storage
An important distinction in the discussion around alcohol duty is how it applies to investment-grade wine stored in bond.
By storing wine in a bonded warehouse under HMRC supervision, investors avoid alcohol duty and VAT while the wine remains in storage. In practical terms, changes to UK alcohol duty do not affect the investor while the wine stays in bond.
This structure underpins the fine wine investment market. Investors buy, sell, and trade wine in bond without triggering duty or VAT. HMRC only levies duty if and when you remove the wine from bond for UK consumption; at that point, the authorities calculate tax based on the wine’s alcohol content at the prevailing rates.
For collectors and investors, this offers several advantages:
- No duty or VAT while trading – allowing capital to be allocated efficiently
- Liquidity – wines can change ownership without physical movement
- Flexibility – duty is only paid if the wine is eventually consumed
From an investment perspective, this also means that rising alcohol duty linked to alcohol volume wine primarily affects drinkers, not investors, provided the wine remains in bond. As a result, duty increases tend to have limited impact on the pricing of investment-grade wines, which typically trade on a duty-suspended basis.
However, for those planning to drink their wines in the future, it remains important to factor in potential duty costs – particularly for higher-ABV wines – when deciding whether to withdraw bottles from bond.
WineCap FAQ – Alcohol duty and wine
Q: What is wine alcohol volume and why does it matter?
A: It’s the measure of alcohol content expressed as a percentage (ABV). In the UK’s duty system, higher alcohol by volume wine means more duty per bottle, ultimately affecting pricing.
Q: Has duty increased for all wines in February 2026?
A: Yes – duty on wine rose broadly in line with inflation and remains tied to ABV rather than a single flat rate, meaning stronger wines see proportionally more tax.
Q: Does higher ABV always mean higher duty?
A: Under the current system yes – alcohol per volume wine (i.e., ABV) is directly linked to duty charges.
Q: How do UK duty rates compare with other countries?
A: The UK is among countries that tax wine excise based on alcohol content. Others, like the US and Australia, use different structures; some EU countries apply minimal or no excise on wine.
Q: Will this tax system change again soon?
A: Duty rates are typically reviewed annually in the Budget and Spring Statements. Future reforms could further adjust how wine percent alcohol influences duty.