Back in 2019, I wrote a blog on the history of age statements. I have been thinking about them lately and I thought I would share a few of my more recent thoughts here today.
Age statements about disappeared twenty years ago when the whiskey supplies started to dry up with the growing demand for Bourbon and Rye whiskeys. Wild Turkey and Buffalo Trace in particular removed age statements from their brands. They brought them back on their premium brands and special releases. Heaven Hill, to their credit, kept the age statements on most of their age-stated brands. Still, age statements seemed a thing of the past for most four to eight year old whiskeys.
Then the artisan distillery movement started to grow. As they got older whiskey in their warehouses they started to place age statements on their whiskey brands. They did this to show that they were making quality whiskey and the consumer should give their brands a try. They also started releasing Bottled-in-Bond whiskey for a similar reason and when they had older whiskey than four years old, they wanted to advertise that fact through an age statement. Brands like Lieper’s Fork started releasing six year old whiskeys with an age statement.
Age statements are making a comeback. As whiskey stocks grow with expanded production, you are starting to see older whiskey being put in the bottle. The next step will be increased competition for sales as the market levels off. You will probably see an increase in age stated brands. You see this happening now with Jim Beam releasing their Black Label Jim Beam with a seven year age statement. The next step will be when brands like Weller Special Reserve start coming out with the seven year age statement once again.
Competition for bottle sales will drive this increase in age statements. As consumers are finding more and more age stated brands, the distillers without age stated brands will find their non-age stated brands decrease in sales. This will drive them to put age statements back on labels. For example, consumers will look at brands like Weller Special Reserve, with its high price point and compare it to brands like Wilderness Trail wheated recipe with the six year old age statement and similar price point and pick up the Wilderness Trail bottle at the liquor store.
Age statements are making a comeback. As whiskey sales level off and warehouse stocks increase with the increased production levels and fierce competition for bottle sales, distilleries are going to be putting older whiskey in the bottle. They will be placing an age statement to reflect this older whiskey going in the bottle.
Photos Courtesy of Rosemary Miller















May 20, 2024 at 10:57 am
It’s what we all have been waiting for, right. It’s remarkable that you mentioned the boom being 20yrs
old
May 20, 2024 at 11:09 am
It was about twenty years ago that Wild Turkey went from 8 years old to number 8.
May 20, 2024 at 11:16 am
Interesting post, hope this bears out, not sure if you meant to comment on secondary pricing in referencing Weller Special Reserve, but a 750 is $34 retail and $50 secondary while Wilderness trail 6yr is $50. The comparison seemed a little odd as your point seemed to be about the distillery, not demand driving up pricing.
May 20, 2024 at 11:34 am
In Kentucky, if you can find Weller Special Reserve, it will run you anywhere from $50 to $500 in liquor stores.
May 22, 2024 at 6:41 pm
Your local store and the other stores in Kentucky marking that product up to $50 or more from the $30 distillery price, will never have the impact you’ve laid out of Buffalo Trace being incentivized to age state Weller SR again – At best you see the stores reducing the markup, because demand will lower for the bottle. Now if there were age stated comparable products actually competing with the distillers price of $30, perhaps you have a point. So long as non age stated Weller Special Reserve is being purchased in all quantity possible available, at the price the distillery sets, they have no incentive to change their branding, juice or marketing. No matter what amount the stores markup their product to – The markup never goes back to the distillery!
May 20, 2024 at 4:49 pm
There also needs to be an understanding on Solera aging and its impact to an Age Statement. Putting a drop of 15 year old juice in a 4 year old barrel should not constitute a label that shows a 15 year old whiskey.
May 20, 2024 at 8:01 pm
The age statement is for the youngest whiskey in the bottle so a solera bottle would still be four year old whiskey.
May 21, 2024 at 1:35 pm
Not sure Diageo got that message with Blade and Bow.
May 21, 2024 at 11:34 am
I have only bought age stated whiskies to the exclusion of everything else. Just my style.
May 21, 2024 at 2:37 pm
I am very glad to see a return of age statements. While I agree that taste and quality are most important, there are certain characteristics one looks for in 5, 10, or 15 year whiskeys and sometimes you are looking for those notes that a 15 year can deliver, or that harmonic balance of being a whiskey that is both old and young that I find in a 10 year, and no amount of blending can really match.
Good article Michael!