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On Premise sprits sales fall by 4.6%, but some categories are bucking the trend



CGA by NIQ’s research shows it was a challenging year for the spirits category in the On Premise in 2023—but there are still plenty of opportunities for growth.

Here are eight trading insights to help suppliers and operators understand trends and revive sales in 2024.  

 

1 Sales down 4.6% 

CGA’s On Premise Measurement service shows spirits sales totalled £7,646m in 2023—down by 4.6% on 2022, which had been a particularly good year for the category. This is well below the 1.3% growth for total On Premise drinks sales last year. 

 

2 Share lost to beer and soft drinks 

Some spirits sales have leaked away to other categories in the last 12 months—partly as a result of consumers seeking to save money or moderate their alcohol intake. Spirits had a 24.4% share of total sales in 2023, down by 1.5percentage points. Meanwhile, beer’s share rose 1.3 percentage points to 42.9% and soft drinks’ slice by 0.2percentage points to 14.7%.  

 

3 Rising costs put spending under pressure… 

As the cost of living crisis continues, CGA’s Consumer Pulse research shows a quarter (26%) of consumers are now choosing spirits neat or with mixers less often than before—nearly three times as many as the number (9%) who are buying them more. Pressure on spending also means 24% are choosing cocktails less frequently. 

 

4 … But premium categories out-perform 

While some consumers are watching their spending, others continue to seek more expensive spirits. Premium brands increased their share of spirits sales by value by 1.7 percentage points to 27.4% in 2023, while the super-premium segment rose 0.3 percentage points to 8.3%. While standard spirits still take the majority (64.3%) of sales, their share dipped by 2 percentage points. This is a reminder that many loyal spirits consumers remain eager to trade up. 

 

5 Cream liqueurs in growth 

Cream liqueurs was the only sub-category to achieve growth in 2023, with sales by value up 29.8%—largely because of the popularity of short serves like Baby Guinness. Cream liqueurs now account for 2.5% of all spirits sales.  

 

6 Vodka still the largest category 

With well over a quarter (28.9%) of all spirits sales last year, vodka remains the largest sub-category. But while its share rose by 0.3 percentage points, total sales were still down by 3.5%. Flavoured vodka sales grew 11.2%—a significantly better performance than the 5.0% drop in the non-flavoured segment. 

 

7 More losses for gin 

Gin has had a tough run of sales in the last few years, and it lost another 0.9 percentage points of spirits share in 2023. In the reverse trend to vodka, non-flavoured gin stole 0.4 percentage points of share from flavoured varieties. 

 

8 Extra share for Scotch, brandy and rum  

Categories taking some of gin’s share of spirits sales in 2023 included imported whisky and Scotch (both up 0.3percentage points) and brandy (up 0.1 percentage points). Golden / dark and white rum rose 0.5 and 0.1 percentage points respectively. 

 

9 High tempo occasions are diversifying 

CGA’s Evolving High Tempo Occasion Report explores how consumers are shifting their late-night visits to earlier dayparts, such as ticketed events, bottomless brunches and pub and bar crawls. These occasions present new opportunities for spirits brands – but an understanding where and how to cater to these consumers during these shifting occasions will be crucial in driving spirits sales.

 

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