Scotch on a Budget

I love Scotch. Scotchy Scotch Scotch. But like most people, I can’t afford to drink my favorites every day. Even if I score a good deal on a Lagavulin 16 or a Talisker 10, at approximately $5.52 per glass (see math here) I can’t afford to polish that bottle off in 12 days (or less). If I did, I’d be looking at a $2000 a year habit! In case you’re keeping track, that’s about the same price as a pack-a-day cigarette habit. Ouch. It gets worse, too… spend a few hours perusing the whisky blogs and magazines, and you’ll find that the focus is often on pricier bottles. Just as with wine connoisseurship, higher prices are often (not always!) applied to older, better, more highly-regarded selections. Flip through the ratings in the latest issue of a whisky mag, and you’ll see the most-recommended bottles topping $200 or more, and that’s not including the Collectors or rare releases! Here are some pieces of advice on how to enjoy Scotch without breaking the bank.

Important Note: Many of the suggestions below result in the more-expensive bottles in your cabinet lasting you longer. As long as you keep your best whiskies away from light (sun or otherwise) and tightly corked/capped, they will remain pristine and untarnished for up to a year. Even after a year, they won’t suffer more than a little oxidation (which affects the flavor). Keep in mind, however, that the more “headspace”, or air space in the bottle, the faster oxidation will affect your whisky. I know whisky enthusiasts who savor a bottle until it is only a quarter full, and then invite friends over to share the entire remainder of the bottle. This is also a good way to make friends!

1. Pick a “Daily Dram”

Many whisky lovers realize quickly how expensive a daily glass of their cherished favorites run, and begin looking for cheaper alternatives for the “less special” days. This is the oft-referenced “Daily Dram.” By picking a younger, more-widely distributed, or blended whisky that also shows some of the taste elements of your favorite dram, you can indulge in that daily glass without wallet worry. As an added benefit, your special-occasion bottles will last you longer! (See note above about keeping whisky longer). Some examples:

2. Mix it up

While I would never recommend mixing Single-Malt Scotch with anything except perhaps a few drops of water, bottles of a cheaper blend or immature malt will last longer if you develop a taste for them mixed with water or club soda. Try it with an inexpensive Irish whiskey, blended Scotch, or very-young craft distillation. Turning a dram of inexpensive blend into a whisky highball can quench your thirst and eliminate the desire for a second glass.

3. Discover Whisky by the Glass

One of the wonderful things about the world of whisky is the wide variety of excellent flavors and expressions available on the international market. While individual preferences differ, it is pretty rare to come across a “bad” glass of whisky. However, it can be a burden on your bank account to experience whisky by buying bottles (even on recommendation). Instead, use Yelp.com, Google, and the phone book to find a local bar or three that has even a moderate Single-Malt offering (call ahead to avoid a lot of driving around). A dozen different bottles at a minimum. By discovering your favorites and exercising your palate on whisky at $6 a glass, you can save a lot of money on bottles. Another option (although sometimes more difficult to find) are 50ml “mini” bottles of whiskies sometimes stocked by liquor or convenience stores.

4. Split

If you’re lucky enough to have friends that enjoy whisky, consider splitting the cost of pricier bottles with them. A $120-$160 bottle of Macallan 18 year (a beautiful thing) is a lot less prohibitive if split several ways into seal-able glass containers. Just make sure to use a funnel for careful pouring, and do it evenly!

5. Buy in Bulk

While I don’t recommend buying whisky by the case (yes, you can get tired of even your favorite Scotch after a few bottles), you can find larger-volume bottles at a steep discount at big-box club stores like Sam’s Club or Costco. Bring along a calculator and do the math to determine if the savings are really there. Try several stores in your area, since they all may carry different inventories, and check back at different times of the year. Also remember that at Costco, you do not need a membership to enter the warehouse and purchase alcohol!

6. Shop Around

I love a good deal. I especially love a good deal on fine Single-Malt. First, make a list of local (or at least driving-range) liquor stores that carry Scotch. Write down (or type into a mobile device such as a smartphone or tablet PC) a sample list of your favorite whiskies. Include benchmark bottles that are likely to be widely carried (such as The Macallan 12, Laphroaig 10, The Glenlivet 12, Talisker 10, and The Balvenie 12 DoubleWood). Also include some higher-range bottles for comparison (such as The Macallan 18, Springbank 18, and 18-or-older bottles of The Dalmore). By tracking the prices of such benchmark bottles at all your local stores, you can develop a good sense of what’s overpriced and what’s a good deal, you can determine which stores are most likely to offer the highest discounts, and you’re more likely to be able to identify an excellent deal when one comes around! I swear that a good Scotch, purchased at a great price, tastes even better!

Got any suggestions of your own for saving money on Scotch and other whiskies? Share in the comments!

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  • I always check out duty free airport and cruise shops while travelling. Major cities are good, yet best deal I ever got was in Grand Turk in the Caribbean. Got an extra 20 bucks off the already low prices by buying two bottles at the same time.
    Also, New Hampshire, USA has excellent everyday prices, due to lack of State tax. Stock and availability in each outlet store can be viewed in advance online.

  • Randomly found this website looking for whisky reviews. Good suggestions, but damn, a bottle of laphroig is like $65 in Canada! I need something cheaper!

  • @EMP, Good luck! Keep in mind that prices are pretty variable – a local grocery store here has horrible prices – $50 US for Laphroaig, $105 for Lagavulin 16, etc… try looking for independent wine stores or big-box chains like Costco, Total Wine, Beverages & More, etc. Somebody’s bound to have decent prices. You should also check out the Whisky Whisky Whisky forum, and see if anyone else in your area knows where the deals are. Cheers!

  • @EMP Also, Glenlivet 12 should be the cheapest Single Malt available – that’s usually a good baseline. If it’s not under $30 where you’re shopping, then their prices are probably too high. I can reliably find it for $21-$25 here.

  • Although it is not comprehensive, I use wine-searcher.com to look for deals and values. It doesn’t include Costco, Trader Joes (which has the Balvenie Doublewood for the lowest price I could find), and others, but I think it’s pretty useful overall. I’ve found some pretty great deals through the site.

  • I find your website to be a great read and very helpful for a young single malt conisuer such as myself. Although, I fail to see many similarities between sweet singles and Irish blends; I especially find Jameson to be rather briny. I might suggest 12 yr Abalor as a less expensive alternative. Also, I don’t know if it’s because I live in New York, but if you’re buying a bottle of Glenlivet 12 year old for for under 30, it’s off the back of a truck…the cheapest I’ve seen is 38$.

    • Graham, thanks for your comments! Jameson does have savory quality (which I’m guessing comes from its proportion of pot-still whiskey, since Redbreast has this savory flavor in abundance) which I interpret as “oily” and “meaty”, while others may definitely find brine. As for the price – all of the prices that I list on my website come from Northern California – generally from the best prices that I can find after extensive shopping-around. See my Finding a Better Whisky Shop article for specifics. While I might post that a Balvenie DoubleWood is around $32-$35 at my favorite whisky shop – I can still find it for upwards of $50 or even $60 if I go to the more expensive specialty shops in San Francisco, or to high-end grocery stores which generally have high prices on these items. I sympathize with other parts of the world, however (especially Canada), as prices on imported whisky can be astronomical. Have you tried looking upstate or maybe in other parts of New England? I have a friend in Massachusetts who sometimes finds deals to rival my own, and the New Hampshire state liquor store posts its prices online. Cheers and good luck!

  • Referencing your point #3, I’ve been able to find several different whiskies in 50mL size. It’s really helped to expand my tastings. Here’s a small list of what I’ve found; Bushmills, Bushmills Black Bush, Chivas Regal 12, Compass Box Eleuthera, Cragganmore 12, Gentleman Jack, Glenmorangie 12yr. Quinta Ruban, Glenlivet 12, Glenlivet 15, Glenlivet 18, Highland Park 18, Jameson, Macallan 12 and Woodford Reserve.

    • Nice finds there! I’ve only seen a few of those (notably the Eleuthera, HP 18, and some of the 12s). Availability of 50ml samples depends, I think, entirely on the retailer and their distributors. Some retailers recognized the marketing potential of samples, and make an effort to obtain them from distributors and display them. Most, unfortunately, don’t.

      • That was from several different stores. I’ve been scouring all the local shops in an effort to find as many different 50 mL bottles as I can.

  • Amazingly Albertson’s Scotch priced at $8.00 for a fifth isn’t all that terrible, provided you have one of their supermarkets nearby.
    It’s a blended variety not dissimilar to a less sweet version of J&B. Great for a Scotch and Soda or other times you need a ‘well Scotch’ for entertaining or guzzling immoderately.
    I’ve had worse that cost considerably more.

      • I heartily agree with you guys. Any idea who might be the distillery for Albertson’s scotch?
        Our Albertson’s (in New Mexico) offers a discount for the purchase of 6 or more bottles of any liquor and/or wine.
        Currently, they’re offering a 25% discount.
        I just bought 1.75 liter bottle of Albertson’s scotch for a little more than $13. They also had 12 year old Glenlivet 750ml on sale for $30, and Gold Sauza tequila for $7.50/750ml. Needless to say, my grocery bill was a bit inflated this week.

        • Thanks to finding this website through Google, I braved the waters and tried the Albertsons Scotch, and I too am satisfied.

  • I want to second wine-searcher.com as a way to find great deals. I just used them to score some Corryvreckan from a San Francisco wine shop for $60, a good $30 less than I could find it for locally. Even with cross-country shipping added it was a great deal.

    • BTW – I understand that this post is titled “scotch on a budget”, but you can always enjoy a decent bourbon (for me Elijah Craig 12 or Four Roses Small Batch) some nights for about half the cost of most single malts.

  • Unless, you live in Ontario and have to buy Scotch from the LCBO. The Balvenie 12 yr Doublewood is 89.95, so you can imagine how we feel. And the selection is terrible. We can’t import Scotch from outside Ontario.

  • I love single malts. Because I don’t drink a great deal, a std 750ml bottle lasts too long. I would buy more scotch if I could buy 375’s. Do you think the economics of the business will ever allow that?

    • I don’t think I’ve ever seen 375ml bottles of single malt, except maybe Glenlivet 12 and Glenfiddich 12. I have seen 375ml bottles of Great King Street: Artist’s Blend and Glasgow Blend, and I’ve seen “flask” style bottles of the major blends. I recommend either finding a friend to split bottles with you (buy a bunch of bottles with corks at specialtybottle.com – 375ml for 2-way splits or 250ml for 3-way splits) or splitting the bottles up yourself and putting some away for a future day. With minimal airspace in a tightly-corked bottle stored in the dark, you can expect those to last almost indefinitely. Cheers!

  • Hi Scotch Noob!

    Here in Canada, scotch is brutally expensive. Like Glenlivet for $54 expensive. I just got a bottle of Lagavulin 16 for $127. I can afford it, I’m doing just fine financially and I don’t drink that much, but still…

    One of my favourite drinks, the classic Blood & Sand can be perked up by adding just a 1/4 oz of Islay. You get to enjoy that distinct flavour in an environment already formulated for scotch. In my experience most scotch keeners don’t do the cocktail thing very much, but I think this Blood & Sand slight variation is something that most of them would really enjoy. And at just a quarter ounce, it only adds about a buck a drink, even in Canada! Try it while you can still get the cava cava oranges…

  • What are your daily drams in 2021? My goal this year is to spend a lot less on whisky, yet not sacrifice on flavor entirely. And so I’ve been compiling a “forever” shelf: a handful of whiskies that are both cheap enough to have on hand at all times, but also tastier than, say, Black Velvet. My current list is: Evan Williams Bottled-in-Bond ($17.99), Glenlivet 12 ($34.99), and Jameson Caskmates Stout ($22.99). So I have a bourbon, a single malt, and a blended Irish. Is there any other whisky I might be overlooking, in the sub $40-ish range? (Buffalo Trace ($26.99) and Monkey Shoulder ($35.99) are also contending for a permanent spot on my shelf, but Bank Note isn’t available in my area). Cheers and thanks!

    • Good question, and one that’s becoming harder to answer. In ~2015 when I settled on a set of “forever” bottles, I didn’t anticipate all the things that can ruin such a list: Quality decreasing over time, bottles selling out or going on allocation, prices skyrocketing, etc. Even with all the whisky I taste, it’s too hard to constantly revive “all time favorites” list without having to constantly buy and re-taste stuff that I thought was settled. Alas, $55 is the new $40, which used to be the new $30. GlenDronach 12 is still high up on my list, but quality has decreased a little – GlenAllachie 12 can replace it (but it’s $50+). Old Tub by Jim Beam is my favorite cheap bourbon right now, but it’s a limited release, and even future releases are likely to be more expensive or less good. You can’t go wrong with Laphroaig 10 year, which is still the best deal in peated scotch. Monkey Shoulder is great, but I haven’t re-tasted it recently enough to be sure it still is. Ditto with Great King Street. Sagamore Spirit Rye is good for the price, even the baseline one. Hochstadter’s and Rittenhouse 101 are still go-to ryes. Honestly, you can’t go wrong with a bottle of bourbon if it costs more than $20 these days. For single malt, see if you can find good prices on one of the Glenlivet 14s (like the Cognac cask), Glenfiddich 15 Solera, or anything from Glenmorangie except the “Original” 10 year. For Canadian, I still can’t beat Lot 40. Sorry if most of that is above your $40 range…

      • Thanks for the reply. I tried Old tub a few months ago, but wasn’t blown away. After reading your review, however, I have to pick up another bottle ($22.99) as i trust your palate more than mine. I hear you on prices: the term “budget scotch” seems like an oxymoron. (on a more positive note, i found kilchoman machir bay at costco for $44.99, and was FLOORED by how amazing it was: undeniably peaty but somehow light/floral. Probably the best 45 bucks i’ve spent in a WHILE. thanks for your review of it.)