09/01/2023

US alcohol sales in 2022 led by premium spending across all categories

Spirits continue to grow led by agave and whisky, while moderation trend fuels no-alcohol beer and lower ABV options across RTDs and wine

 

Preliminary 2022 data from IWSR shows that all major categories across the total beverage alcohol industry in the US – beer, cider, wine, spirits, and ready-to-drink (RTDs) – posted growth across premium-plus price tiers*.

While total volumes of wine (-2%), beer (-2%) and cider (-4%) are all expected to have declined in 2022, the premium-and-above segments of each are forecast to have grown: wine (+6%), beer (+4%) and cider (+11%). Total spirits volumes are expected to be up +2%, with premium+ up +13%, while RTDs expected to show moderate gains at less than +1% with premium+ up +38%.

“Economic uncertainty continued throughout 2022, ranging from inflation to talks of a recession to supply chain instability,” says Emily Neill, COO Research, IWSR Drinks Market Analysis. “Despite this, a recent IWSR consumer price sensitivity survey shows Americans feel confident about their finances at a personal level.”

High-income drinkers, earning over $150,000, were especially secure, and across all demographics, Millennials show more confidence than older drinkers. IWSR consumer data shows consumer spending and purchasing volume are up in 2022 vs 2021 in most tracked categories.

Despite industry-wide price increases, premiumisation (or trading up to higher-priced, often higher-quality products) is still driving all segments of beverage alcohol.

Premiumisation is occurring most notably in spirits. Overall, 33% of Americans said they had spent $50 or more on a bottle of alcohol in 2022, against just 24% in 2021. Furthermore, six in 10 online shoppers say they spend more on alcohol online than in-store.

“Another area where premiumisation is proving to be a key factor driving volume is at-home consumption,” says Neill. “With a vast majority of Americans consuming alcohol at home, 46% say they are likely to treat themselves to better quality drinks there, which is also beneficial for wine and beer.”

Other key insights from IWSR include:

Spirits category has its 25th straight year of volume gain

Long-term premiumisation of spirits has boosted the category with evident crossover in RTDs as pre-mixed cocktails and spirit-based RTDs gain ground.

Total whisky category volumes (up +3% in 2022 vs 2021), surpassed vodka (less than +1% growth in 2022 vs 2021) last year for the first time in almost two decades. US whiskey holds the largest share of total whisky volumes, as well as percentage growth (+4%), with value increases led by bourbon which increased by +8%.

Agave spirits contributed $1.6bn to the spirits industry in 2022. This growth accounted for 70% of the overall volume growth and 65% of overall value growth of total US spirits.

Also notable in 2022 – agave spirits surpassed US whiskey by value to become the second most valuable spirits subcategory in the US. Tequila alone is set to overtake vodka and US whiskey in 2023 to become the most valuable spirits category in the US.

Traditional spirits are expected to overtake traditional beer as the share of servings leader for the first time in modern history this year. This means on a drink-by-drink basis, more Americans will drink traditional spirits.

Bright spot for beer across premium and imports, as RTDs slow with mixed performance across subcategories

While total beer continues to recover from pandemic losses, imports (led by Mexican beer) showed positive volume gains at +4%. Domestic beer commands a 79% volume share of total beer and struggles from long-term decline, weighing down overall beer performance.

The RTD category (which includes all alcohol bases) was able to post seven straight years of volume gains but saw a much lower growth rate than in previous years, (+1%) in 2022, as malt-based hard seltzers slow down. Spirit-based RTDs, hard teas and FABs show momentum however and premiumisation is evident across the RTD category as value increased by +6%.

Fuelled by Prosecco, sparkling wine achieved its 21st consecutive year of both volume and value gains

While sparkling wine sees continued growth, the total wine category declined by volume for the second straight year, decreasing -2% in 2022 vs 2021. From a value perspective, total wine posted modest growth (+1%). ​Still wine continues to drag down overall wine performance (-3%) as declines in the standard-and-below segment were unable to be offset by advances occurring in the premium-and-above tiers. ​

Within still wine, a strengthening trend of health and wellness is bringing awareness to the no- and low-alcohol subsegments. ​In other wine segments, rice wine/sake (+3%) and flavoured wine (+8%) performed well. Rice wine/sake benefited from a return to the on-premise, while flavoured wines attract younger LDA consumers drawn to flavour, a halo effect from the RTD category.

No/low alcohol is increasing in significance as the health and wellness movement commands a growing portion of consumer spending.

Though no/low products are a mere 1% volume share of total beverage alcohol in the US, the category’s growth rate was +15% in 2022. No/low-alcohol wine and beer hold the largest share, both in volume and value.

More than half of alcohol drinkers claimed to want to moderate their intake in 2022. The leading reasons people say they consume no-alcohol products is to stay in control followed by avoiding the effects of alcohol, while low-alcohol drinkers prioritize reducing alcohol intake in general.

Channel dynamics point to strengthening on-trade recovery

Usual channel dynamics were severely disrupted by Covid-19, with ecommerce and brick and mortar off-trade sales benefitting from on-trade restrictions. Near-term corrections will see the picture stabilize over the next five years. Ecommerce share was up +1% in 2022, at a much more moderate performance than pandemic highs. On-premise recovery is evident with the channel up +24%, and with a full return to pre-pandemic volumes expected in 2023. Half of consumers expect their on-trade drinking to remain the same, although many are watching what they spend and reducing the frequency of visits.

 

*Premium-plus, premium-and-above, and premium+ refer to all price bands from premium to prestige.

 

You may also be interested in reading:

The luxury spirits market: key growth drivers
No- and low-alcohol category value surpasses $11bn in 2022
The 8 drivers of change for beverage alcohol in 2023 and beyond

The above analysis reflects IWSR data from the 2022 data release. For more in-depth data and current analysis, please get in touch.

CATEGORY: All  |  MARKET: All, North America  |  TREND: All, Premiumisation  |