Skip to main content

SipSource 2025 Q2 Report Shows Signs of Continued Stabilization

Wine & Spirits Wholesalers of America (WSWA) released the SipSource 2025 Q2 Report, offering a comprehensive look at U.S. wine and spirits depletion trends through the first half of the year. Data in the report underscores ongoing category challenges, evolving consumer behaviors and areas of cautious optimism as the industry navigates persistent macroeconomic and market headwinds. 

“Consumer confidence right now is fragile, and continued trade volatility including concerns over tariffs and supply chain instability is adding to the pressure facing the industry,” said SipSource analyst Dale Stratton in a news release. “These factors are shaping purchasing patterns, slowing recovery, and forcing industry stakeholders, everyone from producers to importers to wholesalers and retailers, to rethink inventory, pricing, and promotional strategies.” 

Wine and Spirits See Steep YTD Declines

Demand remained soft across categories in the first half of the year with Spirits falling -6.0% in volume and -5.0% in revenue, according to the report, while wine posted sharper drops of -8.7% in volume and -8.5% in revenue. On a rolling 12-month basis, Spirits dropped a more modest, but significant -4.1% and -3.8% in volume/revenue trends, and wine is down -7.2% and -6.6% in volume/revenue trends. 

Wine Faces Ongoing Struggles 

In June 2025, Wine’s sustained downturn reached its 52nd consecutive month of negative volume growth, according to the report. Declines in premiumization and distribution remain a concern, particularly in on-premise channels where local purveyors continue to optimize wine lists and prioritize cash flow over large selections and inventories. Dining, which accounts for more than half (56%) of wine revenue and 58% of Wine Points of Distribution (PODs) is down -7.2% and -7.0%, respectively. Prosecco and Champagne are notable exceptions, showing modest to strong growth mid-year. 

Premiumization Shows Signs of Return in Spirits 

After multiple months of volume growth outpacing revenue, premiumization trends are reemerging in key categories, according to the report. Revenue declines are now consistently less severe than volume declines, particularly in Premium+ price tiers. While overall spirits performance remains negative, Tequila/Agave Spirits remain a bright spot, up +1.1% in volume and +0.7% in revenue in the latest 12-month rolling data.

RTD Growth Slows but Remains a Net Driver of Category Growth 

“The RTD category continues to be a net growth driver, albeit at lower rates than in recent years,” said SipSource analyst Danny Brager in the release. “And according to other industry data sets like NIQ scans, we’ve seen a focused shift away from malt-based beverages to spirits-based ready-to-drinks.” 

According to NIQ data, during the first six months of 2025, the total RTD category is up +1.7% in revenue but down -3.2% in volume. While overall growth is slowing, spirits-based RTDs were up +19.6%, with wine-based up +12.4% and malt-based products down -0.8%. 

The post SipSource 2025 Q2 Report Shows Signs of Continued Stabilization appeared first on Beverage Information Group.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.