Contract Manufacturing Alcohol India: How AABL Powers Premium Brands
India's spirits market is the third largest in the world by volume, consuming over 1.5 billion litres of IMFL annually . For global alcohol brands, producing locally through a contract manufacturing partner is no longer optional it's a competitive requirement. Contract manufacturing alcohol in India allows international brands to access cost-efficient production, navigate complex excise regulations, and serve price-sensitive consumers without compromising on product standards. This post explains how contract manufacturing works in the Indian spirits industry, what to look for in a distillery partner, and how franchise agreements function in this space.
What Is Contract Manufacturing in the Alcohol Industry?
Contract manufacturing in the alcohol industry means a brand owner outsources production blending, bottling, or both to a licensed third-party distillery. The brand retains ownership of the recipe, the label, and the market rights. The manufacturer provides infrastructure, regulatory compliance, and production expertise.
This model is common across FMCG sectors. In spirits, it carries additional weight because alcohol production in India is state-regulated under excise law. Every production unit needs state-specific licences. A contract manufacturer already holds those licences, which removes a significant barrier for brands entering new geographies.
How Is It Different From Toll Manufacturing?
Toll manufacturing is a subset of contract manufacturing. In toll manufacturing, the brand owner supplies the raw materials typically ENA or malt concentrate and pays the distillery a fee to blend and bottle. In full contract manufacturing, the distillery sources inputs too. Both models exist in the Indian spirits market, with the choice depending on supply chain control preferences.
What Types of Alcohol Can Be Contract Manufactured in India?
Indian distilleries handle a wide range of products under contract, including whisky, rum, vodka, brandy, and gin. All of these fall under the IMFL category when produced domestically using ENA as the base spirit. Premium products using imported Scotch malt or Caribbean rum concentrate for blending also qualify for contract production, provided the blending facility holds the required state excise permits.
How Do Global Spirits Brands Use Contract Manufacturing in India?
Global spirits brands use Indian contract manufacturing to produce locally at a fraction of the import cost. Imported spirits attract customs duties that can exceed 150% in India, making locally blended alternatives far more commercially viable for volume segments.
A brand like Johnnie Walker or Captain Morgan targeting the Indian mass-premium market needs a production partner who can maintain consistent blend standards, meet state excise labelling requirements, and manage distribution compliance. Franchise and contract agreements with established distilleries make this possible at scale.
What Is a Franchise Agreement in Liquor Manufacturing?
A franchise agreement in liquor manufacturing is a legal arrangement where a brand owner grants a distillery the right to produce and sell a specific brand within a defined territory. The distillery follows the brand's blend specification, uses approved raw materials, and operates under the brand owner's quality audit. It differs from standard contract manufacturing in that it often includes territorial sales rights for the manufacturer.
India's largest spirits company a Diageo subsidiary has historically used such franchise agreements to extend production across multiple states without building new distilleries in each location. Distilleries in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and other states have operated as authorised franchise manufacturers for premium international brands like Black & White, Black Dog, VAT 69, Smirnoff, and Captain Morgan. You can see an example of this model in action on this Indian distillery's contract manufacturing page, which lists several Diageo-affiliated franchise brands.
What Does a Brand Need to Qualify for a Franchise Agreement?
A brand needs registered trademarks, a defined blend specification, and sufficient market volume to make the arrangement commercially worthwhile for the distillery. Most large distilleries set minimum annual volume thresholds before entering a franchise agreement. The brand must also support the distillery through approved raw material sourcing and periodic quality audits.
What Are the Regulations for Alcohol Contract Manufacturing in India?
Alcohol contract manufacturing in India is governed by state excise acts, not a single central law. Each state sets its own licensing conditions, labelling requirements, and permitted production categories. A distillery that manufactures under contract must hold a valid distillery licence, a blending licence (if applicable), and state-specific brand registration for every product it produces.
This creates a fragmented regulatory picture. A brand approved for production in Madhya Pradesh cannot automatically manufacture or sell in Maharashtra without separate state registration. This is precisely why choosing a contract manufacturer with existing multi-state excise approvals and established regulatory relationships matters.
What Certifications Should a Contract Distillery Hold?
At minimum, a contract distillery should hold ISO 9001 certification for quality management and comply with the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) specifications for IMFL products (Source: Bureau of Indian Standards, IS 839). Many distilleries also maintain FSSAI licences for bottling operations. Brands sourcing for export additionally need the manufacturer to comply with the importing country's food safety and alcohol labelling standards.
How Are Excise Duties Managed in Contract Manufacturing?
Excise duty liability in India typically rests with the production entity the distillery. In a contract arrangement, the agreement specifies whether the duty is paid by the distillery and recovered from the brand owner, or whether the brand owner deposits directly with the excise authority. This must be defined precisely in the contract, as excise violations carry significant penalties under state excise acts.
How Is Potable Alcohol Different From Industrial Alcohol in Production?
Potable alcohol is produced for human consumption and must meet stricter purity standards than industrial alcohol. Extra Neutral Alcohol (ENA), the primary base for IMFL, is a high-purity ethanol derived mainly from molasses or grain. It must meet BIS specifications for methanol content, aldehydes, and heavy metal traces before it qualifies for blending into consumable spirits.
Industrial alcohol, by contrast, is denatured to prevent consumption and is not used in beverage production. The distinction matters because contract distilleries must maintain strict segregation of potable and non-potable alcohol streams to comply with excise regulations.
Why Does ENA Quality Affect Final Product Standards?
ENA quality directly determines the baseline character of the finished spirit. Low-quality ENA carries off-notes sulphur compounds, higher alcohols that no amount of blending or flavouring can fully mask. Premium contract manufacturers source ENA from certified grain or molasses-based distilleries and run independent quality checks before it enters the blending process.
Conclusion
Contract manufacturing alcohol in India gives global brands a practical route to scale without the capital burden of building owned distilleries in every state. The model works because established distilleries already carry the regulatory licences, production infrastructure, and quality systems that brands need. The franchise agreement format extends this further, giving manufacturers territorial production and sales rights under a brand's specification. As India's spirits market continues growing, particularly in the premium and semi-premium segments, the role of high-quality contract manufacturers will only become more important. The real question is whether enough distilleries can maintain the blend consistency and compliance standards that global brands increasingly demand. We strictly follow all government regulations, industry standards, and responsible manufacturing practices in every stage of production.










