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Meet two Aussie businesses riding the alcohol-free drinks boom

Aussie alcohol-free drinks businesses Sans Drinks and Brunswick Aces are among the speciality bottleshops and bars riding the boom in demand for alcohol-free booze.
Lois Maskiell
Sans Drinks
Sans Drinks founder Irene Falcone. Source: supplied.

Aussie alcohol-free drinks businesses Sans Drinks and Brunswick Aces are among the speciality bottleshops and bars riding the boom in demand for alcohol-free booze.

During the pandemic, the shift to at-home drinking, coupled with increasing health concerns, accelerated the consumption of sophisticated non-alcoholic drinks, helping businesses expand their offerings. 

In May, alcohol-free e-store Sans Drinks opened a second bottleshop in Sydney, and Melbourne-based sapiir distillery Brunswick Aces opened the doors to the cityโ€™s first alcohol-free bar. 

Irene Falcone, founder of Sans Drinks and former owner of Nourished Life, says the market has โ€œexplodedโ€ because the quality of the products has improved. 

โ€œIf you do drink alcohol and want to have a break or drink less, then you now have options,โ€ Falcone tells SmartCompany.  

New brands to discover

Global research firm IWSR has been tracking the growth in the no- and low-alcohol drinks market. Its Drinks Market Analysis report found more than 65% of consumers want to discover new brands this year. 

Itโ€™s no surprise then that sales in Australia of no- and low-alcohol products are predicted to rise 16% between 2020 and 2024.

Falcone opened her second bottleshop in the northern Sydney suburb of Freshwater in late May, after starting her online store in October 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

โ€œIt was actually a really seamless process,โ€ she says. โ€œI already had a shop located at the front of my warehouse at Brookvale.โ€

Across its two bottleshops and online store, Sans Drinks stocks 80 brands, from alcohol-free wines and beers to ciders and spirits.

A standard bottle of wine costs $10 to $30, while the most expensive non-alcoholic gin is about $50. 

Falcone says the second storeโ€™s first week of trading was โ€œjust crazyโ€ and the business is on track to hit $10 million in turnover by the end of next financial year. 

Itโ€™s a promising start that Falcone says has led her to start discussions about franchising the business.

โ€œThe target is 20 stores in the next three years across Australia,โ€ she says. 

Brunswick Aces non-alcohol drinks
Some of the drinks available at the Brunswick Aces bar. Source: supplied.

The rise of sapiir

Brunswick Aces, a distillery and bottleshop located in Melbourneโ€™s inner northern suburbs, was busy fitting out its new bar during the stateโ€™s lockdown last year. 

Founded in 2017 by six friends, the business is known for its non-alcoholic spirits called sapiir, which it wholesales to Australian businesses and exports overseas, including to Dubai and Singapore.  

Co-owner Stuart Henshall tells SmartCompany sapiir-style drinks date back to the middle ages, when vapour distillation techniques were used to extract aromatics from botanical ingredients.

The distilleryโ€™s most popular line, Spades Sapiir, is a dry gin-like drink with notes of cardamom and parsley. Its sales have grown 500% year-on-year over the last four years, says Henshall.

At the start of May, the business opened its industrial Baroque-style bar to alcohol-free and sober curious customers, selling a range of cocktails, wine and beers.  

โ€œWeโ€™re trying to alleviate the apprehension by being the hub of non-alcoholic beverages,โ€ Henshall says. 

Along with sapiir-based cocktails, the bar sells wine, beer and cider from mostly Australian suppliers, with prices starting at $6 for a glass of wine.

After an incredibly busy opening, Henshall says it became clear cocktails were the most popular item on the menu. 

Brunswick Aces bar
The Brunswick Aces bar. Source: supplied.

โ€œWe attribute that to cocktails being quite difficult to make at home because you have a few ingredients in there that take a lot of time and effort to make,โ€ he says. 

The second most popular item on the menu is beer, which โ€” out of the entire non-alcoholic drinks category โ€” is widely recognised as having the best quality. 

Thanks to major brewers investing in no- and low-alcohol beer and cider, those products make up for 92% of sales in the market globally, according to IWSR. 

While the main reason people want to drink alcohol-free beverages is due to health concerns, Henshall says there are other factors too.

Religious practices, and the desire not to โ€œlook messy on social mediaโ€ all motivate customers to visit his bar.

โ€œPeople want clear heads, and they want to enjoy their life without being brought down by a hangover,โ€ he says. 

โ€œThereโ€™s nothing worse than seeing a picture of yourself the next day where youโ€™ve got one eye open and youโ€™re not looking your best.โ€