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How the EU-India trade deal could reshape the fine wine market

  • India remains one of the smallest wine markets globally, but consumption is growing rapidly from a very low base.
  • The latest EU-India trade deal marks the first meaningful step toward tariff liberalisation, improving long-term access for European wine.
  • History shows that when large markets open gradually – as China did in the early 2000s – collector demand and investment interest can follow.

India and the European Union announced a major step forward in trade relations last week, with Brussels hailing the agreement in principle as one of the most significant developments in modern EU trade policy. Among the headline areas under discussion: India is expected to begin easing tariffs on European wine, alongside beer and olive oil, as part of a broader push toward gradual market liberalisation.

At first glance, wine may seem like a footnote in a deal dominated by cars, textiles, pharmaceuticals, and geopolitics. But for the fine wine world – and particularly for the long-term evolution of wine investment demand – India’s gradual market opening could prove far more consequential than current consumption figures suggest.

India’s wine market growth: Small base, rapid expansion

India remains one of the least developed wine markets in the world relative to its population.

Wine represents well below 1% of the country’s total alcohol consumption, and India accounts for only a tiny fraction of global wine imports. Total annual consumption is still modest, with domestic producers supplying the majority of the market.

On a per-capita basis, the numbers are striking: India consumes approximately 0.02 litres per adult per year – the equivalent of a single tasting measure per person annually.

To put that in context:

  • Australia consumes over 20 litres per capita
  • France and Italy sit above 40 litres
  • Portugal leads the world at more than 60 litres

India may be the world’s most populous country, but wine remains a marginal category.

And yet the trajectory is clear: India’s wine market has been expanding at double-digit rates, making it one of the fastest-growing alcoholic beverage segments in the country.

Market researchers project India’s wine market could reach around $520 million by 2028, and potentially approach $1 billion by 2034 – still small globally, but significant given today’s base.

Wine consumption in India: A premium lifestyle category

India’s alcohol market remains overwhelmingly dominated by spirits and beer:

  • Spirits: ~53%
  • Beer: ~46%
  • Wine: less than 1%

In high-income economies, wine often represents around 27% of alcohol consumption, and the European region sits closer to 31%. India’s wine market is therefore not simply small; it is structurally underdeveloped. But this is also why the upside is so significant.

Wine is increasingly positioned not as mass alcohol consumption, but as a lifestyle and premium category, particularly in major urban centres. It is also uniquely aligned with the growth of India’s middle class, which comprised 31% of the population in 2023 and is projected to reach 60% by 2047.

Indian wine imports are rising in urban premium markets

Imported wine remains a small segment in absolute terms, but it is gaining visibility in affluent metropolitan markets such as Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru.

European exporters have reported steady growth, and producers are increasingly investing in distribution networks, brand-building, and consumer education.

Crucially, wine markets almost always develop first in wealthy cities before broadening nationally – and India’s trajectory so far fits that pattern.

India’s wine import tariffs: The key barrier to European wine

For decades, India’s wine market has been constrained less by demand than by access.

India’s 150% wine import duty has historically restricted European wine exports, making imported bottles prohibitively expensive. On top of federal tariffs, each Indian state layers its own excise regime, often inflating shelf prices dramatically.

In practice, imported bottles can end up three to five times more expensive than comparable wines in other major markets once all taxes and fees are applied.

Any reduction in national duties would therefore be meaningful since it will start to unwind the single largest structural barrier at the federal level.

True liberalisation, however, would still require significant state-level reform.

India alcohol taxes: State-by-state barriers remain

India’s wine market is extremely fragmented. States fall into four distinct regulatory environments:

  • Private distribution markets – Maharashtra, Goa, Haryana
  • Government monopoly models – Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Delhi
  • Auction and lottery markets – Punjab, Chandigarh
  • Dry states – Bihar, Gujarat, Nagaland, Mizoram

Even where excise rates are manageable, barriers remain high through label registration fees and entry costs. Delhi, for example, charges a Rs. 2 lakh brand fee, while other states impose steep registration hurdles.

Northern states have even introduced “cow cess” levies — welfare fees on every bottle of wine to fund cattle shelters.

This complexity means that India’s market opening will be uneven, gradual, and city-led.

Wine education on the rise

Fine wine markets do not develop through income alone. They require education.

The rise of figures such as Sonal Holland MW, India’s first and only Master of Wine (since 2016), reflects the growing sophistication of India’s wine ecosystem. Her academy and the India Wine Awards are helping to build a professionalised culture of tasting, curation, and consumer knowledge.

This shift matters enormously: investment demand does not emerge without informed appreciation of provenance, scarcity, and value.

EU–India trade deal arrives in a fragmented global trade world

It is impossible to separate this agreement from the wider context in which it has arrived.

Global trade is becoming more fragmented. Tariff regimes are increasingly politicised, supply chains are being re-evaluated, and cross-border flows of goods are being reshaped by geopolitics as much as economics.

The wine market is not immune. Over the past year, the fine wine industry has been watching renewed trade tensions between the US and key partners, alongside uncertainty around tariffs, shipping, and market access. In that environment, any meaningful liberalisation elsewhere carries outsized importance.

India’s decision to begin lowering duties on European wine therefore signals a gradual shift toward integration, and it is coming at a moment when much of the global trade landscape is moving in the opposite direction.

For fine wine, where demand is global but supply is finite, the emergence of new consumer markets has always been one of the most powerful long-term drivers of price appreciation.

China’s wine boom shows what happens when large markets open

The closest modern parallel to the opening of the Indian wine market is China.

In the early 2000s, China’s wine market was similarly underdeveloped. But gradual reductions in trade barriers, expanding distribution, and the emergence of gifting culture created one of the most dramatic demand transformations the wine world has ever seen.

By the late 2000s and early 2010s:

  • Bordeaux became a symbol of luxury
  • Auction activity surged across Asia
  • Global pricing dynamics shifted

India today is not China in 2010. Its regulatory structure is more fragmented, its per-capita consumption far lower, and cultural constraints are more pronounced.

But the structural similarities remain notable:

  • A vast population starting from a low base
  • Rapid urban wealth concentration
  • Wine positioned as aspirational luxury
  • Increasing education and professionalisation
  • Early steps toward reduced import barriers

In markets of this scale, even modest shifts in penetration can carry long-term implications.

What this could mean for fine wine investment

For investors, the key takeaway is not that India will suddenly become a dominant importer of blue-chip Burgundy or Champagne.

The market is still highly taxed, highly regulated, and structurally complex. State-level excise regimes, distribution monopolies, and steep registration costs remain major constraints. True liberalisation will take years.

However, fine wine investment is not driven by today’s consumption alone – it is driven by expectations of future demand.

Opening markets matter because they create:

  • Greater accessibility
  • More transparent pricing
  • Broader consumer participation
  • And, crucially, the early foundations of collector culture

India is not there yet but may now be entering the first stage of a familiar cycle: from niche consumption, to aspirational luxury, to informed collecting, and eventually, to investment-grade demand.

A wine market to watch

In a world where global trade is becoming more fragmented, even the gradual opening of a market of 1.4 billion people is one of the most important long-term developments the fine wine industry can watch.

The industry has speculated for decades about what India could become for fine wine. Now, for the first time, the market may be beginning to find out.

 

WineCap’s independent market analysis showcases the value of portfolio diversification and the stability offered by investing in wine. Speak to one of our wine investment experts and start building your portfolio. Schedule your free consultation today

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Wine investor vs collector: which one are you?

  • On the outside, wine collecting and investment look similar, but they are different activities with unique objectives.
  • Wine collectors and wine investors have different considerations and motivations.
  • Most fine wine lovers are a mix of collector and investor and need professional guidance for optimal decision-making.

Many wine lovers curate an expanding cellar over time. However, while some earmark these special wines for future dinner parties and family events, others regard them as financial assets with growth and return potential. From the outside, wine collecting and wine investment often look similar – but the mindsets, motivations, and strategies that drive these activities are fundamentally different.

As the fine wine investment space continues to grow and garner interest as an alternative asset class (owing to its record of stability, low correlation to equities, and years of consistent wine investment returns), understanding these differences is crucial.

Are you a private wine collector or a global wine investor – or a combination of both? Read on to find out.

What is wine collecting?

What drives wine collecting is, above all, passion. Fine wine collectors buy items they admire because of their storytelling, ability to evoke memories, or simply because they align with their tastes. When making decisions about which wines to buy, financial goals are not a key factor.

Collectors of wine typically:

  • Buy wines they intend to enjoy one day.
  • Curate their collection around regions or producers they esteem.
  • Purchase wines spanning a range of styles, including niche bottles.
  • Build verticals for pleasure rather than profit.
  • Store wines at home or in mixed-use cellars.
  • Open rare bottles to celebrate important milestones.

For a collector, the ‘return on wine investment’ is the quality of the experience when a treasured bottle is finally opened and enjoyed.

What is wine investment?

In contrast, wine investment is a financial strategy, rather than purely an expression of taste. Investors regard fine wine as an asset – one that has shown strong returns over decades, enjoys low volatility, and displays reliable resilience in periods of economic turbulence. It is often regarded as a valuable addition to a wider investment portfolio, performing as an asset that can weather the volatility sometimes seen in equities.

Investors typically:

  • Select wines which have strong capital appreciation.
  • Concentrate on blue-chip regions with deep and consistent demand globally such as Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne, Tuscany, Piedmont, Napa, and the Rhône.
  • Use wine investment market data: indicators of market liquidity, critic scores, scarcity, and historical performance to evaluate the best wines to invest in.
  • Put provenance, condition, and professional storage first.
  • Buy and store wine via trusted wine investment platforms.
  • Are guided by data, analytics, and market signals over personal taste.
  • Have a clear time horizon and exit strategy.

Investors measure success by risk-adjusted return, not just by how pleasurable a wine might be to enjoy at a future date.

See our Wine Investors Guide for more information.

Asset behaviour: drinkable luxury vs financial instrument

Investors and collectors are each interested in pricey wines because of their quality and historical significance. However, while the former values prestige wines mostly for their potential financial value, the latter appreciates their cultural capital.

Collectors value wine for its:

Against this background, they may be comfortable purchasing wines with imperfect provenance or storage, as the drinking enjoyment overrides any financial return of wine investment.

Investors value wine as:

  • An object with unique economic and structural features and potential.
  • A reliable portfolio diversifier.
  • Having a finite supply, which can work in favour of price performance.
  • Possessing global demand and growth potential as established markets grow and new ones emerge.
  • An asset with advantageous low correlation with stocks, currency, and commodities.

These characteristics are key influencers in wine investor decisions and can play a stabilising role in diversified portfolios during periods of market volatility.

Financial mechanics

Both categories of wine lovers have to navigate factors that impact if and when they buy, sell, or enjoy their bottles. The most significant are costs, liquidity and wine investment growth.

Costs

Both collectors and investors may face costs associated with:

  • Professional storage.
  • Insurance.
  • Shipping and logistics.
  • Potential taxes depending on jurisdiction.

While costs are similar for both collecting and investing, how they are approached varies vastly. Collectors usually accommodate expenses as part of their hobby. Investors, however, have to take them into account when calculating net returns. For example, storage and fees can impact long-term profits.

Liquidity

Wine as an asset class is less liquid than equities. Due to its tangibility, selling can take days or weeks, meaning investors need:

  • A platform or experienced broker.
  • Impeccable provenance records.
  • Timely demand for the particular wine and/ or vintage.

In contrast, collectors don’t necessarily factor selling into the equation. In fact, they often don’t sell at all, with most of their bottles eventually being opened and enjoyed.

Returns

Investment-grade wine has a long history of producing solid long-term returns, with many indices outperforming conventional markets during major downturns. However, fine wine performance is cyclical, like all assets.

Meanwhile, for collectors, the return is the pleasure they enjoy when they choose to open a bottle for private enjoyment or to mark a special occasion. It does not correlate to the rise and fall of the market.

Other considerations

Collectors and investors have different buying motivations but they still need to consider how to balance their cellars or portfolios. 

Collectors buy based on emotion, which can mean that they: 

  • Overbuy wines they don’t drink. 
  • Don’t have proper or enough storage.
  • Build imbalance cellars.
  • Are too sentimental to sell or open valuable bottles when the time is right (in their peak drinking window).

Investors purchase wine for its returns potential, which means they need to consider the market and operations:

  • Market cycles, shifts in regional demand, and the influence of critics.
  • Optimal liquidity. 
  • Buying the right wine from a reputable supplier. 
  • Reliable storage and logistics.

Where are you on the spectrum?

Most wine enthusiasts do not fall 100% into either the collector or investor category; they are usually a hybrid of both. The key question you need to ask yourself is: Do you buy wine for emotional or financial return?

If you buy wine because you love what’s in the bottle, you’re a collector. If you purchase wine because of how it can enhance your portfolio, you’re an investor. If you are somewhere in between and are looking to fine-tune your objectives, WineCap can guide you with clarity, confidence, and data-driven precision as you take the next step. 

WineCap’s independent market analysis showcases the value of portfolio diversification and the stability offered by investing in wine. Speak to one of our wine investment experts and start building your portfolio. Schedule your free consultation today.