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Analysis

Winning the Australian Omnichannel Liquor Shopper: Purchasing & Consumption Trends for 2026

Analysis
Winning the Australian Omnichannel Liquor Shopper: Purchasing & Consumption Trends for 2026


  • Liquor purchasing is the most omnichannel it has ever been. Consumers now flow across traditional on-premise, off-premise retail, digital platforms, and experience-led spaces more seamlessly than ever. 
  • This creates huge opportunity but also intense fragmentation for suppliers trying to understand where their category is winning or losing, and critically, where to invest next. 
  • For brands, the challenge is not to “be everywhere” but rather to show up in the right places to meet the needs and motivations of their current and future consumers. 

Winning in today’s landscape requires:

continuously tracking where consumers are buying, drinking, and consuming 

understanding how channels compete, complement, and reinforce each other 

developing a channel strategy that adapts as occasions shift 

The consumer evidence behind this is compelling, NIQ’s OPUS report tells us: 
The consumer evidence behind this is compelling, NIQ’s OPUS report tells us: 

60% of Australians say they seek out brands they try in on-premise venues when later shopping in retail stores. 

43% say they have purchased a drink in retail or on-premise directly because they saw it on social media or online. 

Discovery, trial, and replenishment are now interconnected, and channel strategy must reflect this. 

Retail Remains The Cornerstone, But Faces Continued Pressure

Retail still anchors the liquor category, but engagement is softening. NIQ’s Omni shopper data highlights: 

  • 69.4% of households purchased alcohol at least from retail stores across the whole of 2025, down from 71.5% in 2024. 
  • In the most recent 12 weeks, this dropped again to 51.0%, down from 54.1% the same period a year earlier. 
  • Purchase frequency is also down 4.9%, though higher spend per occasion has softened the blow. 

With fewer shoppers entering the channel and those who do buying less often, the traditional volume engine for liquor is under structural pressure. Brands relying solely on Off Premise retail risk future share loss unless they activate new touchpoints. 

Request a private briefing with our BevAl experts and turn insights into action. 

people hands in a table with a drink

On-Premise Sees Contrasting Fortunes 

The On Premise continues to be a barometer for category health, but performance is diverging sharply. NIQ’s On-Premise Measurement (OPM) spotlights: 

  • Beer has delivered strong value growth, up +11.1% YoY. 
  • Glass spirits have declined -4.0% YoY. 
  • RTDs delivered the fastest growth rate, up +15.8% YoY. (Draught RTD being the driver, up +18% vs YA) 

Subchannel breakdown shows pubs as the standout performer for all categories: 

  • Beer in pubs: +14.1% vs +9.3% in restaurants 
  • Spirits in pubs: +1.2% vs +5.0% in restaurants 
  • RTDs in pubs: +26.5% vs +16.2% in restaurants 

However, value perceptions remain a universal challenge. When ranking visit attributes by satisfaction, “overall value for money” scores lowest, and consumers rate spirits, cocktails, and RTDs as the least satisfying categories on value. 

What this means: 

  • Beer must continue leveraging momentum through value cues and session able occasions. 
  • Spirits need to relearn value perceptions through elevated serves, mixology, price clarity, and experience led premiumization. 

Despite value for money perceptions, some RTDs are clearly winning this battle, with draught in particular driving the growth of RTDs. 

Online Retail Grows Strongly Off a Small Base  

Experience-led channels offer a Powerful Brand Building Platform

As consumers increasingly seek more than just a drink, experience-led on-premise venues are quickly becoming high-impact brand discovery hubs. 

In Australia: 

  • 14% of consumers attend festivals 
  • 13% visit stadiums 
  • 10% visit arenas 
  • 10% visit game-based experience bars 

These channels are not peripheral. They are recruitment engines that enable brands to leverage partnerships, sampling, rituals, and immersive activations. 

Consumers choose these venues because they offer: 

  • Something fun (49%) 
  • An engaging activity with friends or family (41%) 
  • Interactive entertainment (34%) 
  • An exciting experience (34%) 

This reinforces a crucial point: people are not going out for a drink. They are going out for an experience. 

For brands, this means activations must enhance the look, feel, and energy of the venue, not sit alongside it. The brands that win here create experiences that consumers take with them into retail, online, and everyday drinking occasions. 

So What? A Clear Call to Action for Brands

The consumer journey is now nonlinear. A brand discovered in an arena may be bought online, reposted on social media, gifted to a friend, and replenished from a bottle shop. 

To win in this omnichannel world, brands must:   

Industry Momentum: A New Thought Leadership Program Begins

To help the industry stay ahead of these shifts, we are launching a new insight-sharing thought leadership calendar partnership between NIQ and the Drinks Association. The first theme in this series focuses on omnichannel behaviour and its growing influence on discovery, trial, and purchase. Throughout the theme period, we will release targeted insights and practical frameworks, culminating in a live webinar that brings the industry together to unpack the findings and explore how to activate omnichannel strategies with confidence. 

Ready to turn insights into action?

Connect with our experts and learn how to transform data into real‑world impact.

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