Tax Foundation

09/19/2025 | Press release | Archived content

Beer Taxes in Europe, 2025

Significant Changes from July 2024

  • Lithuania increased the tax on a standard bottle of beer by €0.0249.
  • Slovenia increased the tax on a standard bottle of beer by €0.0140.
  • Latvia increased the tax on a standard bottle of beer by €0.0132.
  • Poland increased the tax on a standard bottle of beer by €0.0123.
  • Estonia increased the tax on a standard bottle of beer by €0.0109.
  • Several other countries changed the tax by less than one eurocent with rate changes or changes to currency conversions to the euro.

The motivations for excise taxes on beer are straightforward. Governments tax beer and other alcohol both to discourage people from consuming alcohol and to generate revenues from a broadly consumed, but socially disdained, product. Beer taxes remain a blunt tool for reducing harm, however.

European tax treatment of alcohol varies even more widely than just the treatment of beer. Generally speaking, beer is taxed more heavily than wine, with several countries placing no excise tax An excise tax is a tax imposed on a specific good or activity. Excise taxes are commonly levied on cigarettes, alcoholic beverages, soda, gasoline, insurance premiums, amusement activities, and betting, and typically make up a relatively small and volatile portion of state and local and, to a lesser extent, federal tax collections.on wine whatsoever. Alcohol in beer is taxed much lighter than alcohol in spirits, however.

Innovation in the alcohol industry has blurred existing categorical lines. Craft brewing, with a diverse flavor profile and wider range of alcohol content, revolutionized the beer industry, exponentially increasing the number of beers available to global consumers. Malt liquor, a higher-alcohol-content beer brewed with extra malt, by its own name is such a clear category stratifier. Many ready-to-drink cocktails are distilled spirits drinks, but after combining the spirit with a mixer, the final product available to purchase has an alcohol content closer to a beer than a bottle of liquor.

Beer in the EU is generally already taxed by alcohol content, whether by percent alcohol or degree Plato, but other categories of alcohol are not. As the alcohol product landscape continues to develop, the treatment of those categories is likely to become more complex, inefficient, and costly to administer and comply with.

Modernizing alcohol taxation by discarding clunky categorical systems for a tax levied on alcohol content would equalize the treatment of different types of alcohol while making the tax system more efficient and more transparent.

Beer taxes already tend to be levied per degree of alcohol content in Europe, and the wide range of rates reflect different governments' outlooks on shaping consumer behavior, public health, and revenue generation via tax policy.

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Tax Foundation published this content on September 19, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on September 23, 2025 at 08:14 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]