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Royal Reality Check: King Charles' English Whiskey Gets a Price Cut

Even royal approval doesn't guarantee whisky success

When you're the King of England, you might expect everything you touch to turn to gold. But it turns out even royal approval doesn't guarantee whiskey success - King Charles' birthday dram just got a £50 price cut after failing to sell out its limited run.

The Highgrove English whiskey, created to celebrate the King's 75th birthday, has dropped from £175 to £125 per bottle. That's a pretty clear signal that even 1,500 bottles was perhaps a bit optimistic for this particular release.

What makes this especially interesting is how it contrasts with other royal whiskey launches. The Balmoral estate's own 45-year-old Royal Lochnagar release (priced at an eye-watering £3,200) shows there's definitely still an appetite for premium royal-themed Scotch. So what went wrong here?

The answer might lie in Charles' bold decision to back English whiskey - a move that raised more than a few eyebrows in Scotland. While the Cotswolds Distillery, who produced the whiskey, is doing great work, asking whiskey collectors to shell out premium prices for English whiskey is still a tough sell.

There's some cool innovation here - the whiskey uses heritage Plumage Archer barley grown on Charles' own Highgrove estate, and each bottle features one of the King's watercolors. But at £175, it was competing with some seriously established names in Scotch whisky.

The price cut brings it more in line with reality, though £125 is still premium territory. For context, you can pick up a bottle of well-regarded Scotch from the Highgrove shop for £49.95, or spring for a 12-year-old Laphroaig at £105.

The takeaway? Even royal backing can't fast-track the decades of reputation-building that goes into premium whiskey pricing. English whiskey is on the rise - with about 30 distilleries now operating south of the border - but it looks like they'll need to earn their stripes the old-fashioned way, one dram at a time.