Tag Archives: Craft Beer

A Glass Half Full Revisited: When Demographic Momentum Stalls

In May 2015, I published a blog post titled A Glass Half Full?” The piece was inspired by a simple yet intriguing question a colleague posed while we were enjoying a couple of beers together at the Delirium Cafe in Amsterdam: How large a share of the American beer market might craft brewers ultimately capture?

Toward the end of that blog entry, I offered my response. And here it is:

Well I am not going to be nailed down to a specific market share. However, with demographic momentum working in their favor, capturing somewhere between 40% and 50% of the market (as currently defined) by 2035 is not unreasonable. Of course I may be wrong.

Oh boy, was I wrong. Even though 2035 is still nine years away, it’s already clear that my prediction is unlikely to come close. Back in 2015, when I made it, craft breweries had already captured 19.3% of the American beer market – measured in dollar sales, not volume. Today, that share sits at 24.6%. That’s an increase, but hardly the dramatic surge I had anticipated when I offered that bold forecast eleven years ago. So, what went wrong?

Before addressing that question, it is worth revisiting the context behind my original prediction. Between 2010 and 2014, the number of craft breweries in the United States grew from 1,758 to 3,968 – an increase of ~125 percent. Over the same period, craft beer’s share of the U.S. beer market rose from 7.6 percent to 13 percent, a gain of 71 percent. By any reasonable measure, the industry was in the midst of an unmistakable boom.

In recent years, however, that boom has become something of a bust. Between 2020 and 2024, the number of craft breweries in the United States increased from 8,921 to 9,769, an increase of just 9.8%. Over the same period, craft beer’s market share increased from 23.7% to 24.7%. an increase of 4.2%. Taken together, these trends suggest that the American consumer’s appetite for craft beer has largely stalled.

Towards the end of my 2015 blog entry, I made the observation that my bold forecast hinged very much upon “the next generation of beer drinkers preferring craft over traditional beer” and that “preferences sometimes have a habit of changing with generational shifts”. How true this turned out to be.

It was Millennials – those born between 1981 and 1996 – whose outsized enthusiasm for craft beer powered the segment’s extraordinary expansion. Unfortunately, for craft brewers at least, it was an enthusiasm not shared by Generation Z – those born between 1997 and 2012.

It is well documented that members of Generation Z are drinking less alcohol. Writing for USA Today, Betty Lin‑Fisher characterizes this shift as Gen Z “ghosting” alcohol, noting that a desire to lead a healthier lifestyle is a key motivating factor. Survey data from Gallup in 2025 support this interpretation: 66% of Americans aged 18–34 reported that they viewed moderate alcohol consumption – defined as one or two drinks per day – as harmful to personal health. By comparison, this view was held by 50% of adults aged 35–54 and 48% of those aged 55 and older. A 2021 study in JAMA Pediatrics reported that 28% of college students abstained from alcohol in 2018, up from 20% in 2002. It is important to note that concern about the health impacts of alcohol has been increasing across all age groups in recent years, suggesting that changing attitudes toward drinking are not confined to younger generations alone.

Growing interest in healthier lifestyles – and a deliberate move away from alcohol – has given rise to initiatives such as Dry January and Sober October, while also adding new terms like sober curious to the popular lexicon. These shifts are not confined to the United States. Declining alcohol consumption has been documented across a range of advanced economies, including Australia, Ireland, and Japan. Even Germany – long regarded as a stronghold of beer culture – recorded its steepest drop in beer sales in more than three decades in 2025.

Many people who are cutting back on alcohol still want beverages that deliver beer’s familiar flavors. This preference has helped fuel rapid growth in the non‑ and low‑alcohol beer segment. In the United States, sales of non‑alcoholic beer rose by 23 percent between January and August 2025. Although non‑alcoholic beer still accounts for only about 1.3 percent of total beer sales, the category has become large enough to support major players. Athletic Brewing Company, which produces only non‑alcoholic beer at its breweries in Milford, Connecticut, and San Diego, California, now ranks as the sixth‑largest craft brewery in the United States.

Although much of the existing evidence points to declining alcohol use among Gen Z, a recent IWSR survey suggests the trend may not persist. In the United States, the share of legal drinking age (LDA+) Gen Z adults reporting alcohol consumption in the past six months increased from 46% to 70%. While this is quite a large change over a very short period, one expert suggests that this may be indicative of longer-tern trends and that as Gen Z age and gain greater disposable income, their drinking patterns may increasingly resemble those of older generations. Writing for the Pew Research Center on generational differences in values and behaviors, Michael Dimmock cautions that “don’t assume that what you see today is what you’ll get tomorrow.” In other words, change happens.

When all is said and done, this retrospective makes clear that my 2015 forecast was shaped by the extraordinary momentum of the craft beer boom and an assumption that Millennial preferences would be replicated by subsequent generations. Instead, the past decade has underscored how contingent such projections are on shifting demographic, cultural, and health-related dynamics. While Millennials’ enthusiasm propelled craft beer’s rapid ascent, slower growth since 2020 reflects both saturation and changing attitudes toward alcohol -especially among Gen Z, whose drinking behaviors differ markedly from their predecessors, at least to date. At the same time, the rise of non‑ and low‑alcohol beer, along with emerging evidence that Gen Z’s consumption patterns may evolve with age, serves as a reminder that generational preferences are neither fixed nor fully predictable. As the aforementioned Micheal Dimock of the Pew Research Center has noted, “what we observe today should not be mistaken for a permanent trajectory” – a lesson this episode in forecasting has reinforced all too clearly. And, as the Danish adage succinctly reminds us “prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future”.

Further Reading:

McCabe, Sean E., Brooke J. Arterberry, and Kara Dickinson, Rebecca J. Evans-Polce, Jason A. Ford, Jennie E. Ryan, and Ty S. Schepis. . 2021. Assessment of changes in alcohol and marijuana abstinence, co-use, and use disorders among US young adults from 2002 to 2018. JAMA Pediatrics, Volume 175, Issue 1, pages 64-72.

Three Things I’ve Learned Drinking Craft Beer

Growing up in Scotland I was (and still am) an avid football fan. That’s the football played with a round ball, or soccer as it is referred to in the United States. My passion for the sport has not waned over the last four and a half decades. And thanks to the wonders of the internet I am able to watch livestream coverage of games played by my favorite football team back in Scotland, Glasgow Celtic. And I can also follow all the news and gossip by connecting to the webpages of Scottish newspapers such as the Daily Record or The Scotsman. A common feature that has recently made an appearance in these, and other, newspapers is the “Three Things We Learned” column (sometimes it’s five things). Typically these columns will focus on the weekend’s fixtures or a particular match-up and will detail three (or five) things that a particular journalist feels were learned from the set of fixtures or from a particular fixture. As I was reading one of these columns the other week it got me thinking about craft beer and the things that I have learned as a craft beer drinker. So here goes – in no particular order – three things I’ve learned drinking craft beer?

Brewery Staff Are A Friendly Lot

Lansing Brewing Company in Lansing, MI – one of the craft breweries with a friendly and knowledge staff

I have visited dozens of craft breweries, not just in the United States but also  in a number of other countries including Austria, Australia, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Sweden. A common characteristic of almost every single craft brewery in which I have spent any time is the friendliness, passion, and knowledge of the staff. I like to visit craft breweries when they are quieter – late afternoon is one of my favorite times. I do so partly because I do not particularly like noisy bars. Also, those quieter periods are the perfect time to engage the bar staff in conversation. The bar staff in a craft brewery tend to be very knowledgeable and passionate about the product they are selling. They can also tell you about the brewery itself – the background of the owners, the size of the brewing system used, and the history of the building in which the brewery is housed. And it is a knowledge that they love to share. So I have spent many pleasant hours in craft breweries sitting on a bar stool chatting with bar tenders, asking questions and listening intently. And in the process I have learned so much about the craft beer industry. Not only do the bar staff know about the craft brewery at which they work but they also know about the other craft breweries in town; so my final question to them is often to ask their recommendation for the next craft brewery I should visit.

There’s A Craft Beer for Everyone

Something for everyone- Barley’s Brewing Company in Columbus, OH

Samplers are a good way to taste test a variety of craft beers

I have a number of friends who are not beer drinkers. Their preferred libation is wine. However, in going to craft breweries with them, to my joy, all of them have discovered at least one beer that they enjoy. In most cases these beers happen to be stouts or porters, particularly those that contain coffee or chocolate flavoring. In some respects I am not surprised that these friends have found a craft beer that they genuinely like. The Brewers Association recognizes the existence of over 150 different styles of beer. There is  Scottish-style Heavy-Ale, Finnish-style Sahti, Swedish-style Gotlandsdricke, English-style Brown Ale, German-style Kölsch – the list goes on and on. With so much choice there is surely something for everyone, and my, albeit limited, experience suggests that this may well be the case. So the next time you are in a craft brewery and a friend or family member tells you that they do not like beer, challenge them. Purchase a sampler of five or six different beers and have that person try them all. It might also be an idea, in selecting the composition of the sampler, to enlist the help of the friendly and knowledgeable bartender (see above) and have that person chat with the non-beer drinker to see what tastes and flavors appeal to his or her palate. So don’t take no for an answer when you offer to buy your non-beer drinking friend a beer. Their experience of beer up to that point has probably been Budweiser or Coors Light – so this is your opportunity to expand their horizons and introduce them to wonderful and diverse world of craft beer.

It’s Getting Harder to Drink Macro Beer

I rarely drink macro beer – but here I am doing it at a University of Toledo football game

I attended quite a few weddings last summer. All of them had an open bar. At the final wedding of the summer season I arrived at the reception and went up to the bar to see what was on offer – Budweiser and Bud Light. I opted for the Bud Light and went back to my table. After my second sip I realized that I could not drink any more. It simply was not a taste that I enjoyed. I had four or five hours ahead of me that evening and I am sure that I was close to breaking out into a cold sweat at the thought of drinking Budweiser or Bud Light all evening. Several years of drinking a wide range of flavorful craft beers had finally taken its toll. I simply could not tolerate the taste of macro-produced American-style pale lager – even if it was available for free all evening, as it was. A few minutes later I found myself back at the bar to see what they had for purchase. To my horror the bartender told me that they had no beer for purchase – only Budwesier or Bud Light for free. The bartender must have seen the expression of panic on my face because he quickly added that there was another bar in the building, which he assured me had a fine selection of craft beers for sale. I found it and spent the rest of the evening going back and forth between my table and the bar. The beers were around $6-$7 each so instead of drinking free all evening I forked out somewhere in the region of $35 on beer. But that is where I am when it comes to drinking beer. I’d rather pay for a good craft beer than drink a free Budweiser. I do not consider myself a beer snob. I do not look down on people who drink Coors Light. Live and let live –  if someone enjoys the taste of Miller Genuine Draft let them drink it. There are times, albeit very infrequently, when I do not drink craft beer. On those occasions my beer of choice, more often than not, is Pabst Blue Ribbon.

So here’s to beer drinkers everywhere – drink what you enjoy and enjoy what you drink.

The Meaning of Craft?

The terms craft beer and craft brewery are common parlance when talking about the modern-day American beer industry. Yet despite their common use and seemingly universal acceptance the meaning of the term craft is one that is often discussed and debated.  I’d like Continue reading The Meaning of Craft?