The next time you raise a toast with Michigan-produced beer, wine or spirits, there’s more in the glass than the drink itself: local jobs, state taxes and economic activity that reaches well beyond breweries, wineries and distilleries.
Michigan drinkers pay 20 cents per gallon in state beer taxes, 51 cents per gallon in state wine taxes, and $14.61 per gallon in distilled spirits taxes, according to three separate 2026 Tax Foundation reports. In a side-by-side comparison, they show big differences in how states treat these "sin taxes."
There is no single alcohol-tax scoreboard. Beer, wine and spirits are taxed differently, measured differently and regulated differently from state to state. That means Michigan can rank one way on beer taxes, another way on wine taxes, and somewhere else entirely on distilled spirits.
The Tax Foundation’s beer and wine reports focus on state excise taxes, while noting that state and local sales taxes may also affect what consumers pay. The spirits report reflects the far more complicated world of liquor taxes, especially in “control states,” where government plays a direct role in liquor sales or distribution.
Nationally, the Tax Foundation found wide variation across all three categories. Kentucky has the highest wine tax burden at $3.82 per gallon. followed by Alaska, Florida and Iowa, while California has the lowest at 20 cents per gallon, according to the wine report.
For spirits, Washington has the highest distilled spirits tax rate at $36.68 per gallon, followed by Oregon and Virginia. Wyoming and New Hampshire, both control states, are listed at an effective rate of $0.00 per gallon, followed by Missouri at $2.00 per gallon, according to the Tax Foundation.
Separate industry studies show what beer, wine and spirits contribute to the economy.
Beer Serves America, a biennial economic-impact study commissioned by the Beer Institute and National Beer Wholesalers Association, says the beer industry contributes $471 billion in economic impact, supports more than 2.42 million jobs, and pays $58 billion in taxes nationally. The report also breaks the industry into sectors including agriculture, manufacturing, brewing, distribution and retail.
Here is Michigan’s beer industry snapshot:
The economic impact of Michigan's beer industry is felt far beyond brewery taprooms. Here’s a closer look:
WineAmerica’s 2025 Economic Impact Study says the U.S. wine industry generates about $323.55 billion in total economic activity and supports 1.75 million jobs, with producers, distributors, retailers and consumers in every state.
In Michigan:
The spirits industry is smaller than wine by producer count but larger by reported economic activity.
Spirits support about 1.7 million U.S. jobs and contribute $200 billion to the national economy through production, importing, exporting, sales and distribution, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States.
Here’s a snapshot of the spirits industry in Michigan:
Tourism is part of that footprint. Distilleries and distillery trails have become draws in some parts of the country, bringing visitors into tasting rooms and surrounding businesses. Distillery Trail, a craft spirits industry site with a searchable distillery directory, lists 54 distillers in Michigan, including: Ann Arbor Distilling Company, Detroit City Distillery, Griffin Claw Brewing Company and more.
The Distilled Spirits Council also tracks consumer spending across major spirits categories, including American whiskey, brandy and cognac, cordials and liqueurs, Canadian whiskey, gin, Irish whiskey, rum, Scotch, tequila and mezcal, and vodka.
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