Beverage distribution is the middle tier of the three-tier alcohol industry. Wine, spirits, and non-alcoholic distribution each have different licensing and compliance requirements. Beverage distributors play a particularly important role for emerging brands, often working under exclusive franchise agreements in defined territories. Continue reading to learn all about them.
Beverage distribution is one of three tiers in the regulatory framework governing the alcohol industry. The structure exists to enforce alcohol regulations, ensure tax collection, prevent monopolies that limit consumer choice, and keep manufacturers and sellers properly licensed for public safety.
It begins with producers at the first, top tier. This includes breweries, distilleries, or wineries. It funnels down into wholesalers and beverage distributors in the middle tier. These are the connectors who deliver, ship, and facilitate taxes, regulation, and compliance. The final tier is retailers, where consumers purchase directly. These include supermarkets, liquor stores, bars, and restaurants.
Wine and spirits must be distributed and sold through the three-tier system. Some states are open states while others are control states. In control states, manufacturers sell to a state liquor board, which then transfers product to distributors.
Non-alcoholic beverage distribution is free from these constraints. In non-alcoholic distribution, once supplier relationships are locked in, competition is relatively limited. By contrast, the three-tier system in alcohol distribution is specifically designed to ensure ongoing competition between distributors.
Non-alcoholic beverage distributors can work with any retailer, while alcohol distributors can only sell to licensed locations. Many alcohol suppliers also choose to carry non-alcoholic beverages.
For wine and spirits, beverage distributors must obtain an Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) permit and label approval. Each state also has an Alcohol Beverage Control (ABC) agency that requires a state alcohol license and sales tax permit. Both alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverage distributors must obtain necessary business licenses, FDA food facility registration, and health department approval.
Ready-to-drink beverages have seen a serious uptick in consumer spending, reaching $13.6B in 2025. Suppliers are increasingly prioritizing beverage distributors that can accommodate multiple product categories.
Hard seltzers have given consumers a new “healthier” option. This has increased the rise of non-alcoholic brands as well. As younger generations learn the negative effects of excessive alcohol consumption, they turn to low or no-alcohol options.
This is why it is very important for beverage distributors to consider multiple categories. With many younger consumers becoming more conscious of what they drink, offering multiple categories helps retain and grow business. In many cases, a broader portfolio drives additional traffic.
Dock operations differ by beverage type. Different licenses are required for alcoholic beverage distribution versus non-alcoholic. Some states place limits on alcohol shipments. Temperature requirements and handling procedures also vary widely across beverage categories.
One way that multi-category beverage distributors manage complexity is by practicing cross-docking. This strategy eliminates intermediate storage by moving incoming deliveries directly into outbound trucks.
Beyond this, they focus on optimizing for speed and automation. Technology platforms streamline both intake and outbound shipments. Platforms that combine dock scheduling with yard management, like Opendock, improve delivery speed and operational efficiency across multi-category operations.
Several key questions arise as RTDs, spirits, and non-alcoholic beverages reshape the distribution landscape. Find all the answers below.
In the beverage industry, 'distributor' and 'wholesaler' are often used interchangeably. The National Beer Wholesalers Association, for example, represents what many would call distributors.
The more meaningful distinction for emerging brands is around exclusivity: in regulated alcohol categories, franchise laws often require producers to assign specific territories to a single distribution partner, giving that partner exclusive rights in a defined region.
Because beverage distributors often work with manufacturers under exclusive agreements, they play an integral role for craft and emerging brands. They help make sure the product reaches the right consumers. They work with manufacturers under contracts covering pricing, branding, and territorial rights.
Beverage distributors often work in specific geographic regions. Their local expertise makes them valuable partners for newer brands. This includes focused product attention, sales support, and strong communication across the supply chain.
Required licenses vary depending on which categories a distributor handles. For alcohol, distributors need a federal basic wholesaler permit from the TTB, a state wholesaler or retailer license, label and warehouse approval, financial agreements, and compliance with franchise laws.
Non-alcoholic beverages require more straightforward licensing: a business license, FDA food facility registration, and state-specific wholesale food and beverage handling permits. Some states apply franchise laws to non-alcoholic beverages, while others allow direct-to-consumer sales.
When beverage distributors have a central portal to manage appointments, driver check-ins, and dock activity, they retain control. Instant alerts and updates from loading through unloading help ensure predictable delivery performance across craft, emerging brands, RTDs, wine, beer, and beyond.
Beverage distributors using Opendock see 90% of appointments self-scheduled by carriers, a 72% reduction in detention costs, 600 warehouse labor hours saved annually, and 20+ fewer calls and emails per day to warehouse staff.
Request a demo to see how Opendock can support your beverage distribution operations.