Karnataka Liquor Sales Drop: How the Decline Is Impacting State Revenue and Consumer Spending Trends
Karnataka is seeing one of its sharpest dips in alcohol sales in recent years, and the numbers are now a big reason to worry for both policymakers in the state and the revenue officials. According to fresh data from the State Excise Department, a major slowdown across major liquor categories is being noticed, with beer taking the biggest hitof all. Sales have also fallen from 278.79 lakh boxes in 2024 to 227.62 lakh boxes in 2025, a sharp decline of 51.17 lakh boxes.

As per News 18, the sales of Indian Made Liquor (IML), which includes popular categories like whisky, brandy, rum, and gin, also slipped from 407.40 lakh boxes between April and October 2024 to 403.04 lakh boxes in the same period of 2025.
While the percentage dip looks modest, the impact is far from small. IML is Karnataka's largest revenue generator, contributing over 60% of the state's excise income. Any fall in this category directly affects the state's monthly targets and its ability to fund major welfare schemes and infrastructure projects.
According to the previous year's trends, this is now the third consecutive year of declining liquor sales, fuelling concerns at a time when excise duty is Karnataka's second-biggest revenue source after GST, bringing in more than Rs. 30,000 crore annually as per official data.
Drug Abuse and Shifting Consumer Trends
One of the biggest reasons is the rise in drug abuse, particularly in urban pockets, which is taking a section of consumers away from regulated liquor towards unregulated narcotics. This is raising public-health and law-and-order concerns and is also resulting in pure revenue loss since illegal markets contribute nothing to the state exchequer.
At the same time, lifestyle and economic shifts are also a contributing factor. Due to rising inflation, people are now spending less on alcohol, while some younger consumers are shifting toward health-conscious habits.
Illegal Liquor Sales Adds Pressure
The slowdown in official liquor sales has also shifted attention to the growth of illegal liquor markets across Karnataka. These unlicensed players operate outside the excise net, causing direct losses to state revenue and putting consumers at risk due to poor-quality products.


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