Burton, Robyn and Angus, Kathryn and Morgan, Amber and Howell, Rebecca and Critchlow, Nathan and Kersbergen, Inge and Holmes, John and Bowdring, Molly A and Miller, Mia and Waleewong, Orratai and Halme, Aleksi and Voogt, Carmen and Fitzgerald, Niamh (2026) Regulation of alcohol-free and low-alcohol drinks: learning from a comparative analysis of eight countries. Drug and Alcohol Review, 45, (3), e70126. https://doi.org/10.1111/dar.70126.
External website: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/d...
INTRODUCTION: Governance of alcohol-free and low-alcohol (No/Lo) drinks has the potential to influence their public health impact. However, regulation remains poorly understood. This study aimed to identify, summarise and compare formal legal frameworks, non-binding government guidance and recognised self-regulatory frameworks for the labelling, taxation, licensing and condition of sale and marketing of No/Lo drinks across a diverse set of countries.
METHODS: We conducted a desk-based analysis, supplemented by expert input. Eight case study countries (Australia, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, Thailand, the United Kingdom [UK] and the United States of America) were selected for their diversity in geography, alcohol consumption and policy environments. Targeted searches identified documents for determining how No/Lo products were regulated in relation to their labelling, taxation, licensing and conditions of sale and marketing. Data were extracted, tabulated and reviewed for accuracy.
RESULTS: Regulatory thresholds (%ABV) that determine when drinks fall under alcohol legislation vary widely both across and within countries and definitions of No/Lo products are uncommon. For example, drinks can be labelled as alcohol-free at ≤ 0.05% alcohol by volume (ABV) in the UK, but ≤ 1.15% ABV in parts of Australia. Sales of drinks below defined thresholds generally do not require a premises licence. Marketing restrictions were generally shaped by those for standard alcoholic drinks, although new self-regulatory guidance has been developed in Australia, the Netherlands and the UK.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Governance of No/Lo drinks is fragmented and inconsistent, with definitions and regulatory thresholds varying both across countries and between policy areas within countries.
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