Home > Regulation of alcohol-free and low-alcohol drinks: learning from a comparative analysis of eight countries.

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.


Item Type
Article
Publication Type
International, Open Access, Article
Drug Type
Alcohol
Intervention Type
Prevention, Harm reduction, Policy
Date
March 2026
Identification #
https://doi.org/10.1111/dar.70126
Publisher
Wiley
Volume
45
Number
3
EndNote

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