Western Cape Brandy industry drives jobs, growth and export opportunities
By Kris van der Bijl
FROM Paarl and Stellenbosch to the Breede River Valley and Calitzdorp, brandy production anchors a substantial part of the Western Cape’s agri-processing economy, supporting rural employment and a widening export base.
The South African Brandy Foundation (SABF) describes the sector as a substantial contributor to the national fiscus, the agri-processing economy and the rural employment base.
The wine and brandy value chains are tightly linked, with most brandy brands operating from wine estates.
The combined industry contributes R56.5 billion to South Africa’s GDP, equal to 0.9% of national output at market prices, and supports 270 364 jobs, about 1.8% of national employment.
A Cape-anchored value chain
Production is overwhelmingly Western Cape, with Paarl, Stellenbosch, the Breede River Valley and the Klein Karoo around Calitzdorp forming the core production geography.
These areas are supported by long-established cooperage and maturation infrastructure.
The sector supports 7.51 jobs for every R1 million of value-added output, a ratio that compares favourably with more capital-intensive agri-processing categories.
That employment intensity makes brandy a meaningful labour-absorbing activity in rural and peri-urban Western Cape communities.
Production stays concentrated among a small number of established proprietary brands, with major brands like KWV leading on blended and pot still volume.
A second tier of premium estate and craft producers contributes far higher value per litre than their volume share suggests, and drives much of the category’s reputational repositioning at home and abroad.
Tourism adds to the Cape footprint
The sector’s economic reach extends beyond production.
Wine and brandy tourism contributes R9.3 billion to GDP and supports 40 108 jobs, drawing visitors to the same Cape regions that anchor distillation.
The brandy routes link estates, cellars and maturation cellars across the winelands, adding a consumer-facing layer to the industry’s rural economic base.
Premium growth and the export opportunity
Brandy holds a 28% share of the spirits category by volume, making it one of the dominant spirits in the domestic market.
Over the past five years it has recorded a compound annual growth rate of about 0.8%, which the SABF describes as stabilisation.
Growth is concentrated at the top. Certified pot still brandy, some premium blends and Cape Brandy are posting healthy volume and value growth.
Exports stand at roughly 5.5 million litres against domestic consumption of about 28 million litres, an export-to-domestic ratio near 1:5.
The primary destinations are Namibia, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, markets with established consumer affinity for South African products and existing distribution infrastructure.
The SABF treats export growth as a strategic priority for a category that has largely exhausted domestic volume expansion, with offshore markets seen as the route to incremental revenue and a stronger basis for distillery investment.
The Foundation frames premiumisation and export development as complementary strategic imperatives.
Excise weighs on future growth
The main pressure on that growth trajectory is tax. Excise on a standard 750ml bottle of spirits has roughly doubled since 2016, outpacing consumer price inflation and compressing margins through the chain.
The SABF calls it one of the most significant structural cost pressures facing the formal brandy industry, and warns that sustained above-CPI increases deter long-cycle investment in distillation and ageing stock.
Proprietary brandy, the high-volume lower-priced tier, carries most of that pressure, where excise pass-through and substitution by illicit product are felt most acutely.
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