Trump's Tariffs To Tank Tequila
The owner of a famous cocktail bar in Dallas warns that tariffs on Mexican imports will mean higher menu prices and reduced availability of specialty tequila.

By next summer, your favorite margarita could cost a few bucks more—and might taste different too.
That's because President Donald Trump's threatened tariffs on imports from Mexico will increase prices and could reduce the availability of some tequilas and mezcals, says Gabe Sanchez, owner of the Black Swan Saloon, a legendary cocktail bar in Dallas.
"It's going to be a very difficult conversation for us to have with people when they come in," Sanchez told Reason in an interview last week. While his customers might be used to $15 cocktails, Sanchez says tariffs could potentially push menu prices "much higher." (Sanchez' favorite drink right now is called "True Romance," and he was gracious enough to share the recipe, which you can find at the end of this article.)
Trump has threatened to slap new 25 percent tariffs on all goods from Canada and Mexico, and he said on Inauguration Day that those tariffs could hit as soon as February 1. The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday that those tariffs could be announced before the end of the week. The Journal framed that coming move "the first salvos in a multifront trade war."
All wars have casualties, and tequila figures to be among them. All authentic tequila comes from Mexico, and even though there are some small craft makers of agave-based liquors in the United States, imports are and will remain essential to meet Americans' demand for the drink.
"It's like French wines. They only come from France. You know, scotch whiskey only comes from Scotland. You can't substitute [tequila] for something else," says Sanchez.
(Mezcal is a broader category that includes many spirits made from agave, while tequila is a subset made specifically from Blue Weber Agave. It's similar to how bourbon is a subset of whiskey, produced in a specific place and manner.)
That means someone along the supply chain will have to pay the cost of the tariff. Sanchez says he doesn't like the idea of raising prices on the patrons at his bar but sees little alternative.
One of Sanchez's to-go varieties of mezcal is available from a distributor at $35 per liter right now, he says. If the full cost of a 25 percent tariff gets passed down the supply chain, menu prices will have to increase, or certain drinks will have to disappear.
"If that jumps to $42 [per liter], we can't make it. We can't put those in cocktails anymore," Sanchez explains. To stay competitive with other bars in the area, he knows he can't price cocktails much higher than about $15 apiece. "If it jumps at that high, we just can't sell it anymore. You know, somebody is not going to buy a $20 or $22 plus tax mezcal cocktail."
Tequila and other agave-based spirits account for 13 percent of the total U.S. alcoholic beverage market by volume and 22 percent of the market by revenue, according to data from the Wine and Spirit Wholesalers of America (WSWA), which is warning that tariffs on Mexican imports would fall heavily on consumers and businesses. Those tariffs could endanger as many as 14,000 American jobs and up to $2.5 billion in lost U.S. output, according to an economic study commissioned by the WSWA.
"Any new tariffs on wine and spirits in today's economic climate would be extremely disruptive," Dina Opici, chairwoman and president of the WSWA, said in a statement last week. "The entire industry—from suppliers to importers to distributors to retailers—is under immense pressure, with little room to absorb or distribute the cost of additional tariffs."
Even the largest brands would take a hit. Reuters reported in December that Trump's planned 25 percent tariff on Mexican imports would be a big blow to companies like Diageo, which owns brands including Don Julio and Casamigos, and Becle, the Mexico-based brand that is the world's largest tequila producer. Those companies "rely heavily on tequila sales in the U.S. for growth," according to Reuters.
Sanchez also worried about losing access to certain specialty varieties of mezcal and tequila—the sorts of rare bottles that make cocktail culture in Texas unique. With an added 25 percent tariff on exports to the U.S., some small-batch producers might fear their products would be uncompetitive in the American market and simply choose to sell those limited supplies elsewhere, he says.
When he's not slinging drinks behind the bar of the Black Swan—and not helping his 8-year-old build a new pinewood derby race car, which is this week's parenting task, he tells me—Sanchez also works as a consultant for new bars in the Dallas area. That might be the most frustrating part of his job at the moment, given the uncertainty in American trade policy.
"I've told them all…we're going to have to trash some of these menus," he says. "And, you know, especially in North Texas, where a cocktail menu might have 25 percent, 30 percent in agave spirits," he says, "I'm telling them the menus are going to be different. The offerings are going to be different. Hold on to what you got for a little while."
True Romance:
- 1.5 ounces of mezcal
- 0.75 ounce of yellow Chartreuse
- 0.5 ounce of Amaro Averna
- A small spoonful of local Texas honey
- Combine ingredients, stir, and serve over a big cube of ice.
"A little sweet, a little bitter," is how Sanchez describes it. "It'll knock your socks off."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
One thing leftists and Trump defenders have in common is the belief that raising taxes on businesses can't result in higher prices because that's not the intention.
This tired shit again?
He is out of ideas™ .
This story really deserves:
Poor sarc.
Also, drink whiskey.
" . . . You can't substitute [tequila] for something else . . . "
Says someone who never tasted a good bourbon.
My take on drinking:
Water is for washing, ice is for treating bruises. Just pour the bourbon in a glass and hand it over.
Correct. I've never had liquor that tasted better with the addition of ice or water. It's like turning a soda into a la croix. I call bullshit on anyone saying it brings out the flavor.
is this a the beatings will end when our morale improves thing?
So?
TRUMP!!!!
Go Trump Go!
"The owner of a famous cocktail bar in Dallas warns that tariffs on Mexican imports will mean higher menu prices and reduced availability of specialty tequila."
Does someone pay for this level of cherry-picking?
JFC, Bohem, your TDS leads you to bullshit like this? Seek help, asshole.
He's bucking to be Suderman's apprentice, and hopes to show he's worthy of the DC cocktail circuit.
Apparently he's a fan of the Dallas cocktail circuit. Because everything's bigger in Texas.
At least those of the windowless variety.
I thought companies like Diageo were already hurting? Something about paying too much for celebrity brands and declining consumer consumption.
Why would a celebrity brand necessarily be any good?
Oh no.
Douchey bougie drinkers will pay more to drink their douchey bougie drinks.
Another thing leftists and Trump defenders have in common is a deep sense of pleasure when government is used against people they hate. The concept of "Me today, you tomorrow" never crosses their minds.
Project much, Sarckles?
Like when that democrat cop murdered Ashli Babbitt in cold blood and you were super stoked about it?
The more you have to pay for celebrity endorsed luxury tequila the better. Every extra dollar makes it taste better.
Could, could, could, could. Then speculate about a future conversation. OMG! Worst dictator ever.
and even though there are some small craft makers of agave-based liquors in the United States, imports are and will remain essential to meet Americans' demand for the drink.
100% speculation by a "writer". I only see an opportunity for growth for the American producers.
I'm going to contact a few and inquire about investment opportunities.
That's true, unfortunately all of our most punchable faces don't seem to be able to drink liquor that doesn't have a foreign country's tax stamp on it.
$20-$22 is the breaking point for consumers that are already willing to spend $15?
If all of Black Swan's competitors would experience the same increased costs, then there shouldn't be any change in the competition calculus. It's just a matter of whether consumers of this product would give it up, purchase it less, or pay the new price.
I don’t know who the bigger fvckin idiot is, Boehm or this barkeep.
Tequila is but a small part of the cost of a margarita, a 25% ride in tequila prices will not make margaritas go up 25%
$35 a liter means his well brand is $1/oz. A 25% tariff will add 25 cents to the cost of each ounce, or 38 cents per margarita serving.
In restaurants, and I assume this is true for bars as well, the cost of the dish should be 3x the cost of the ingredients. While this is a rule of thumb, it covers overages and waste (inevitable, unfortunately) plus facilities and, of course, salaries. So your $0.38 increase for the tequila should result in a $1.14 increase in the drink.
Now, if he thinks his customers have a cap at $15 for a cocktail, his more expensive cocktails might already be pushing this limit, or even be under it - maybe it's $6 in ingredients, but worth it for the higher end cocktail. The increase in tequila prices might be too much.
Now, I've got a few assumptions and guesses in here, and am also analogizing to restaurants. But in an industry I don't know well, I tend to assume the people involved know it better, so try to work backwards to a better argument. Always worth looking at their point of view, I think.
It’s more like 8x on a mixed drink like this.
But it’s not the “ingredients” that went up - the rent didn’t go up, the dishwashers salary didn’t go up, the insurance didn’t go up, the utilities didn’t go up- just a few nickels in alcohol tax
Boehm is math illiterate.
Sarcasmic hardest hit. Film at 10.
Film is hardly used anymore, nor is that slogan. Broadcast news is also more or less dead. While I have a fondness for that nostalgia, I don't think it would be "great again" to have it all back.
Chill, dude. It’s meant solely as a joke at the drunk one’s expense.
He will be fine. This has nothing to do with plastic jug bottom shelf liquors.
I'll keep that in mind if I ever find myself in Texas.
What happened to "too local"?
Oh FFS. Their tequila cost goes from $1.50 per drink to $2 per drink and so they raise their menu price from $15 to $22?
I oppose tariffs, but this is a dumb example. Fuck that guy.
And it's a MIXED DRINK. Pick a different Mezcal.
Overpriced boutique liquor from 3rd world countries are exactly the scenario where the producer pays the tariff. Most of their expenses are in marketing. It's the marketing firms and custom bottle manufacturers that will get hammered by this.
Last I heard, having a margarita is not on the list of essential services.
Any article who quotes a single ritzy saloon owner who has no first hand knowledge how international liquor trade, wholesale purchase, or distribution works cannot be taken at all seriously. At the very least, talk to someone at the wholesale and/or manufacturing level to get their take.
So many issues...
Most tequila purchased for on-premise consumption is in the way of medium (think Jose Cuervo and Patron) and well quality for things like shots and margaritas. High end tequila is not the bulk of the market. These numbers also betray you: "13 percent of the total U.S. alcoholic beverage market by volume and 22 by revenue" tells us that tequila is very profitable and that there is a lot of room to bring profit in line with other liquors to stay competitive.
The bar owner's math here does not work at all. Tariffs would only affect pre-import prices. A $42 liter bottle of tequila will have been stepped on by the manufacturer, the importer, the wholesaler, the distributor, and, depending on the state, the government (Texas is, iirc, around 6-7% gross receipts and ~8% per drink). The tariffs would only apply at the importer level, which could be as less than 1/2 that bottle's cost at the bar's level. The tariffs would be even lower if the tequila is imported as liquid only and bottled in the US (a common liquor practice; however, I don't have a clue how common with tequila brands).
Another thing is, it ignores market share. Market share is very hard to come by and most companies fight vigorously to hold onto it once they have it. We know that if a product is priced out of a market (regardless of the reason), the void will be filled by other more affordable options. If the manufactures believe that the tariffs are temporary in nature, many of them will lower their prices and take less (or even no) profit in order to keep as much market share as they can until the tariffs are removed.
And finally, the bar owner could also opt to use a cheaper brand in his drinks and over a premium version at added cost (already a very common practice in bars).
25 cents per ounce. They are stupid and can’t imagine us not being stupid
More mindless bleats on tariffs from a publication that doesn't understand them. But if a bar owner in Texas says so..... GTFO.
OK?
Shit's already expensive - the only people drinking it are morons and people with enough money to not notice the cost. And the latter won't notice the increase.
The rest of us drink rotgut brought over when we visit.
Anyone who is using 'high end' tequila in mixed drinks is either a moron or serving morons and either way deserve what they get.
Quality booze is for sipping. Lower-middle stuff is for the mixed drinks.
At my family's Mexican bars we would deliberately use shitty tequila in a mixed drink like a margarita. Not because we were 'cheap', but because they taste 'stronger' when the tequila is harsher. If you use the good sipping stuff in a 'top shelf', they get sent back more often, because they're so much smoother, people think there's less booze in them.
If I were back working in ours, instead of selling someone a marg with something fairly high end like a Cazadores or Don Julio, I'd give them a baseline margarita with a shot of the good stuff on the side.
But Lancaster say Trump can change the price of goods. Who to believe?
All authentic tequila comes from Mexico, and even though there are some…
The tequila and mezcal that gets shipped to the US is overpriced crap, as anyone that has spent serious time in Mexico knows. The auténtico is sublime, and surprising affordable.
They can keep the other shit.
To be more precise, all authentic tequila from Mexico comes specifically from the area around Guadalajara, Jalisco (and a couple of other small municipalities in other areas with well-connected politicians). It's less protected in other countries. I think the USA protection for the Mexican designation ended 4 or 5 years ago when NAFTA expired.
Even in Mexico, if you get a drink that's produced the same exact way, same plant, same methods, same distillation, but it's from somewhere like Oaxaca, it's considered mezcal.
I know that place and fuck that guy.
And last I checked, threatening things is a tactic to get what he wants. Let’s at least wait till he actually does it before setting our hair on fire. (I bet Mexico caves to the demands before they get implemented.)