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Druk Beer (Bhutan Brewery)

Last updated: 29 April 2026706 words

Druk is the principal beer brand of Bhutan Brewery Private Limited (BBPL), a brewery commissioned in December 2006 in the Pasakha industrial estate of Chhukha dzongkhag. Its flagship product, Druk 11000 Strong Premium Lager, has an alcohol content of around eight per cent by volume and is the most widely-recognised Bhutanese beer in domestic and regional markets. The brewery also produces Druk Lager and several other Druk-branded ranges, and operates within the framework of Bhutanese sin-tax and alcohol-control regulation.

Druk is the principal beer brand of Bhutan Brewery Private Limited (BBPL), a brewery located at the Pasakha industrial estate in Chhukha dzongkhag, in the foothills of the southern Himalayan front. The brewery was commissioned on 17 December 2006 and is among the oldest operating breweries in Bhutan. Its flagship product, Druk 11000 Strong Premium Lager, with an alcohol content of around eight per cent by volume, is the most widely-recognised Bhutanese-made beer in domestic and regional markets.[1]

The Druk range now includes Druk 11000 Strong, Druk Lager, Druk Premium and Druk Black Mountain. Brewed using malt and hops imported from outside Bhutan and water sourced from the surrounding catchment, the beers are sold throughout Bhutan and exported in limited volumes, principally to north-eastern India. Druk-branded products are visually identifiable by labels referencing the dragon (druk) of the national flag.[2]

As an alcoholic-beverage producer in a country with strict tobacco-control legislation but no equivalent restriction on beer, BBPL operates within an excise framework that taxes alcohol heavily but permits production, sale and limited advertising. Druk-branded alcohol therefore occupies a particular position in the public health discussion, since alcohol — unlike tobacco — has not been the subject of a national prohibition and contributes substantially to government revenue.

Founding and Ownership

Bhutan Brewery Private Limited was commissioned at Pasakha on 17 December 2006. Industry sources describe it as a private company; some accounts also note shareholding links to Bhutanese state-aligned investment vehicles. The Pasakha industrial estate is the principal manufacturing zone of Chhukha dzongkhag, located near the Indian border at Phuentsholing, and was developed in the 1990s and 2000s as a host site for cement, steel, ferroalloy and consumer-goods plants drawing on hydropower from Druk Holding and Investments-managed schemes.[3]

Druk 11000 Strong

The flagship product, Druk 11000 Strong Premium Lager, is described by the brewery as a strong lager. Independent listings on beer-rating platforms classify the product as a malt liquor in international beer-style terms, with an alcohol-by-volume content reported at up to eight per cent. The beer is bottled in 650 ml glass bottles and sold in 500 ml cans, the latter principally for export. The "11000" in the brand name refers to the original gravity in degrees Plato of the wort.[4]

Other Druk-Branded Beers

BBPL's wider range includes Druk Lager, a lower-alcohol pale lager pitched at the standard market; Druk Premium; and Druk Black Mountain. The brewery also produces non-Druk-branded products including the bottled mineral water Kinley, under contractual arrangements with multinational partners. The Druk range is the principal export to north-eastern India, where Druk 11000 has a small but recognised market share alongside Indian strong beers.[2]

Cultural and Regulatory Context

Beer in Bhutan competes with traditional fermented beverages, principally ara (a distilled grain spirit) and chhang (a millet- or maize-based home brew), as well as with imported Indian beers and spirits. Industrial beer of the Druk type is most prevalent in urban centres and among younger consumers; in rural eastern and central districts, traditional beverages remain dominant.[5]

The regulatory framework distinguishes alcohol sharply from tobacco: under the Tobacco Control Act regime adopted in 2010, the manufacture, sale and consumption of tobacco are heavily restricted, whereas alcohol is taxed at high excise rates but otherwise legal for production and sale. The Royal Government's Multisectoral Action Plan on Non-Communicable Diseases has identified alcohol consumption as a public-health concern and has progressively raised excise on alcoholic beverages, including beer, since the late 2010s.[6]

Other Breweries

Druk competes domestically with a small number of other Bhutanese-made beers, including the Red Panda Weiss Beer brewed at the Bumthang Brewery (founded in the 1990s as part of the Swiss-supported Bumthang dairy and brewing project), and a series of smaller craft and contract brews. Imported Indian and South-East-Asian beers also have a significant market presence.[7]

References

  1. Bhutan Brewery Pvt Ltd, Pasakha — BeerAdvocate
  2. "What We Offer" — Bhutan Brewery (corporate site)
  3. Bhutan Brewery Private Limited (Kinley/BBPL) — corporate Facebook
  4. Druk 11000 — BeerAdvocate listing
  5. "6 popular beverages to enjoy in Bhutan" — Daily Bhutan
  6. "7 beers to try in Bhutan" — BookMyTour
  7. "Local Bhutanese beers to try" — Unusual Traveler

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