USA TODAY US Edition

Sales of boxed wine are booming

Cheap alternativ­e used to be seen as less fancy

- Brent Schrotenbo­er

Demand for certain supermarke­t staples has surged in strange ways since COVID-19 began shutting down the economy in March, sometimes causing a panic over products that never were as popular as they are now: Toilet paper. Disinfecta­nt wipes.

Even wine in a box.

Each has seen a dramatic increase in sales as shoppers load up under lockdown orders during the pandemic.

But none seems to have risen to the cultural occasion quite like those cardboard boxes of wine – a cheaper, alternativ­e to bottles that have been around for decades but haven’t been considered even borderline cool until recently.

Boxed wine sales jumped 36% for the 15-week period ending June 13 compared with the same period last year, outpacing the 29% increase in overall retail wine sales during the same period, according to Nielsen research. Some stores temporaril­y have sold out. Some consumers are even daring to admit they buy it.

“Been buying so much wine lately, we decided to just start going with boxed wine,” says a message posted on Instagram in May by a user identified as Sara Stephenson. “Shh!! Don’t tell my wine snob friends!”

The secret has taken time to spread. Consider the brand Franzia, which has been selling wine in boxes since the 1980s and notched a 27% increase in sales for the 13 weeks ending June 13, compared with the same stretch last year, according to Nielsen. Franzia is not just the world’s biggest boxed wine brand in terms of volume, it’s also been

the biggest wine brand, period, leading in volume sales for the past 23 years, including 26 million cases sold in 2019, according to Shanken’s Impact Databank, an industry informatio­n resource.

Yet its popularity has been relatively hush-hush among wine buyers, largely because of the American cultural stigma attached to boxed wine in general – that it’s cheap, sold in bulk and widely available down-market, from Walgreens to Walmart.

In 1999, the Los Angeles Times posed the question of whether boxed wine was “socially acceptable” and called various restaurant­s asking if it would be OK for a father-in-law with a “passion for wine-in-a-box” to bring his own supply. One restaurant responded by saying, “I can’t have that in the restaurant. It’s a fivestar restaurant. I can’t have boxed wine in here. I hope that doesn’t sound too pretentiou­s. “

The marketing director for Franzia, Collin Cooney, acknowledg­es the general stigma but says “as more brands have entered the category, the stigma is being overcome.”

The pandemic has accelerate­d that. Inexpensiv­e, easy-to-find brands in big supply are now coveted, especially if it’s wine that prices out at less than 55 cents per five-ounce glass. Instead of being a badge of poor taste, boxed wine even has become a popular quarantine prop for Instagram photos, a symbol of stocking up and having fun despite the restraints of social distancing and the widespread loss of income.

“With everything that’s been going on the past three months, consumers are looking to stock up,” said Cooney of Franzia, which is owned by The Wine Group, based in Livermore, California. “They’re looking to reduce their overall number of trips to the store, and having a format like a box, particular­ly Franzia, which has five liters of wine in a single unit and that can stay fresh for up to six weeks after opening it, compared to less than a week for a traditiona­l glass bottle, that is a very appealing set of features.”

“The challenge has been overcoming barriers for new consumers to try boxed wine.” Brent Dodd Spokesman for Bota Box

Even before the pandemic, there were signs that boxed wine was coming of age. Companies that make it have a common marketing pitch to meet the moment, saying that its packaging is recyclable, helps reduce waste and better preserves the freshness of the drink, which is kept in a plastic bag, tapped by a spigot and encased in cardboard. Instead of toting six or seven regular glass bottles of wine and recycling them afterward, consumers can get roughly the same amount of wine in a single box.

Other brands have entered the market after Franzia and have grown for similar reasons. Three-liter boxes, like those offered by competitor Bota Box, also have exploded in sales during the pandemic, rising 78% for the 13-week period ending June 7 compared with a year earlier, according to IRI Worldwide data cited by Bota Box, which along with Barefoot On Tap, is among the sales leader in that category.

“The challenge has been overcoming barriers for new consumers to try boxed wine, which has now been occurring in large numbers over the past few months,” said Brent Dodd, spokesman for Bota Box, a part of Delicato Family Wines in California.

Boxed wine generally provides much more bang for the buck than glass bottles even though wine sophistica­tes over the years have derided it as cheap in both cost and taste. A five-liter box of Franzia contains roughly 34 five-ounce glasses of wine, all for about $15 to $18, which amounts to less than 53 cents per glass. Even premium three-liter boxes retail for only around $20, which is the equivalent of four regular glass bottles.

Anna Bell, vice president of marketing for Barefoot Wine, noted that Barefoot On Tap has increased in sales by 182% for the 16-week period ending June 14, compared with a year earlier. Such sales growth has provided a bright spot for the wine industry in California, where wineries, especially smaller ones, have suffered from the economic shutdowns caused by COVID-19. A recent economic report for the California Farm Bureau Federation noted that “the largest increase in (wine) sales had come from large volume products such as boxed wine, indicating that domestic consumers were buying greater quantities.”

 ?? BRENT SCHROTENBO­ER/USA TODAY ?? Boxed wine sales jumped 36% for the 15-week period ending June 13, according to Nielsen.
BRENT SCHROTENBO­ER/USA TODAY Boxed wine sales jumped 36% for the 15-week period ending June 13, according to Nielsen.

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