Chattanooga Times Free Press

Kentucky Bourbon Trail attendance reaches record

- BY BRUCE SCHREINER

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Bourbon tourism reached new heights last year in Kentucky, where visitors flocked to large and small distilleri­es as the whiskeymak­ing attraction­s shook off any pandemic-era hangover.

Attendance at distilleri­es along the Kentucky Bourbon Trail surpassed 2 million in 2022 for the first time ever, the Kentucky Distillers’ Associatio­n announced. Venerable bourbon producers and industry newcomers alike benefited from the surge.

Total visits exceeded 2.1 million last year, easily beating the pre-pandemic record of 1.7 million stops in 2019, the distillers’ group said. In the past decade, the “amber adventure” has had a 370% surge in attendance — a boon to the state known around the world for bourbon production, it said.

“The success of Kentucky’s bourbon industry isn’t slowing down anytime soon,” Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said.

The distillers’ associatio­n created the Kentucky Bourbon Trail in 1999 to give visitors an intimate, educationa­l look behind the state’s most historic distilleri­es. Total attendance at its 18 participat­ing distilleri­es nearly reached 1.4 million last year, the group said.

The Kentucky Bourbon Trail Craft Tour launched in 2012 to showcase smaller distilleri­es had its best year. Now featuring 24 distilleri­es, its total attendance last year was 738,287.

Spirit companies have invested huge sums into new or expanded visitor centers to play up the industry’s heritage and allow guests to soak in the sights and smells of bourbon-making.

During the height of the pandemic, distilleri­es in the region were closed temporaril­y to visitors.

Some producers eased back into tourism by allowing limited numbers of visitors. Once virus restrictio­ns were lifted, bourbon tourism bounced back with a full resurgence.

Research shows bourbon tourists tend to be younger, spend between $400 and $1,200 on their trip, travel in large groups, and stay longer than the average visitor to Kentucky, the distillers’ associatio­n said. More than 70% of visitors are from outside Kentucky.

“This is a home-run demographi­c for local communitie­s, generating valuable revenue and tax dollars while boosting a hospitalit­y industry that’s still recovering from the COVID pandemic,” said Kentucky Distillers’ Associatio­n President Eric Gregory.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BRUCE SCHREINER ?? The Jim Beam visitor center in 2012 at its central distillery in Clermont, Ky.
AP PHOTO/BRUCE SCHREINER The Jim Beam visitor center in 2012 at its central distillery in Clermont, Ky.

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