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best rum brands in india (2026) — from old monk to craft rums

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22 min read

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updated

tl;dr: the best rum brands in india ranked. 12 rums from old monk to bacardi to premium craft picks, with honest reviews, prices, and tasting notes.


tldr: old monk (rs 300-400) is still the best rum in india. sweet, smooth, absurdly cheap, and perfect neat or with cola. bacardi carta blanca (rs 700-900) is the best white rum for cocktails, especially mojitos. captain morgan original spiced (rs 1000-1400) is the best premium upgrade if you want something with more depth and vanilla warmth.


the best rum brands in india start and end with old monk, but there’s a lot more to explore. india is the world’s largest rum market by volume, and i’ve tried 8 of the 12 rums on this list over years of social drinking. no brand deals, no affiliate links. just honest opinions.

india is the world’s largest rum market by volume. that’s not a random stat. we genuinely consume more rum than any other country. and yet, most of the conversation online is about whisky. rum gets treated like the drink you had in college and moved on from. but that’s changing. craft rums are showing up, bacardi has expanded its lineup, and old monk continues to be the most beloved bottle in the country despite spending exactly zero rupees on advertising.

this guide covers 12 rums available in india, from budget bottles under rs 300 to craft options above rs 2000. i’ve personally tried 8 of these over the years. for the premium and craft rums i haven’t tried, i’ve done proper research and clearly labeled those sections. no brand deals, no affiliate links, just honest opinions from a guy who thinks old monk with cola is one of the best drinks ever invented. if spirits aren’t your thing, my best beer brands in india guide covers the lighter side.

one thing to know upfront: rum prices in india vary significantly by state. excise duty structures differ, so the same bottle of old monk can cost rs 280 in goa and rs 400 in maharashtra. i’ve mentioned price ranges to account for this, but always check your local shop. states like goa, pondicherry, and parts of rajasthan tend to be cheaper. maharashtra, karnataka, and delhi are usually on the higher end.

this guide is part of liquor india, where i review every major alcohol brand available in india. no sponsors, no affiliate links.


best rum brands india: quick comparison

#brandtypeprice (750ml)ABVbest for
1old monkdark rumrs 300-40042.8%sipping neat, rum + cola
2bacardi carta blancawhite rumrs 700-90037.5%mojitos, cocktails
3bacardi carta negradark rumrs 800-100040%dark cocktails, sipping
4captain morgan original spicedspiced rumrs 1000-140035%cola mix, easy sipping
5McDowell’s No.1 rumdark rumrs 250-35042.8%budget mixing
6hercules rumdark rumrs 200-30042.8%absolute budget
7old port rumdark rumrs 250-35042.8%budget dark rum
8malibucoconut rumrs 1200-160021%pina coladas, sweet drinks
9camikaraaged cane spiritrs 2000-300042.8%premium sipping
10havana clubcuban rumrs 1500-220040%daiquiris, premium mixing
11contessa rumdark rumrs 250-35042.8%budget alternative
12jolly rogerdark rumrs 350-50042.8%slight step up from budget

best dark rum brands india: the legends

these are the rums that define drinking culture in india. everyone’s had at least one of them. they’re available in every liquor shop from goa to guwahati, and they’ve earned their place through decades of being the default choice.

1. old monk — best rum in india, period

price: rs 300-400 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 9/10

old monk is not just the best rum in india. it might be the most universally loved alcohol in the country. i’ve been drinking it since college, and honestly, nothing in this price range has ever come close. the first time i had old monk was at a friend’s place, mixed with cola in a steel glass, and i remember thinking “this is too easy to drink.” that’s the thing about old monk. it doesn’t fight you. it’s smooth, it’s sweet, and it goes down like it’s not even 42.8% alcohol.

what makes old monk special is the natural sweetness. it’s got this caramel, almost vanilla-like warmth that makes it genuinely enjoyable neat. pour it into a glass, no mixer, no ice, just old monk at room temperature, and it’s still good. that’s remarkable for a rs 300-400 bottle. try doing that with any whisky at this price and you’ll reach for a chaser immediately. at rs 300-400, old monk competes with the best whisky under 500, and honestly wins. old monk doesn’t need a chaser. it doesn’t need cola. it doesn’t need anything. cola just makes it even better. old monk and cola is the most iconic drink combination in india, and for good reason. the sweetness of the rum and the fizz of the cola create something that’s genuinely hard to stop drinking.

the other thing about old monk is the cult following. this is a brand that has done zero advertising for decades. no celebrity endorsements, no flashy campaigns, no social media presence. it survives entirely on word of mouth and loyalty. there’s a reason people get emotional about old monk. it’s tied to memories. college nights, first drinks, house parties, hostel rooms. it’s the great equalizer. your ceo and your auto driver probably both drink old monk, and that says something.

the only downside is the sugar content. old monk is noticeably sweeter than most rums, and if you’re having 4-5 drinks, that sweetness accumulates. some people find it cloying after a point. the hangover, while not the worst, is a particular kind of heavy-headed morning that old monk regulars will recognize. but at rs 300-400 for 750ml? there is no better value in indian alcohol. period.

2. bacardi carta blanca — best white rum in india

price: rs 700-900 (750ml) | type: white rum | ABV: 37.5% | rating: 7.5/10

bacardi carta blanca is the default white rum in india, and it’s the only bottle you need if you want to make cocktails at home. mojitos, daiquiris, rum punch, cuba libre: bacardi carta blanca is what every recipe assumes you’re using, and it works exactly as expected.

i’ve bought bacardi white multiple times specifically for house parties where we were making mojitos. and it delivers. it’s clean, it’s light, there’s a subtle sweetness but nothing overpowering. it doesn’t have the heavy caramel character of old monk. it’s designed to be a blank canvas that takes on the flavors of whatever you mix it with. mint and lime in a mojito, citrus in a daiquiri, cola in a cuba libre. it adapts to everything because it doesn’t bring much of its own personality. some people see that as a negative. i see it as the whole point of a white rum.

neat, bacardi carta blanca is not great. it’s thin, slightly sharp, and there’s not enough flavor to make sipping interesting. the 37.5% ABV (lower than most indian rums at 42.8%) means it’s lighter, which is good for cocktails but unimpressive on its own. if you’re buying this to sip, you’re buying the wrong bottle. get old monk for sipping. get bacardi for cocktail night. that’s the simple split.

at rs 700-900, it’s more expensive than dark rums in the same segment, but you’re paying for versatility. no other bottle in your home bar will get as much use if you’re into making drinks. it’s the one rum that earns its price through sheer utility.

3. bacardi carta negra — best dark rum for cocktails

price: rs 800-1000 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 40% | rating: 7/10 | research-backed

bacardi carta negra is bacardi’s dark rum offering, and it positions itself as a more complex alternative to the carta blanca. where the white rum is clean and neutral, the carta negra brings darker flavors: molasses, a bit of spice, some oakiness from barrel aging. it’s bacardi’s answer to people who want a dark rum but with a more refined, international profile than old monk.

from what i’ve gathered through reviews and friends who’ve tried it, carta negra works well both as a sipper and as a dark mixer. it’s less sweet than old monk, which some people prefer. the flavor profile is drier, more in line with caribbean dark rums than indian ones. with cola, it makes an excellent dark rum and cola that’s slightly more sophisticated than old monk + cola. less sugary, a bit more depth. for dark cocktails like a dark and stormy (dark rum + ginger beer), it’s reportedly better than old monk because the ginger pairs better with dry rum than sweet rum.

the catch is the price. at rs 800-1000, you’re paying almost triple what old monk costs for a dark rum that isn’t necessarily three times better. it’s different, sure. and if you’re tired of old monk’s sweetness, carta negra is a logical upgrade. but most people in india who want dark rum just want old monk, and it’s hard to argue against that. this one’s for the person who’s ready to explore beyond the default.

4. captain morgan original spiced — best spiced rum brand india

price: rs 1000-1400 (750ml) | type: spiced rum | ABV: 35% | rating: 7.5/10 | research-backed

captain morgan is the world’s most famous spiced rum, and it’s increasingly available in indian liquor shops, especially in metros and goa. the “original spiced” variant is the one you’ll find most commonly. it’s golden, flavored with vanilla and spices, and has a distinctly different character from any indian rum.

the spiced rum category barely exists in india. we have dark rum and white rum, and that’s about it. captain morgan brings something genuinely different to the table: a warmth that isn’t just alcohol burn, but actual vanilla and cinnamon notes that make it feel like a more complex drink. with cola, captain morgan is fantastic. the vanilla in the rum pairs with the sweetness of cola in a way that’s almost dangerously drinkable. it’s smoother than old monk + cola but with more going on flavor-wise.

the problem is the price and ABV. at rs 1000-1400 (depending on your state), it’s firmly in premium territory. and at 35% ABV, it’s lower than old monk’s 42.8%, which means less kick per drink. if you’re used to the punch of indian dark rums, captain morgan can feel light. but that lower ABV also makes it very easy to drink, which is either a pro or a con depending on how you look at it. as an occasional treat or a party showpiece, captain morgan is excellent. as an everyday rum, the price makes it hard to justify when old monk exists. at rs 1000-1400, captain morgan competes with whisky in the same range.


best premium rum brands india

these bottles sit above the everyday segment, either in price, positioning, or both. they’re not what you’d buy for a casual tuesday night. they’re for occasions when you want something special, or when you’re curious about what rum can be beyond the old monk + cola default.

8. malibu — best coconut rum brand india

price: rs 1200-1600 (750ml) | type: coconut rum | ABV: 21% | rating: 6.5/10 | research-backed

malibu is technically a rum-based coconut liqueur, and it’s a completely different beast from everything else on this list. at 21% ABV, it’s barely stronger than wine. but it has a very specific use case: tropical cocktails and sweet, easy-drinking party mixes.

malibu tastes like coconut sunscreen smells, and i mean that in the nicest possible way. it’s sweet, tropical, and extremely approachable. pina coladas are the classic application. malibu + pineapple juice + ice, and you’ve got a drink that doesn’t taste like alcohol at all. it also works with orange juice, cranberry, or just soda water for a light summer drink. it’s the kind of bottle that gets pulled out at parties and everyone who doesn’t usually drink suddenly has three glasses.

the downside is that malibu is not a “real” rum in the way purists think about rum. you can’t sip it, you can’t mix it with cola like a regular dark rum, and the sweetness becomes overwhelming quickly. at rs 1200-1600, you’re paying a premium for what’s essentially a flavored mixer. but for its specific purpose (tropical, sweet, party-friendly drinks), nothing else does the job as well. just don’t buy this expecting a rum experience. it’s a coconut drink that happens to contain rum.

9. camikara — best indian craft rum

price: rs 2000-3000 (750ml) | type: aged cane spirit | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 8/10 | research-backed

camikara is india’s most serious entry into the craft rum (technically “cane spirit” per indian regulations) space. produced by piccadily distilleries in punjab (the same group behind indri whisky), camikara is single estate, pot-distilled, and aged in various cask types. it’s designed to compete with premium caribbean rums, not with old monk.

the reviews from people who’ve tried camikara are consistently positive. it’s described as complex, with layers of dried fruit, toffee, and oak that you don’t find in any mass-market indian rum. this is a sipping spirit, meant to be had neat or with a single ice cube, not drowned in cola. the 12-year aged variant, if you can find it, is apparently remarkable. even the base expression punches well above its price point when compared to imported premium rums.

the challenge with camikara is availability and price. at rs 2000-3000, it’s 8-10 times the cost of old monk. and you won’t find it in your neighborhood liquor shop. it’s stocked in select premium retail outlets in metros. but if you’re someone who’s graduated from old monk and wants to understand what premium rum tastes like without paying rs 5000+ for an imported bottle, camikara is the most interesting option in india right now. it’s a sign that indian craft spirits are getting genuinely good, not just “good for india.”

10. havana club — best cuban rum in india

price: rs 1500-2200 (750ml) | type: cuban rum | ABV: 40% | rating: 7/10 | research-backed

havana club is one of the most iconic cuban rum brands in the world, and it’s available in india through select importers. the 3-year (anejo 3 anos) is the most commonly found variant, and it’s a proper light rum with more character than bacardi carta blanca.

havana club’s reputation is built on its cuban origin. cuba is to rum what scotland is to whisky. the 3-year variant is smooth, slightly sweet, with subtle vanilla and a clean finish. it’s excellent in daiquiris and mojitos, bringing a bit more depth than bacardi while still being versatile enough for mixing. the 7-year variant, if you find it (rare in india), is a genuine sipping rum that can go toe-to-toe with good whisky.

at rs 1500-2200, havana club sits in premium territory, and the availability issue is real. outside of goa, bangalore, mumbai, and delhi, finding a bottle is difficult. duty-free shops at airports are often the easiest source. but if you spot it and you’re curious about what cuban rum tastes like, the 3-year is a solid, well-priced introduction. it’s not going to change your life, but it’ll show you that there’s a world of rum beyond india’s borders that’s worth exploring.


best budget rum brands india

these are the bottles you grab when the budget is tight, the group is large, and the mixer is doing most of the heavy lifting. they’re not here because they taste great. they’re here because they exist, they’re cheap, and millions of people drink them every day.

5. McDowell’s No.1 rum — cheapest rum brand india

price: rs 250-350 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 5/10

McDowell’s No.1 rum is the budget dark rum that india runs on. if you’ve been to any budget-friendly bar, any roadside theka, or any large indian gathering where the host needed to buy eight bottles, McDowell’s rum was probably there. it’s part of the McDowell’s mega-brand that also produces whisky, brandy, and basically every other spirit in the budget segment.

i’ve had McDowell’s rum multiple times, and my honest take is: it does the job, but only with a mixer. neat, it’s rough. there’s a strong alcohol burn, a sharp taste that’s more industrial than caramel, and an aftertaste that reminds you this is a rs 250 product. but with cola (specifically thumbs up or coca-cola, the sweeter the better), it transforms into a passable dark rum and cola. the cola does the work of covering what the rum lacks in smoothness. for a group of friends splitting the cost, it’s math that makes sense: two bottles of McDowell’s plus a 2-liter cola for under rs 800 serves 6-8 people.

the honest comparison everyone wants: McDowell’s rum vs old monk. old monk wins, and it’s not close. for just rs 50-100 more, old monk gives you a rum that’s genuinely smooth, naturally sweet, and drinkable neat. McDowell’s can’t touch that. the only reason to buy McDowell’s over old monk is if you’re buying multiple bottles and every hundred rupees matters.

6. hercules rum — cheapest branded rum

price: rs 200-300 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 4/10

hercules rum is rock bottom. it’s the cheapest branded rum you’ll find in most states, and it exists for one reason: it’s alcohol, and it’s cheap. the branding tries its best with the muscular greek god aesthetic on the label, but the liquid inside is about as refined as the graphic design suggests.

i’ve had hercules rum exactly twice, both times at hostel-era gatherings where the collective budget was approximately rs 500. and both times, the cola did all the work. hercules neat is brutal. there’s no subtlety, no sweetness, no complexity. it’s alcohol with a vaguely dark rum color and a burn that starts in your throat and doesn’t leave for a while. even with cola, you can taste the harshness underneath. it’s the rum equivalent of hayward’s fine in the whisky world. technically drinkable, practically an endurance test.

at rs 200-300, hercules serves its market. it’s for when budget is the only consideration and everything else is secondary. i don’t judge anyone for buying it. i’ve been there. but if you can stretch to old monk (rs 300-400), the improvement is massive. like, night-and-day massive. that extra rs 100 might be the single best upgrade in all of indian alcohol.

7. old port rum — best budget rum in south india

price: rs 250-350 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 5.5/10

old port rum is one of those budget brands that’s bigger than you’d think. it’s massive in south india, particularly in kerala, karnataka, and tamil nadu, where it competes directly with McDowell’s rum. in north india, it’s less common, and many people haven’t heard of it. but in the south, it’s a staple.

i first had old port rum during a trip to kerala, and it’s marginally better than McDowell’s. there’s a touch more sweetness, the burn is slightly less aggressive, and with cola it becomes actually okay. not just tolerable, but okay. it’s still a budget rum, so don’t expect old monk levels of smoothness. but among the sub-rs 350 options, old port is the second-best choice after old monk (where old monk is available at that price, since in some southern states, old monk is pricier due to distribution).

if you’re in south india and old monk is priced higher than usual (it happens, distribution varies), old port rum is a solid fallback. it won’t wow you, but it won’t punish you either. it’s the “decent enough” of budget rums, and sometimes that’s all you need.

11. contessa rum — budget dark rum alternative

price: rs 250-350 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 4.5/10

contessa rum is another budget dark rum that you’ll find across india, particularly in western and northern states. it’s made by radico khaitan (the same company behind magic moments vodka and 8 PM whisky) and it occupies the same budget shelf as McDowell’s and hercules.

i’ve had contessa rum at a couple of house parties where it was the available option. it’s… fine. it’s not as harsh as hercules, but it’s not as drinkable as McDowell’s either. there’s a peculiar bitterness in the finish that cola helps with but doesn’t completely eliminate. the rum itself doesn’t have much character. it’s dark in color but flat in taste, like someone took a neutral spirit and added caramel coloring without the caramel flavor.

at rs 250-350, contessa is interchangeable with McDowell’s rum for most purposes. if the shop has both, i’d pick McDowell’s. if they only have contessa, it’ll work with cola. the honest truth about this entire budget segment is that the differences between brands are tiny. they’re all rough spirits that need a mixer, and your cola choice probably matters more than which bottle you pick.

12. jolly roger — mid-budget rum brand india

price: rs 350-500 (750ml) | type: dark rum | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6/10

jolly roger is the budget rum that people who don’t want to buy old monk end up buying. it’s priced just slightly above the McDowell’s tier, and it positions itself as a step up from the bottom shelf without reaching premium territory. the pirate branding is fun (skull and crossbones, because of course), and the bottle has a vaguely premium feel for its price.

i’ve had jolly roger a handful of times, and it genuinely is a notch above the pure budget options. there’s a bit of sweetness, not old monk levels, but enough to smooth out the experience. with cola, jolly roger is a solid drink. neat, it’s still not great, but it’s less painful than McDowell’s or contessa. there’s a slight caramel note that comes through, suggesting they’ve actually put some effort into the aging or flavoring process.

the question is whether jolly roger is worth the extra rs 50-100 over McDowell’s, and my answer is yes, but only if you’re still not reaching old monk’s price. because old monk at rs 300-400 remains the obvious choice in this segment. jolly roger occupies that narrow band where old monk isn’t available or is priced higher due to state-specific pricing. in goa, for instance, where old monk is dirt cheap, jolly roger doesn’t make sense. in maharashtra, where old monk can touch rs 400, jolly roger at rs 380 becomes a genuine alternative. it’s all about your local pricing.


verdict: best rum brands india to buy

the indian rum market is simple, and that’s actually a good thing. you don’t need to overthink this.

for everyday drinking: old monk. this isn’t nostalgia talking. it’s genuinely the best value in indian alcohol across all categories. smooth enough to sip neat, perfect with cola, and priced at rs 300-400. there’s no scenario where old monk is the wrong choice for a regular evening drink. it’s been the answer for 70+ years and nothing has challenged it.

for cocktails at home: bacardi carta blanca. if you want to make mojitos, daiquiris, or any rum cocktail, this is the standard. it’s clean, mixable, and does exactly what a white rum should do. don’t try making mojitos with old monk (too sweet and dark). get a bottle of bacardi for cocktail nights.

for a premium upgrade: captain morgan or camikara. captain morgan if you want an internationally recognized spiced rum that’s easy to drink and widely available. camikara if you want to experience what indian craft distilling can do. it’s more expensive and harder to find, but it’s genuinely world-class.

on a tight budget: McDowell’s No.1 rum + cola. don’t bother with hercules or contessa if you can avoid them. McDowell’s is the best of the budget lot, and if you can stretch to old monk (often just rs 50-100 more), always do that instead.

the one thing i’ll say about rum in india that doesn’t apply to whisky: the gap between the best budget option and the cheapest option is tiny in price but massive in experience. old monk at rs 300-400 vs hercules at rs 200-300. that rs 100 difference gives you one of the best spirits in the country vs one of the worst. no other category in indian alcohol has that kind of value cliff. take advantage of it. buy old monk.

for a complete picture of indian spirits, also check my whisky guides and vodka guide.


best rum brands india: frequently asked questions


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drink responsibly. must be of legal drinking age in your state.

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