← liquor india
whisky

best whisky under 700 in india (2026) — the sweet spot between budget and decent

·

22 min read

·

updated

tl;dr: the best whisky under 700 in india. 10 honest picks from royal stag to blenders pride, with real prices and no brand deals.


tldr: royal stag (rs 500-700) is the most reliable whisky under 700, consistent across states and drinkable neat with water. blenders pride (rs 600-700 in cheap states) is the best buy if you find it under 700 in your state, a genuine upgrade in smoothness. 8pm premium black (rs 550-750) is the underrated pick that nobody talks about but quietly delivers above its price.


the best whisky under 700 in india sits in an awkward middle zone. it’s above the truly budget stuff in the under 500 bracket where everything is a rough mixer. but it’s below the under 1000 range where things actually start getting good. this rs 500-700 window is where most regular drinkers in india actually spend their money. it’s the price of a royal stag, an imperial blue, a couple of quarters on a weekend. it’s the everyday whisky bracket.

and yet nobody writes about it properly. online guides either cover “under 500” (budget picks) or “under 1000” (mid-range). the rs 500-700 space gets lumped into one or the other, which is unfair because this is where the volume is. more bottles of whisky are sold in this range than any other price segment in india. royal stag alone is among the top-selling whisky brands globally, and it sits right here. imperial blue is another volume monster in this segment.

the honest truth about this bracket: you’re not getting smoothness that’ll impress a scotch drinker. but you’re past the point where every sip makes you wince. with water or soda, these whiskies are perfectly fine evening drinks. and a few of them are genuinely surprising neat. prices vary by state, as always. i’ve listed ranges. check your local shop. and remember, almost every whisky at this price is technically IMFL (indian made foreign liquor), made from grain spirit rather than malted barley. the purists would say these aren’t real whisky. but nobody buying a bottle at this price is asking for scotch pedigree. they’re asking for a drinkable evening, and this bracket delivers that.

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


best whisky under 700: quick comparison

rankwhiskytypeprice (750ml)best formy rating
1royal stagindian blendedrs 500-700most reliable all-rounder6.5/10
2blenders prideindian blendedrs 600-800smoothest (if under 700 in your state)7/10
38pm premium blackindian blendedrs 550-750underrated neat sipper6.5/10
4imperial blueindian blendedrs 450-600best mixer6/10
5royal challengeindian blendedrs 550-700smooth value pick6.5/10
6antiquity blueindian blendedrs 600-800legacy neat sipper6/10
7McDowell’s No.1 reserveindian blendedrs 500-650safer budget option6/10
8director’s special blackindian blendedrs 450-650budget with character5.5/10
9oaksmith goldindian craft blendrs 550-700something different6/10
10officer’s choice blueindian blendedrs 400-550cheapest decent option5/10

best whisky under 700 for neat sipping

these are the bottles where you can skip the cola. add water or a single ice cube, and you’ve got a drink that’s actually pleasant. not world-changing, but pleasant. that’s the realistic bar for this price range. and honestly, reaching “pleasant neat” at rs 500-700 is an achievement in the indian whisky market.

1. royal stag — the anchor of the under 700 bracket

price: rs 500-700 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6.5/10

royal stag is the default whisky of india. if you’ve been to any house party, any roadside bar, any wedding, you’ve had royal stag. it’s not exciting and it’s not trying to be. what it is, consistently, is the most reliable whisky in the rs 500-700 range. you know exactly what you’re getting every time you buy a bottle. pernod ricard (the parent company) has nailed the consistency. whether you buy it in delhi or in goa, the taste is the same.

i’ve had royal stag more times than i can count. it’s the whisky i reach for when i don’t want to think about what to buy. neat with a splash of water, it’s smooth enough. there’s a slight grain sweetness and a clean finish that doesn’t linger unpleasantly. it’s not something i’d sip slowly and contemplate, but it’s genuinely drinkable without a mixer. that puts it ahead of most things at this price. on cold evenings, a peg of royal stag with warm water is a legitimate comfort drink. i’ve done that more times than i’d admit publicly.

the pricing is remarkably consistent too. rs 500-550 in goa and haryana, rs 550-650 in delhi and UP, rs 600-700 in maharashtra and karnataka. even in expensive states, it rarely crosses rs 700 for the 750ml. that’s what makes it the anchor of this bracket. the quarter (180ml) at rs 130-180 is also the best value for a quick evening drink. if you’re a regular drinker who buys 2-3 quarters a week, royal stag is what most people settle on. for the full brand breakdown, see my royal stag review.

2. blenders pride — the best buy if your state prices it under 700

price: rs 600-800 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 7/10

blenders pride is technically a bracket above. in most states, it sits at rs 700-850, putting it in the under 1000 guide. but in goa, chandigarh, haryana, and parts of rajasthan, blenders pride drops to rs 600-700. if you’re in one of those states or visiting, this is the best whisky you can buy in this bracket, full stop. the quality gap between blenders pride and everything else here is not small.

i’ve had blenders pride many times. the difference between blenders pride and royal stag is noticeable from the first sip. blenders pride is smoother, has a slight woody note, and the finish is cleaner. neat with water, it’s genuinely pleasant. it’s the whisky that convinced a lot of people that indian blended whisky doesn’t have to taste like medicine. pernod ricard positioned it perfectly, premium enough to feel like an upgrade, priced close enough that it’s not a stretch. it’s the bottle you bring to a house party when you want to show you’ve upgraded from royal stag without going overboard on spending.

the catch is availability under 700. in maharashtra, karnataka, and kerala, you won’t find it here. it’ll be rs 750-900. so this pick comes with a geography disclaimer. if your local price is under 700, buy it over everything else on this list. if it’s rs 750+, skip down to the under 1000 guide where it belongs. a lot of people who live in expensive states make it a point to buy 3-4 bottles of blenders pride whenever they visit goa. at rs 600-650 in goa vs rs 850 in mumbai, the savings on a multi-bottle purchase are significant.

3. 8pm premium black — the underrated pick nobody talks about

price: rs 550-750 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6.5/10

8pm premium black is a radico khaitan brand. radico makes magic moments vodka, rampur single malt, and a bunch of other spirits. 8pm premium black is their mid-range whisky play, and it’s better than it has any right to be at this price. it won a gold at monde selection, which is one of those awards every brand seems to have, but the liquid actually backs it up. radico has been quietly improving their whisky lineup while pernod ricard and diageo dominate the marketing conversation.

i haven’t tried 8pm premium black personally. from conversations with friends who drink it regularly (mostly in UP and madhya pradesh where it’s big), the consensus is that it’s smoother than royal stag and punches into blenders pride territory without the blenders pride price. neat with water, it holds up. with soda, it makes a solid highball. one friend in lucknow told me he switched from royal stag to 8pm premium black two years ago and hasn’t gone back. “same price, better drink” was his exact take. that’s one person’s opinion, but i’ve heard similar things from others in north india.

the regional availability is the limitation. 8pm is huge in UP, madhya pradesh, rajasthan, and parts of north india. in south india and the east, you might not find it easily. it doesn’t have the national distribution of royal stag or the brand recognition of blenders pride. but if your local shop stocks it, try a bottle before reaching for the usual royal stag. you might be surprised. at rs 550-750, it’s one of the best-kept secrets in indian whisky. the radico khaitan connection also means the production quality is reliable. this isn’t some random local brand. it’s from a company that makes rs 10,000 single malts.


best whisky under 700 for mixing

if you’re adding cola, soda, or water to every drink, these bottles do the job without wasting money on smoothness you won’t taste through the mixer. there’s no shame in mixing. most whisky consumed in india is mixed with something, and these brands are designed for exactly that.

4. imperial blue — the mixer king under 700

price: rs 450-600 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6/10

imperial blue is the whisky designed for people who don’t really like whisky. that’s not an insult. it’s lighter, slightly sweeter, and less aggressive than most indian blended whiskies. with cola or soda, it practically disappears into the mixer, which is exactly what a lot of people want. pernod ricard markets it with the “men will be men” campaign, which is cheesy but effective. the brand is massive in india by volume.

i’ve had imperial blue more times than i’d like to admit, usually at parties where it’s the default pour. it’s fine. neat, it’s thin and a bit medicinal. but nobody buys imperial blue to drink neat. with cola, it’s actually pleasant. with soda and a lime, it makes a decent highball. it’s the “vodka of whiskies” in the sense that it’s meant to be a vehicle for whatever you’re mixing it with. the 42.8% ABV gives it enough kick without the burn that cheaper whiskies have.

at rs 450-600, it’s one of the cheapest bottles in this guide, often sitting at the border between the under-500 and under-700 brackets. in goa it’s as low as rs 420-450, in delhi around rs 500-550. pernod ricard positioned it as the entry point before you graduate to blenders pride. most people follow that exact path. the quarter (180ml) at rs 110-150 is also one of the most sold formats in indian liquor shops. if you’re at a party and someone pours you IB with cola, accept it. it’s a perfectly functional drink. for the full review, see my imperial blue review.

5. royal challenge — the value pick that surprises people

price: rs 550-700 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6.5/10

royal challenge is the whisky i keep recommending that nobody expects to be good. it’s from united spirits (diageo), the same company behind McDowell’s and director’s special, but royal challenge is a clear step above both. there’s a smoothness here that brands rs 200 more expensive don’t always have. diageo doesn’t spend much on marketing royal challenge, which is why most people walk past it to grab a royal stag or blenders pride. their loss.

i first tried royal challenge when blenders pride was sold out at the shop. bought it on a whim, expecting nothing. it was better than i thought. smoother than royal stag, less sweet than imperial blue, and with a slight maltiness that gives it some character. with water, it’s a solid neat sipper. with soda, it’s a good everyday drink. the finish is clean and doesn’t leave that harsh aftertaste that McDowell’s has. it’s the kind of whisky that makes you wonder why it doesn’t cost more.

the pricing puts it in an interesting spot. at rs 550-700, it costs the same as royal stag in many states but gets overlooked because the brand doesn’t have the same marketing muscle. pernod ricard spends crores on blenders pride and royal stag ads. royal challenge just sits on the shelf, quietly being better than its price. if you’re in a state where it’s under 700, it deserves a try. i’d put it ahead of imperial blue and McDowell’s without hesitation, and it competes with royal stag on a good day. the lack of brand hype is actually a feature: you’re paying for the liquid, not the marketing budget.

6. antiquity blue — the legacy brand that still holds up

price: rs 600-800 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6/10

antiquity blue has been around for decades. it’s one of those brands that your uncle drinks because he’s been drinking it since the 90s. at rs 600-800, it straddles the under-700 and under-1000 brackets depending on your state. in cheaper states (goa, haryana), it’s comfortably under 700. in maharashtra and karnataka, it pushes past. the brand has a certain nostalgia factor. it was premium once, back when blenders pride didn’t exist and the choices in the mid-range were fewer.

i’ve had antiquity blue at family functions. it’s a reliable, no-surprises whisky. smoother than McDowell’s, not as refined as blenders pride. with water, it’s a decent evening drink. it doesn’t have the marketing buzz of royal stag or the cult status of old monk (wrong category, but you get the point). it’s just a solid, middle-of-the-road indian blended whisky that does its job. the flavor profile leans slightly sweet, with a grain character that’s typical of IMFL in this range. nothing offensive, nothing memorable.

the brand has lost some market share over the years as royal stag and blenders pride have taken over the mid-range space. younger drinkers rarely pick it up. but if you see antiquity blue under 700 in your state, it’s worth a bottle. it won’t surprise you, but it won’t disappoint you either. sometimes that’s exactly what you need from a weeknight whisky. and if you’re buying for a gathering where the older crowd will be drinking, antiquity blue carries a familiarity that newer brands don’t. your uncle will approve.


budget options under 700

these sit at the lower end of this bracket. they’re upgrades from the truly budget stuff in the under 500 guide, but they’re not reaching for the stars either. functional, available, and cheap. if you’re spending rs 400-650, these are your picks.

7. McDowell’s No.1 reserve — the safer budget option

price: rs 500-650 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6/10

McDowell’s No.1 is the world’s highest-selling whisky brand by volume. let that sink in. more McDowell’s is sold globally than any other whisky brand. the “reserve” variant sits slightly above the regular McDowell’s, with better packaging and a marginally smoother profile. it’s the whisky equivalent of ordering a regular coffee vs a medium coffee. technically different, practically similar, but the reserve is the better choice if both are available.

i’ve had regular McDowell’s many times. the reserve is a small but real improvement. less of the harsh bite, slightly cleaner finish. it’s still a mixer whisky, but the mixer experience is better. with soda, it’s drinkable. with cola, it’s perfectly fine. neat, it’s functional but not something i’d choose if blenders pride or royal stag are on the shelf. the difference between McDowell’s and royal stag is more noticeable than the difference between McDowell’s and McDowell’s reserve, which tells you something about where the upgrade money goes.

at rs 500-650, McDowell’s reserve sits at the lower end of this bracket. the main advantage is availability. you can find McDowell’s literally everywhere in india, from metros to small towns to highway dhabas. in remote areas where royal stag might not be in stock, McDowell’s is always there. that reliability has value. if you’re traveling through less connected parts of india and need a bottle, McDowell’s reserve is the safe choice. it’s not great, but it’s never bad. that consistency across thousands of shops nationwide is its own kind of quality.

8. director’s special black — budget with a bit of character

price: rs 450-650 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 5.5/10

director’s special black (DSP black) is the upgraded version of regular director’s special. at rs 450-650, it sits at the border between the under-500 and under-700 brackets. in states like UP, rajasthan, and madhya pradesh, it’s firmly in this range. in maharashtra and karnataka, the regular version stays under 500 while the black pushes up. united spirits (diageo) positions it as the “premium” variant, but premium is relative in this segment.

i’ve had director’s special at a few gatherings. the black variant is noticeably better than the regular. there’s a slight smokiness (or at least an attempt at it) that gives it more character than McDowell’s. with water, it’s passable. with soda, it works. it’s not going to compete with royal stag on smoothness, but it offers something slightly different in the flavor profile if you want variety in this segment. the black packaging also looks better than the regular gold, which matters at a house party even if it shouldn’t.

the honest take: at this price, the differences between brands are small. you’re choosing between shades of “okay.” director’s special black is a fine choice when the budget is tight and you want something a notch above the absolute bottom shelf. but if you can spend rs 100 more, royal stag is the better buy every time. the upgrade from DSP black to royal stag is one of the most cost-effective quality jumps in this segment. rs 100-150 buys you a genuinely smoother drink. remember that next time you’re standing at the shop counter.

9. oaksmith gold — something different in a sea of sameness

price: rs 550-700 (750ml) | type: indian craft blend | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 6/10

oaksmith gold is from beam suntory, the japanese whisky giant. that pedigree shows up in the packaging and branding, which looks distinctly more modern than the typical indian whisky shelf aesthetic. the bottle design, the typography, the color scheme, it all screams “we’re not like the others.” whether the liquid matches the branding is the question. beam suntory is the company behind jim beam and yamazaki, so they know whisky. the question is whether they’ve applied that knowledge to a rs 600 indian product.

i’ve tried oaksmith gold once. it’s different. lighter than most indian blended whiskies, with a subtlety that’s either refreshing or underwhelming depending on your expectations. if you’re used to the grain-forward punch of royal stag or blenders pride, oaksmith feels thin. if you’re looking for something easy and clean, it works. with soda and a lime, it makes a nice highball, possibly the best highball in this bracket. there’s a softness to it that soda and citrus complement well.

at rs 550-700, oaksmith gold is priced like royal stag but marketed like something premium. the suntory connection gives it credibility, and the liquid is genuinely different from everything else on this list. try one bottle if you’re curious. you’ll either make it your regular or go back to royal stag. there’s not much middle ground with this one. the upgraded version, oaksmith international (rs 900-1300), is covered in the under 1500 guide and is a more convincing product. oaksmith gold is the entry point that’s worth tasting, if only to decide whether the brand speaks to you.

10. officer’s choice blue — the cheapest decent option

price: rs 400-550 (750ml) | type: indian blended | ABV: 42.8% | rating: 5/10

officer’s choice blue is the premium variant of officer’s choice, which is india’s highest-selling whisky by volume. the regular officer’s choice is a rough budget whisky covered in the under 500 guide. the blue version is smoother, better packaged, and sits at the upper end of the budget segment. allied blenders and distillers (the maker) basically took the regular officer’s choice recipe and refined it slightly for people willing to pay rs 50-100 more.

i’ve had officer’s choice (the regular one) and it’s harsh. the blue variant is better, but “better than officer’s choice” is a low bar. it’s still a mixer whisky. with cola, it’s fine. with soda, it’s acceptable. neat, i wouldn’t recommend it. the main selling point is price. at rs 400-550, it’s the cheapest bottle on this list, and in states with high excise duties, it might be one of the few options that stays under 700 when everything else climbs above.

the honest take: if your budget is genuinely capped at rs 500, officer’s choice blue is the safest bet. it’s cheap, it’s everywhere, and with enough cola it’s a functional drink. if you can stretch to rs 550-650, royal stag or 8pm premium black are significantly better. that extra rs 100-150 is the best upgrade money in indian whisky. i keep saying this because it’s the single most important advice in the under-700 segment: the difference between rs 400 and rs 600 in indian whisky is dramatic. don’t be penny-wise here.


the quarter game: best whisky quarters under 200

if you’re not buying full bottles, the quarter (180ml) format is where the real volume happens. millions of quarters are sold daily across india. here’s the quick ranking for under 200:

  1. royal stag quarter (rs 130-180): best taste, most reliable, the default choice
  2. imperial blue quarter (rs 110-150): best mixer quarter, light and sweet
  3. blenders pride quarter (rs 150-200 in cheap states): the premium pick if available
  4. McDowell’s No.1 quarter (rs 100-140): safe, available everywhere
  5. officer’s choice quarter (rs 80-120): cheapest option, rough but functional

the math works out interestingly. two royal stag quarters (360ml) cost rs 260-360, while a 750ml royal stag costs rs 500-700. the full bottle is better value per ml, but quarters give you flexibility. you can drink one tonight and save one for tomorrow. no commitment, no wastage if a bottle goes bad (rare, but it happens with cheap whisky in hot weather). for daily drinkers, the quarter format also provides natural portion control, which is worth something.


a note on state pricing

the rs 500-700 bracket is particularly sensitive to state excise differences. a bottle that’s comfortably under 700 in one state might be rs 800 next door. this is the bracket where state borders matter most, because a small price shift can move a bottle from “accessible” to “out of range.”

cheapest states: goa, pondicherry, chandigarh, haryana, parts of rajasthan. in these states, even blenders pride drops under 700, giving you access to the best bottle on this list. goa is practically a wholesale market for alcohol. a trip to goa without buying a few bottles for the way back is a wasted opportunity.

mid-range: delhi, UP, madhya pradesh, parts of west bengal. royal stag and imperial blue sit comfortably in the 500-650 range here. most of the brands on this list are properly under 700.

expensive states: maharashtra, karnataka, kerala, tamil nadu. higher excise duties push prices up. some bottles listed here at rs 550-650 will cost rs 700-800 in these states, pushing them into the under 1000 bracket. if you’re in mumbai, you already know the pain.

bihar has prohibition. no legal liquor sales. if you’re reading this from bihar, you already know the situation.

the best strategy if you live in an expensive state: stock up when you travel to goa or chandigarh. the savings on 4-5 bottles can be rs 1000-1500. everyone who lives in maharashtra and visits goa does this. it’s practically a tradition. some people plan their goa trips around alcohol shopping. i’m not judging.


verdict: best whisky under 700 to buy

the under 700 bracket is simple. there are two tiers, and your decision depends on what’s available in your state.

if blenders pride is under 700 in your state: buy it. it’s the smoothest, most refined whisky you can get at this price. nothing else comes close. check your local shop. if it’s rs 650-700, don’t think twice.

if blenders pride is above 700 (most states): royal stag is your pick. it’s the most reliable, most consistent, most available whisky in this range. you can buy it anywhere in india and know exactly what you’re getting. it works neat with water, with soda, and as a mixer. it’s not exciting, but it’s never disappointing. that counts for a lot when you’re buying a bottle after a long day.

if you want something different: 8pm premium black is the underrated alternative. it’s smoother than royal stag, cheaper than blenders pride, and available across north india. if you’re bored of royal stag and want to try something without spending more, this is it.

on a tight budget? imperial blue for mixing, royal challenge for neat sipping, officer’s choice blue as the absolute floor. below that, you’re in the under 500 bracket and the conversation changes entirely.

if you’ve explored this bracket and want to move up, the under 1000 guide is where things genuinely improve. 100 pipers, oaksmith international, and black dog open up scotch and craft blends that this bracket can’t touch. the quality jump from rs 700 to rs 1000 is one of the biggest in indian whisky. and if whisky isn’t doing it for you at this budget, old monk rum at rs 300-450 is honestly a better neat sipper than any whisky under 700. that’s not a controversial take. it’s just a fact of the indian alcohol market.


best whisky under 700: frequently asked questions


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

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

more from liquor india

whisky

amrut fusion review (2026) — the single malt that put india on the world whisky map

honest amrut fusion review. expert tasting notes, state-wise prices, all variants compared, how to drink it, and why this bangalore single malt changed everything for indian whisky.

whisky

antiquity blue review (2026) — the mid-range whisky nobody talks about

honest antiquity blue whisky review. tasting notes, variants compared (blue, ultra premium, rare), state-wise prices, how to drink it, and whether this ABD whisky deserves your money.

whisky

teacher's highland cream review (2026) — the smoky budget scotch

honest teacher's highland cream whisky review. tasting notes, price across india, variants compared, how to drink it, and whether this smoky budget scotch deserves a spot on your shelf.

whisky

black dog vs 100 pipers (2026) — which mid-range scotch is better?

black dog vs 100 pipers compared honestly. taste, price, mixing, sipping, hangover, and which blended scotch i'd actually buy in india.

whisky

godawan whisky review (2026) — india's desert single malt with a sustainability story

honest godawan single malt whisky review. expert tasting notes for series 01 and 02, state-wise prices, how it compares to amrut and indri, the rajasthan distillery story, and the unique botanical cask finish.

whisky

best single malt whisky in india (2026) — indian and imported picks

the best single malt whisky in india. 15 indian and imported single malts with honest reviews, tasting notes, prices, and state-wise availability.

liked this? get more honest reviews

no spam, just useful stuff. unsubscribe anytime.