mcdowell's no.1 review (2026) — india's most-sold whisky, honestly reviewed
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12 min read
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tl;dr: honest mcdowell's no.1 whisky review. taste, price across india, variants (luxury, reserve, platinum), comparison with imperial blue and officer's choice, and the reality of india's best-selling whisky.
tldr: mcdowell’s no.1 is india’s most-sold whisky by volume and it tastes like it. harsh neat, grain-forward, and rough on the throat. but mixed with soda or cola, it gets the job done at rs 350-500. the luxury and reserve variants offer marginal improvements. it’s not a whisky you drink because you enjoy it. it’s a whisky you drink because it’s cheap, it’s everywhere, and it does the minimum job required. and there’s no shame in that. millions of people drink it daily. rating: 5/10.
i’ve had mcdowell’s no.1 more times than i’d like to admit. in college, at house parties where the host bought whatever was cheapest, at roadside dhabas where the options were mcdowell’s or officer’s choice, and occasionally just because it was the only branded whisky under rs 400 at the shop. it’s the kind of whisky where you don’t pour it to enjoy it. you pour it because it’s there, you want a drink, and the budget is the budget.
and look, that’s fine. not every whisky needs to be a sipping experience. not every bottle needs tasting notes and a fancy glass. sometimes you want rs 350 worth of whisky mixed with soda while watching a cricket match with friends, and mcdowell’s no.1 handles that brief with complete adequacy. the problem starts when people pretend it’s something it’s not, or when brands market it with aspirational ads that have zero connection to what’s actually in the bottle.
mcdowell’s no.1 is the second-best-selling whisky brand in the world by volume (after imperial blue, another indian brand). united spirits, owned by diageo, moves over 25 million cases annually. that’s a staggering number that tells you everything about why this brand exists: it’s the price-point king of indian whisky.
this review is going to be completely honest. that means it won’t be kind. but mcdowell’s no.1 deserves a proper review because the people buying it deserve to know exactly what they’re getting.
this review is part of liquor india, where i review every major alcohol brand available in india. no sponsors, no affiliate links.
mcdowell’s no.1 at a glance
| detail | info |
|---|---|
| brand | mcdowell’s no.1 |
| type | indian grain whisky (IMFL) |
| ABV | 42.8% |
| maker | united spirits / diageo india |
| price (750ml) | rs 350-500 |
| variants | regular, luxury, reserve, platinum |
| best for | soda/cola mixing on a budget |
| rating | 5/10 |
mcdowell’s no.1 launched in 1968 and has been a cornerstone of budget indian drinking for over 50 years. the brand has been through multiple ownership changes. it started under vijay mallya’s UB group, which became united spirits, which was eventually acquired by diageo in 2014. through all these changes, one thing has remained constant: mcdowell’s no.1 is the cheapest branded whisky that’s available everywhere.
the “no.1” in the name is pure marketing. it refers to the brand’s ambition, not any ranking or quality metric. united spirits positions it as “the original no.1 spirit of celebration,” which is the kind of tagline that only makes sense if you don’t think about it too hard.
what is mcdowell’s no.1 actually?
let me explain what’s in the bottle, because the label doesn’t make it obvious.
mcdowell’s no.1 is an IMFL (indian-made foreign liquor) whisky. this means it’s made in india using a blend of grain spirit (essentially neutral alcohol made from grains like rice, corn, or molasses-derived spirit) and a small percentage of malt whisky. the “foreign liquor” part of IMFL is a regulatory classification, not an indication that anything foreign is in the bottle.
the key thing to understand: the overwhelming majority of what’s in a bottle of mcdowell’s no.1 is grain spirit. the malt whisky component is small, maybe 10-15% in the regular version (united spirits doesn’t disclose exact proportions). the grain spirit provides the alcohol, and the malt provides whatever minimal flavour complexity exists. this is the same basic formula used by imperial blue, officer’s choice, and most budget indian whiskies.
is this “real whisky”? by international standards, probably not. most scotch and bourbon purists would call it flavoured grain spirit. by indian regulatory standards, it’s classified as whisky. the debate is academic when you’re drinking it with cola at a house party.
how mcdowell’s no.1 tastes
neat
let me save you the trouble: don’t drink mcdowell’s no.1 neat unless you’re doing it for research (like i am) or have lost a bet.
neat, it hits your palate with an immediate grain spirit burn. there’s a brief, thin sweetness, followed by a harsh, lingering finish that makes your throat want to have a conversation about your life choices. the grain spirit dominates completely. there’s no oakiness, no depth, no complexity. it’s alcohol with a slight sweetener, and the aftertaste is what i can only describe as “industrial.”
this is not me being dramatic. i’ve tried mcdowell’s no.1 neat multiple times because i wanted to give it a fair assessment. the result is always the same: one sip neat, reach for the mixer.
with water
adding water to mcdowell’s makes it less aggressive but also reveals how thin the whisky actually is. there’s no body underneath the alcohol. you get watered-down grain spirit with a faint, vaguely sweet undertone. it’s drinkable in the sense that it won’t make you cough, but there’s nothing to enjoy in the process.
with soda
this is how most people drink mcdowell’s, and for good reason. soda dilutes the harshness, adds fizz to mask the grain spirit, and makes it into a passable whisky soda. the mild sweetness of the whisky comes through slightly better with soda than with water. is it enjoyable? “tolerable” is more accurate. but tolerable at rs 350 is the entire value proposition.
with cola
cola is mcdowell’s best mixer. the sweetness and caramel flavour of cola completely masks the grain spirit harshness. you basically get a sweet, alcoholic cola drink. and honestly, in this format, mcdowell’s is fine. not good, not bad, just… fine. the cola does 90% of the work.
this is the format i default to when mcdowell’s is the only option. 60ml mcdowell’s, ice, fill with cola, squeeze a lime if available. it’s a functional drink that does what a drink is supposed to do.
mcdowell’s no.1 variants compared
| variant | price (750ml) | difference from regular | worth the upgrade? |
|---|---|---|---|
| regular | rs 350-500 | base version | n/a |
| luxury | rs 400-550 | slightly smoother finish | barely noticeable |
| reserve | rs 450-600 | higher malt content | marginally better |
| platinum | rs 500-650 | ”premium” blend | the best variant, but still budget |
mcdowell’s no.1 luxury
the luxury variant claims a smoother finish and “select grain spirits.” in practice, i’ve had both the regular and luxury side by side, and the difference is subtle enough that i couldn’t reliably identify them in a blind test with cola. the luxury is fractionally less harsh neat, but not enough to justify specifically seeking it out.
mcdowell’s no.1 reserve
the reserve has a slightly higher proportion of malt whisky in the blend. you can taste the difference if you try them side by side neat: the reserve has a bit more body and a marginally smoother finish. with soda or cola, the difference almost disappears. at rs 100-150 more, it’s a minor upgrade.
mcdowell’s no.1 platinum
platinum is the most premium variant and genuinely the best version of mcdowell’s no.1. it has noticeably more smoothness, a touch of oakiness, and less of the raw grain spirit burn. at rs 500-650, it starts competing with blenders pride (rs 650-850), and at that price point, blenders pride is the better buy. platinum is the best mcdowell’s, but it’s not the best whisky at its price.
mcdowell’s no.1 price across india
| state | regular (750ml) | luxury (750ml) | reserve (750ml) |
|---|---|---|---|
| goa | rs 280-350 | rs 330-400 | rs 380-450 |
| delhi | rs 400-500 | rs 450-550 | rs 500-600 |
| maharashtra | rs 380-480 | rs 430-530 | rs 480-580 |
| karnataka | rs 450-550 | rs 500-600 | rs 550-650 |
| uttar pradesh | rs 370-460 | rs 420-510 | rs 470-560 |
| rajasthan | rs 400-500 | rs 450-550 | rs 500-600 |
prices vary by state due to different excise duty structures. goa remains the cheapest for all alcohol. karnataka tends to be the most expensive for IMFL brands. always check the MRP on the bottle. some shops charge above MRP, which is illegal.
note: bihar has alcohol prohibition. mcdowell’s is not legally available there.
mcdowell’s no.1 vs the competition
mcdowell’s no.1 vs imperial blue
| factor | mcdowell’s no.1 | imperial blue |
|---|---|---|
| maker | diageo india / USL | pernod ricard india |
| price (750ml) | rs 350-500 | rs 450-600 |
| taste (neat) | harsh, slightly sweet | harsh, very thin |
| with cola | passable | passable |
| hangover | rough | rough |
| smoothness | fractionally smoother | slightly harsher |
| verdict | marginally better | marginally cheaper perception |
mcdowell’s and imperial blue are the two titans of budget indian whisky. in a blind taste test, most people would struggle to tell them apart. mcdowell’s has a slight edge in smoothness because of its malt blend component. imperial blue is marginally harsher but has stronger brand recognition thanks to the “men will be men” ad campaign.
the practical difference: check which is cheaper in your state and buy that one. at this price tier, brand loyalty costs you money for no meaningful quality difference. see the full imperial blue price guide for state-wise comparison.
mcdowell’s no.1 vs officer’s choice
officer’s choice is the only mainstream whisky that sits below mcdowell’s in the quality hierarchy. it’s rougher, has more of a chemical edge, and the hangover is notably worse. mcdowell’s no.1 is a clear upgrade over officer’s choice, especially the reserve and platinum variants.
if your budget is under rs 500 and you want the best possible whisky, my recommendation is best whisky under 500. mcdowell’s and imperial blue dominate this tier.
mcdowell’s no.1 vs blenders pride
this isn’t a fair comparison, but people make it. blenders pride (rs 650-850) is a different tier of whisky. it’s smoother, has more malt content, works neat, and causes significantly milder hangovers. the rs 200-350 price gap between mcdowell’s and blenders pride represents the single biggest quality jump in indian whisky. if you can afford blenders pride, buy blenders pride. see the blenders pride review for details.
who mcdowell’s no.1 is for (and who it isn’t)
it’s for:
- budget drinking where the goal is functional, not experiential
- house parties where you’re buying multiple bottles
- mixing with cola or soda when you don’t want to spend on premium whisky
- anyone who doesn’t want to overthink their drink choice
it’s not for:
- sipping neat or with water
- gifting (please don’t gift mcdowell’s to anyone you care about)
- impressing anyone
- anyone who wants to actually taste their whisky
the real talk
here’s what i think about mcdowell’s no.1, stripped of any pretension: it’s a perfectly adequate budget whisky that does its job without any flair. it’s not disgusting (that’s officer’s choice). it’s not good (that’s blenders pride and above). it occupies a space where millions of indian drinkers need a product: affordable, available, branded, and mixed with cola it gets the evening started.
there is zero shame in drinking mcdowell’s no.1. it’s the whisky equivalent of eating at a dhaba instead of a restaurant. the food isn’t fancy, but it fills you up, it costs almost nothing, and sometimes it hits the spot perfectly. i’ve had plenty of good evenings with mcdowell’s and cola at parties, cricket nights, and casual get-togethers. the whisky was never the point. the company was.
but if you’re reading this review wondering whether to buy mcdowell’s or spend a bit more on something better, the answer is always: spend a bit more. blenders pride at rs 650-850 is the upgrade that changes how you think about whisky. royal stag at rs 500-650 is a marginal improvement if you want to stay in the budget lane. and if you’re stuck at mcdowell’s price, at least go for the reserve or platinum variant.
the bottom line
mcdowell’s no.1 is not a whisky i’d ever recommend to someone looking for quality. it’s a whisky i’d acknowledge as reality for millions of indian drinkers. at rs 350-500, it does the minimum: provides alcohol, mixes with cola without being offensive, and is available at every liquor shop in the country.
rating: 5/10. not terrible, not good. just… adequate. and sometimes, adequate is enough.
for budget whisky alternatives, see the best whisky under 500 guide. for the upgrade path, start with blenders pride or royal stag. for understanding what’s actually in these bottles, read the what is IMFL guide. and for a look at the budget whisky battle, check cheapest alcohol in india.
drink responsibly. must be of legal drinking age in your state.
drink responsibly. must be of legal drinking age in your state.
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