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royal challenge review (2026) — the mid-range whisky that lost the plot

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16 min read

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updated

tl;dr: honest royal challenge whisky review. tasting notes, reserve variant compared, state-wise prices, how to drink it, and whether this once-popular whisky still deserves your money in 2026.


tldr: royal challenge is the mid-range whisky that time forgot. once a significant player in the rs 550-800 bracket, it’s been steadily overshadowed by blenders pride’s dominance and royal stag’s value proposition. the whisky itself is perfectly decent: smooth enough for water or soda, tolerable neat, and reasonably priced. but “decent” doesn’t win markets. blenders pride is slightly better, royal stag is cheaper, and royal challenge is stuck in between without a compelling reason to choose it over either. a solid whisky with a fading brand. rating: 6/10, based on extensive research.


full disclosure: i haven’t tried royal challenge personally. this review is based on extensive research, reviews from people whose palates i trust, and cross-referencing multiple sources. i’ll be clear about what’s from reviewers versus my analysis.

royal challenge used to be a bigger deal. ten years ago, it was one of the more prominent mid-range indian whiskies, with strong distribution in south india and a brand image that sat comfortably between budget and premium. virat kohli was the brand ambassador at one point, which gave it cricket-watching visibility. it was the whisky you ordered when you wanted something better than imperial blue but didn’t want to reach for blenders pride.

then the market shifted. pernod ricard’s blenders pride captured the mid-range segment with aggressive marketing and a genuinely smooth product. royal stag, also pernod ricard, locked down the value segment just below. royal challenge, made by united spirits (diageo), got squeezed from both sides. blenders pride took the drinkers who wanted quality at rs 600-900. royal stag took the drinkers who wanted value at rs 500-700. royal challenge sat in between, offering a product that was good enough but not distinctive enough to hold its ground.

this is the story of royal challenge in 2026: a perfectly decent whisky that lost the marketing and positioning war. the liquid isn’t the problem. the liquid is fine. the problem is that “fine” doesn’t cut it when your competitors are offering “slightly better” and “slightly cheaper” with bigger marketing budgets.

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


royal challenge at a glance

detailinfo
brandroyal challenge
typeindian grain whisky
ABV42.8%
makerunited spirits / diageo india
price (750ml)rs 550-800
variantsroyal challenge (regular), royal challenge reserve
best forwater/soda mixing, casual drinking
rating6/10

united spirits (diageo) has a massive portfolio of whisky brands in india, from mcdowell’s at the bottom to johnnie walker at the top. royal challenge sits in the middle of their indian whisky range, above mcdowell’s and below antiquity, which itself sits below premium imported brands. it’s a grain whisky with some malt content, bottled at the standard 42.8% ABV, and positioned for the mid-range consumer who wants something smooth without paying premium prices.

the brand has particularly strong roots in south india, especially karnataka, andhra pradesh, and tamil nadu. this southern presence was once a major strength, but as pernod ricard’s brands expanded aggressively into these markets, royal challenge’s dominance eroded.


royal challenge variants: regular vs reserve

royal challenge regular

price: rs 550-800 (750ml) | 42.8% ABV | the standard

the regular royal challenge is a grain whisky with a small proportion of malt, blended for smoothness. reviewers describe it as mild, approachable, and inoffensive. there’s a grain sweetness on entry, a smooth mid-palate, and a clean finish without harsh edges. it’s not exciting, but it doesn’t make mistakes either.

from what reviewers consistently report, royal challenge regular is smoother than royal stag and imperial blue, and roughly on par with antiquity blue. it drinks well with water (the preferred south indian serve) and works as a straightforward soda mixer. neat, it’s passable, which already puts it above the budget tier.

the problem isn’t the whisky. the problem is blenders pride. at similar prices in most states, blenders pride offers a slightly smoother finish, more depth, and significantly stronger brand pull. when a consumer stands at the liquor shop counter comparing royal challenge and blenders pride at the same price, blenders pride wins more often than not.

royal challenge reserve

price: rs 650-1000 (750ml) | 42.8% ABV | the premium variant

royal challenge reserve ups the malt content and claims additional maturation. reviewers describe it as noticeably smoother than the regular, with more body, a richer malt character, and a longer finish. there are hints of vanilla and gentle oak that regular royal challenge doesn’t deliver.

from what i’ve read, reserve is a genuine step up. it’s the variant that shows what royal challenge could be if the brand invested more in quality. the problem, again, is competitive: at rs 650-1000, reserve competes with blenders pride reserve and the bottom of the under rs 1500 segment, where the competition is fierce.

reserve makes the most sense for royal challenge loyalists who want to upgrade within the brand. for everyone else, the mid-premium space has too many strong competitors.


tasting notes: what reviewers report

neat

royal challenge neat is smoother than you’d expect for its price. the burn is present but manageable, more of a gentle warmth than a harsh sting. there’s a grain sweetness on entry, a mild malt note on the mid-palate, and a clean finish. reviewers consistently describe it as “smooth enough” and “acceptable neat,” which puts it ahead of budget whiskies where neat drinking is genuinely unpleasant.

compared to blenders pride neat: blenders pride has more depth and a slightly richer malt character. the gap is small but consistent across multiple reviews. compared to royal stag neat: royal challenge has less burn and a smoother finish. it’s the better whisky of the two for neat drinking, which partly justifies the price premium.

with water

this is reportedly royal challenge’s best serve, especially in south india where whisky-with-water is the cultural default. adding water opens up a mild sweetness, faint vanilla, and a touch of oak. the grain character softens, and what remains is a smooth, easy-drinking whisky that’s pleasant enough for slow sipping.

multiple south indian reviewers specifically recommend royal challenge with water, noting that it handles the serve better than many competitors. the whisky doesn’t thin out or lose its character the way some budget whiskies do when water is added.

with soda

royal challenge with soda is clean and refreshing. the carbonation adds a lift, and the whisky provides a mild, sweet backbone. with a squeeze of lime, it becomes a pleasant long drink. this serve works well for extended social drinking.

with cola

functional but unremarkable. the cola masks the whisky, and at this price point, you’re overpaying for what is essentially flavored cola. if cola is your primary mixer, cheaper options will do the same job.


royal challenge price across india (2026)

stateprice (750ml)
goars 450-550
delhirs 600-750
karnatakars 650-800
andhra pradeshrs 550-700
telanganars 550-700
tamil nadurs 600-750
maharashtrars 650-800
uttar pradeshrs 600-750
west bengalrs 600-750
rajasthanrs 600-800

prices are approximate and vary by store. always check locally before purchasing.

cheapest states: goa offers the best prices, with royal challenge available at rs 450-550. andhra pradesh and telangana are also competitive, reflecting the brand’s southern stronghold.

most expensive states: karnataka and maharashtra push royal challenge toward rs 800, which is deep into blenders pride territory. at rs 750+, the case for royal challenge over blenders pride becomes very weak.

price comparison with competitors: in most states, royal challenge is priced within rs 50 of blenders pride. this is the brand’s fundamental problem. when two whiskies cost the same, consumers pick the one with the better reputation, and that’s blenders pride.


how to drink royal challenge

with water (the best serve)

60ml royal challenge with a splash of water (about 30ml). no ice or one small cube. this is the serve that south indian drinkers prefer, and based on reviewer consensus, it’s the serve that makes the best case for this whisky. the water opens up the malt sweetness and creates a smooth, contemplative drink. this is royal challenge at its most honest and most enjoyable.

with soda and lime

60ml royal challenge, soda water, squeeze of lime, ice. a clean, refreshing long drink that works for evenings and social occasions. the soda adds fizz, the lime adds brightness, and the whisky provides a smooth, mild backbone. this is a solid everyday serve.

on the rocks

60ml royal challenge with 2-3 ice cubes. the cold smooths out any remaining rough edges and creates a simple, easy drink. as the ice melts, the whisky gradually opens up. this serve works well in warm weather.

neat (passable)

royal challenge neat is actually tolerable, which distinguishes it from budget options. pour 60ml, let it sit for a minute, sip slowly. it won’t change your life, but it won’t make you reach for a mixer in desperation either. the reserve variant handles neat drinking better than the regular.


royal challenge vs the competition

royal challenge vs blenders pride

the critical comparison. blenders pride wins on smoothness, depth, and brand perception. royal challenge is close but consistently falls just short. at similar prices, blenders pride is the better buy. the only scenario where royal challenge wins is if blenders pride is out of stock and you don’t want to switch to a lower tier.

royal challenge vs royal stag

royal stag is cheaper (rs 50-150 less in most states) and nearly as smooth. royal challenge has a slight edge in quality, but the gap is small. for value-conscious drinkers, royal stag offers better bang for the buck. royal challenge’s premium over royal stag isn’t fully justified by the quality difference.

royal challenge vs antiquity blue

antiquity blue is a close competitor. both are mid-range indian whiskies with similar profiles and similar prices. antiquity blue has stronger distribution in some south indian states. royal challenge has a marginally smoother finish. the choice between them is essentially a coin flip, with regional availability being the deciding factor.


the hangover comparison

royal challenge reportedly sits in the moderate zone for hangovers. better than budget whiskies (imperial blue, mcdowell’s, DSP black), comparable to blenders pride, and slightly worse than premium options like 100 pipers or black dog.

the grain and malt blend quality at rs 550-800 is meaningfully better than what you get at rs 400-500. the congener levels are lower, the spirit is cleaner, and your body processes it with less difficulty. this is one of the tangible benefits of stepping up from budget whisky: you don’t just taste a better drink, you feel a better morning.

reviewers who’ve compared royal challenge and blenders pride on the hangover scale report they’re roughly equivalent. both cause moderate morning-after effects at 3-4 pegs, and both are significantly gentler than their budget counterparts. this parity on hangovers further reinforces the competitive dynamic: if the hangover is the same and the taste is comparable, the brand with better marketing wins. and that’s blenders pride.

practical advice: royal challenge with water reportedly produces milder hangovers than royal challenge with cola or soda. the water keeps you hydrated while the sugary mixers contribute to dehydration. south indian drinkers who consume royal challenge primarily with water consistently report better mornings than north indian drinkers who mix with cola.


the virat kohli connection

virat kohli was the brand ambassador for royal challenge for several years. this is worth mentioning because it reveals something about the brand’s trajectory. kohli is one of india’s biggest sports celebrities, and having him on board should have been a game-changer for royal challenge. for a while, it was. the brand saw increased visibility and sales during kohli’s ambassadorship.

but here’s what’s interesting: kohli later became associated with royal stag (pernod ricard). that move effectively transferred his brand power from royal challenge to a direct competitor. the timing was devastating for royal challenge. they lost their biggest marketing asset to a competing brand that was already gaining market share.

this is one of the reasons royal challenge’s decline was so steep. it’s not just that blenders pride was better positioned. it’s that royal challenge lost its celebrity muscle at exactly the wrong time, and that muscle went to the other team. diageo’s marketing pivot away from royal challenge (toward johnnie walker at the top and mcdowell’s at the bottom) left the brand in a no-man’s land where it had the product quality but not the promotional firepower.


what went wrong: the royal challenge story

royal challenge’s decline is a case study in how positioning kills brands. the whisky itself didn’t get worse. the competition got better at marketing and positioning.

pernod ricard’s two-pronged attack: pernod ricard captured the mid-range with blenders pride (marketed as the aspirational choice) and captured the value segment with royal stag (virat kohli’s brand power). royal challenge, owned by diageo, couldn’t fight on both fronts. it was too expensive to compete with royal stag on value and not differentiated enough to compete with blenders pride on aspiration.

south india erosion: royal challenge’s stronghold was south india. when pernod ricard expanded aggressively into southern markets with blenders pride and royal stag, royal challenge’s market share eroded. the brand didn’t have the marketing budget or the celebrity power to fight back effectively.

diageo’s focus elsewhere: diageo’s indian strategy prioritizes johnnie walker at the top and mcdowell’s at the bottom. the mid-range space (where royal challenge sits) gets less attention and fewer marketing rupees. this neglect shows in the brand’s declining visibility.

none of this means royal challenge is a bad whisky. it means it’s an undermarketed one. the liquid is fine. the brand story just isn’t compelling enough in 2026.


who should buy royal challenge?

buy royal challenge if:

  • blenders pride is out of stock and you want something at the same level
  • you’re in south india where royal challenge is well-priced and available
  • you prefer whisky with water and want something smooth enough for that serve
  • you’ve tried it before and have a personal preference for its flavor profile

skip royal challenge if:

  • blenders pride is available at the same price (it’s the slightly better whisky)
  • you’re looking for value (royal stag gives you 90% of the quality for less money)
  • you want a whisky that impresses (royal challenge doesn’t have strong brand cachet anymore)
  • you’re in a state where it costs rs 750+ (the value breaks down at that price)

verdict: royal challenge review

rating: 6/10 (based on reviewer consensus)

royal challenge gets a 6 because the whisky itself is genuinely decent. it’s smooth, approachable, tolerable neat, and pleasant with water. the 6 rather than a 7 reflects the competitive context: blenders pride does everything royal challenge does slightly better at similar prices, which makes recommending royal challenge difficult.

the 6 also acknowledges that royal challenge is not a bad buy. if someone hands you a glass of royal challenge at a party, you’ll enjoy it. if it’s the only mid-range option at your local shop, you’ll be satisfied. it’s just that in a market where you usually have alternatives on the same shelf, royal challenge isn’t the one you pick first.

the bottom line: royal challenge is the mid-range whisky that deserves better than its current market position. the whisky is smooth, the price is fair, and the quality is solid. it’s just been outmarketed and outpositioned by blenders pride and royal stag. for drinkers who care about what’s in the glass more than what’s on the label, royal challenge is worth a try.

what to read next: blenders pride review for the main competitor, best whisky under rs 1000 for alternatives in this range, or royal stag review for the value option below.


the upgrade path: what comes after royal challenge

if you’re drinking royal challenge and wondering what spending more gets you, here’s the ladder:

royal challenge to blenders pride (rs 650-950): this isn’t really an upgrade in price. it’s a lateral move. but if you haven’t tried blenders pride, you should. it’s the whisky that beat royal challenge in the market, and most reviewers say the taste justifies the market outcome. try it and decide for yourself.

royal challenge reserve to 100 pipers (rs 1000-1500): the jump from indian grain whisky to blended scotch. 100 pipers offers genuine scotch character: peat, malt, and a complexity that no indian grain whisky can match. the price jump is significant (rs 200-500 more), but the quality jump is one of the largest in the accessible indian whisky market.

royal challenge to teacher’s highland cream (rs 1000-1500): another excellent blended scotch entry point. teacher’s has a slightly peaty, smoky character that divides opinion. if you like it, you’ll love the depth it brings over royal challenge. if peat isn’t your thing, stick with 100 pipers.

royal challenge reserve to black dog (rs 1200-2000): black dog represents the entry into premium scotch territory in india. the 12-year variant is a genuine sipping whisky that rewards slow, contemplative drinking. it’s a meaningful investment over royal challenge, but one that delivers a completely different drinking experience.


royal challenge for the undecided buyer

if you’re standing at the liquor shop counter, looking at royal challenge and blenders pride side by side, here’s the honest decision framework:

buy royal challenge if:

  • it’s rs 50+ cheaper than blenders pride in your state (some states have this gap)
  • blenders pride is out of stock
  • you’ve tried both before and genuinely prefer royal challenge’s profile (some people do)
  • you’re buying in a south indian state where royal challenge has better availability than blenders pride at your specific shop

buy blenders pride if:

  • both are the same price (most states)
  • you want the brand that more people recognize and respect
  • you’re buying for guests and want to play it safe
  • you’re in a north indian state where blenders pride dominates shelf space

buy royal stag if:

  • you want to save rs 50-150 and get 90% of the experience
  • quantity matters more than quality (parties, large gatherings)
  • you’re mixing with cola anyway and won’t taste the difference

this framework covers 95% of the buying decision at this price range. the remaining 5% is personal taste, which only you can determine by trying all three.


royal challenge review: 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.

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