Adding CBD to Hard Seltzer Boosts Sales 18%, Adding Kombucha Lowered It 6%

The study was conducted by Veylinx, a consumer insights platform that uses behavioral research to predict purchasing habits.

According to findings, nearly all added benefits tested (high alcohol, low alcohol, vitamins, kombucha, immunity, energy, sustainable packaging and CBD) drove greater purchase interest from consumers. The study found that adding CBD boosted demand by 12% on average, while enhancing the drinks with kombucha lowered demand by an average of 6%.

Other variations, such as sustainable packaging, showed potential for some brands, but not others. Sustainable packaging for Corona boosted its demand 29%, but shrunk demand for Truly by 23%.

The study also confirmed that White Claw leads the crowded category in overall willingness to pay, with 35% higher average demand than its competitors. Corona and Truly scored second and third, respectively—but trailed the market leader by a wide margin.

“We wanted to study the hard seltzer category because it has disrupted the alcoholic beverage space so profoundly in such a short time,” said Anouar El Haji, CEO of Veylinx. “There are widely divergent predictions about if and how it will sustain its tremendous growth, so we wanted to shed light on which brands and innovations are best positioned for the future.”

The findings showed that all eight brands enjoy a positive product perception across multiple dimensions, including credibility, premiumness, and uniqueness, signaling strong potential for additional growth.  Among the conclusions:

White Claw drives the greatest demand, but benefits the least from adding product extensions.  CBD-infused, energy-boosting, and high-alcohol versions performed well across most brands, and while market leader White Claw commanded the highest demand score, potential product line extensions actually drove less demand for the brand. Every other brand tested had at least one added benefit that lifted demand. For Topo Chico, five of the eight added benefits drove higher demand—including CBD, which provided an 18% lift.

Consumers drink hard seltzer for its refreshing taste, not because it’s healthier. “Refreshing taste” was listed by a majority of respondents (54%) as a primary purchase driver, with Truly, White Claw and Bud Light scoring highest in this category. Somewhat surprisingly, the perceived healthfulness of seltzers compared to other alcoholic beverages was not an important demand driver (only selected by 22% of participants).

Nearly 75% of respondents indicated that they consume hard seltzer at home.

Regional preferences vary
Consumer demand for individual brands differed across regions, with White Claw dominating the Northeast and Midwest. In the South, Smirnoff elicited the highest demand, while Corona took the crown in the West.

The CBD-infused product variation drove the greatest purchase interest in the Northeast, South, and Midwest. The most popular product variation in the West proved to be sustainable packaging.

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