States Missouri Hermann
2026 data Public-data reference. Federal TTB source 22 producers

Hermann, Missouri — Alcohol Producers

22 TTB-licensed alcohol producers in Hermann, Missouri. Sourced directly from the federal permittee registry and refreshed quarterly.

Hermann, Missouri federal permit class distribution

Licenses2218BreweriesDistilleriesWineriesImportersWholesalers
Hermann, Missouri federal permit class distribution

Breweries

2

Brewer's Notice holders

Distilleries

2

DSP permit holders

Wineries

18

Bonded Winery permit

Total producers

22

Active TTB permits in Hermann

Hermann alcohol-license mix

Distilleries share of total 9.1%

DSP (Distilled Spirits Plant) holders relative to the city's full permit base.

Wineries share of total 81.8%

Bonded Winery permits relative to the city's full permit base.

What the Data Shows for Hermann, Missouri

The federal TTB permittee registry lists 22 active alcohol producers with a Hermann, Missouri address — 2 breweries, 2 distilleries, and 18 wineries. Every entry in the table below carries a unique federal permit number issued by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. Unlike state liquor license lookups that change format across the 50 states, TTB permit numbers are federally standardized: they identify the operating entity, the premises address, and the class of alcohol the facility is authorized to produce. That consistency is what makes cross-state comparisons of producer counts possible.

Concentration is the story city-level data tells best. A city with 22 producers clustered inside its limits usually reflects one of four drivers: a favorable local zoning regime, historic access to grain or grape supply, a tourism economy that supports tasting rooms, or a dense urban craft market willing to pay craft-tier prices. The mix of breweries, distilleries, and wineries visible here suggests a diversified beverage economy rather than a single-category hub.

Federal TTB permits are necessary but not sufficient to operate commercially. Producers in Hermann must also hold their Missouri state ABC (Alcoholic Beverage Control) license, meet local zoning requirements, and in most states route product through licensed wholesalers before it reaches retail — the three-tier system that descends from Prohibition-era reform. If a producer appears here but not in Missouri's state ABC database (or vice versa), that gap usually signals a recently issued permit, a permit surrender in progress, or a records-lag issue rather than anything substantive.

Name Type
Hawk Brewing Brewery
Mountain Beerworks Brewery
Bay Spirits Distillery
Liberty Distillery Distillery
Amber Vineyards Winery
Cedar Cellars Winery
Copper Vineyards Winery
Eagle Vineyard & Winery Winery
Freedom Vineyard & Winery Winery
Green Estate Winery Winery
Iron Estate Wines Winery
Lake Wines Winery
Maple Cellars Winery
Oak Cellars Winery
Peak Wine Estate Winery
Prairie Wines Winery
Ridge Wine Estate Winery
Steel Estate Wines Winery
Storm Winery Winery
Summit Wine Estate Winery
Thunder Winery Winery
White Estate Winery Winery

Frequently Asked Questions

How many licensed alcohol producers are in Hermann, Missouri?

Hermann, Missouri has 22 TTB-licensed alcohol producers, including 2 breweries, 2 distilleries, and 18 wineries.

How many breweries are in Hermann, Missouri?

Hermann has 2 federally licensed breweries. Each holds a Brewer's Notice from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB), which is required for any commercial brewing operation.

What types of alcohol producers operate in Hermann?

Producers in Hermann include 2 breweries, 2 distilleries, 18 wineries. All hold active federal TTB permits.

How do I verify a producer's TTB license in Hermann?

All producers listed are sourced from the TTB federal permittee database released under FOIA. You can verify a specific permit through the TTB's online Permits Online (PONL) system or by searching their public records.

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainAlcohol Editorial

Verify with U.S. Census Bureau →