Importer · San Francisco, California

Kevin Wenck

Doing business as Wust Fine Wine Imports. Federal alcohol Basic Permit on file with the TTB.

Importer
Permit class
Active
Status
San Francisco
County
94102
ZIP code

The record

Kevin Wenck holds an active federal Importer Basic Permit (CA-I-22187), with premises in San Francisco, California.

CA-I-22187
federal permit number
San Francisco
premises county
#1
California rank for importers
176
importers in San Francisco

Source: TTB FOIA List of Permittees, April 2025.

According to the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) List of Permittees, published April 2025, this business is one of 83,590 active federal alcohol Basic Permit holders across the United States — among 18,038 wineries, 5,590 distilleries, 21,314 importers, and 38,648 wholesalers. See the full methodology for how each record is sourced.

Permit & location

Permit classImporter
StatusActive
Federal permit no.CA-I-22187
Operating name (DBA)Wust Fine Wine Imports
CitySan Francisco
CountySan Francisco
ZIP code94102
StateCalifornia
Federal regulatorAlcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB)

How Kevin Wenck fits in California

4,659

importer permits in California

#1

of 52 states for importers

20,928

all permits in California

An Importer's Basic Permit authorizes bringing foreign beverage alcohol into the U.S. for commercial sale. Importers also need TTB label approval (a COLA) for each product and must clear U.S. Customs entry requirements.

Frequently asked questions

What permit does Kevin Wenck hold?

Kevin Wenck holds an active federal Importer Basic Permit issued by the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB), permit number CA-I-22187. An Importer's Basic Permit authorizes bringing foreign beverage alcohol into the U.S. for commercial sale. Importers also need TTB label approval (a COLA) for each product and must clear U.S. Customs entry requirements.

Where is Kevin Wenck located?

Kevin Wenck's permit premises is in San Francisco, California (San Francisco County), ZIP 94102. California holds 4,659 importer permits — the 1st most of any state.

Is this an official record?

Yes. This record is drawn directly from the TTB FOIA "List of Permittees," published April 2025 — public U.S. government data. Permit status can change; confirm the current status on the official TTB Public Permit Search before relying on it.

Reading a federal alcohol permit record

A federal Basic Permit is not the same as a state license, and the distinction matters. The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau issues this permit under the Federal Alcohol Administration Act to authorize an entity to produce wine or spirits, import beverage alcohol, or operate as an alcohol wholesaler in interstate commerce. It identifies the operating business, the premises, and the class of activity — but it does not, by itself, authorize retail sale. Almost every permit holder also needs a separate state Alcoholic Beverage Control license to actually sell within a given state, and most states route product through licensed wholesalers before it reaches a store shelf.

The permit number is federally standardized, which is what lets this directory compare holders cleanly across state lines. A permit remains in effect until it is surrendered, suspended, or revoked, so a record appearing here reflects the entity's status as published in the TTB List of Permittees. Because permit status can change between publications, treat this page as a federal reference point and confirm the current status against the official source before relying on it for a transaction.

Source: TTB FOIA List of Permittees, published April 2025 — public U.S. government data, reformatted without alteration. Permit status can change; confirm against the official TTB Public Permit Search. For informational purposes only and not legal, financial, or business advice; see our disclaimer.