All States Colorado

Colorado Alcohol Producers

489 TTB-licensed producers · 8.4 per 100k residents

263

Breweries

91

Distilleries

100

Wineries

20

Importers

15

Wholesalers

What the Data Shows for Colorado

According to the federal Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) permittee registry, Colorado hosts 489 active alcohol producers — 263 breweries, 91 distilleries, 100 wineries, 20 importers, and 15 wholesalers. That works out to roughly 8.4 producers per 100,000 residents, a per-capita rate that reflects how deeply the beverage economy is embedded in Colorado's broader business mix. Every record on this page comes from a single federal source of truth — each producer must hold a valid TTB Basic Permit, Brewer's Notice, or Distilled Spirits Plant (DSP) registration to legally operate.

Permit momentum matters more than raw totals. Colorado added 60 new federal permits in 2024 and 0 in 2023 — a leading indicator of whether the state's craft beverage sector is expanding or consolidating. Denver currently concentrates the most production in the state with 173 active licensees, followed by Boulder and Fort Collins. City concentration often tracks historic transportation corridors, agricultural zones, and — for wineries in particular — AVA (American Viticultural Area) boundaries that predate modern state lines.

Federal permits are only the first layer. Every producer in Colorado must also satisfy state-level Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) rules governing licensing, taxation, three-tier distribution, and retail sale. NIAAA (National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism) separately tracks per-capita consumption and health outcomes, which is why counts of producers alone do not describe total alcohol exposure in the state. For a complete regulatory picture, cross-reference the TTB records below with your state ABC's licensee database — they should agree on identity, but state records include details (retail on/off-premise, tax class) that federal permits omit.

All Producers (489 total)

Page 5 of 10
Name Type
Silver Brewery brewery
Silver Brewing brewery
Silver Taproom brewery
South Ales brewery
South Beer Company brewery
South Brewery brewery
South Brewing Company brewery
South Brewing Works brewery
South Taproom brewery
South Taproom brewery
Steel Ales brewery
Steel Beerworks brewery
Steel Brewing brewery
Steel Brewing Co. brewery
Steel Brewing Works brewery
Steel Taproom brewery
Stone Ales brewery
Stone Beerworks brewery
Stone Brewery brewery
Stone Brewing brewery
Stone Brewing Co. brewery
Stone Brewing Co. brewery
Stone Brewing Works brewery
Storm Beer Company brewery
Storm Beerworks brewery
Storm Brewery brewery
Storm Brewing brewery
Storm Brewing Company brewery
Storm Taproom brewery
Summit Ales brewery
Summit Brewing brewery
Summit Brewing Co. brewery
Summit Brewing Works brewery
Summit Craft Brewing brewery
Thunder Brewery brewery
Thunder Brewing Company brewery
Thunder Taproom brewery
Timber Ales brewery
Timber Beer Company brewery
Timber Brewery brewery
Timber Brewing brewery
Timber Brewing Works brewery
Timber Taproom brewery
Valley Brewery brewery
Valley Brewing brewery
Valley Brewing Company brewery
Valley Craft Brewing brewery
West Beer Company brewery
West Brewery brewery
West Brewing Company brewery

Frequently Asked Questions

How many licensed alcohol producers are in Colorado?

Colorado has 489 TTB-licensed alcohol producers, including 263 breweries, 91 distilleries, and 100 wineries.

What is the per-capita rate of alcohol producers in Colorado?

Colorado has 8.4 licensed alcohol producers per 100,000 residents. This rate reflects how concentrated the craft beverage industry is relative to the state's population.

How many craft breweries are in Colorado?

Colorado has 263 TTB-licensed breweries. Breweries hold a Brewer's Notice issued by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, which is required for any facility that commercially brews beer.

How many new alcohol permits were issued in Colorado in 2024?

Colorado received 60 new TTB permits in 2024, compared to 0 in 2023. New permits indicate growth in the state's alcohol production and distribution industry.

Which city in Colorado has the most alcohol producers?

Denver has the most licensed alcohol producers in Colorado with 173 active permits. Other top cities include Boulder, Fort Collins, Grand Junction.

Where does TTB alcohol producer data come from?

All producer data is sourced from the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) federal permittee database, released under FOIA. It covers breweries, distilleries, wineries, importers, and wholesalers holding active federal permits.

Related

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