If you've been paying attention to the premium tequila space — and as a liquor retailer, you should be — you already know the market is splitting in two. On one side, celebrity-backed bottles fighting for Instagram impressions. On the other, heritage distilleries with actual history, actual craft, and actual staying power on your shelves. The Cascahuín tequila US distribution deal announced in April 2026 just dropped one of Mexico's oldest family-owned distilleries squarely into the second category — and squarely into your buying window.
Cascahuín has been making tequila since 1904. Five generations. One distillery. Zero shortcuts. Until now, getting their bottles required being in the right regional market or knowing the right people. That's over. With T. Edward Wines & Spirits handling national representation, every independent retailer in the country can stock a brand that tequila enthusiasts have been quietly obsessing over for years.
This post breaks down what the distribution deal means for your business, why heritage brands are eating into celebrity bottle sales, and — most importantly — exactly how to position and sell craft tequila in your store. Whether you're already deep in the agave category or just starting to take it seriously, there's a playbook here for you.
Cascahuín Just Went National — Here's Why That Matters for Your Shelves
On April 8, 2026, Cascahuín Tequila announced a partnership with T. Edward Wines & Spirits (TEW) for national U.S. representation. If you're an independent liquor retailer, this is worth more than a passing glance — it's a buying window.
The Distribution Deal: T. Edward Wines & Spirits Takes the Reins
Previously, Cascahuín moved through Skurnik Wines & Spirits, which meant limited regional availability. If you weren't in one of their legacy markets, getting bottles on your shelves required workarounds — or luck. The TEW partnership changes that equation. You're looking at broader rep coverage, streamlined ordering, and — critically — consistent supply. TEW has the national infrastructure to keep your backbar stocked without the headaches.
From Regional Gem to National Availability
Here's the signal worth reading: Cascahuín isn't some startup riding the agave hype cycle. This is a distillery founded in 1904, operating under NOM 1123, with over 120 years of continuous family production. Their Extra Añejo ages 48 months in American oak with an additional four-year stabilization period. Their Reposado bottles at 42% ABV — above the industry minimum — because they're chasing flavor, not cutting corners.
When a heritage tequila brand with that kind of pedigree makes a national push, it tells you where the premium tequila market is heading. Consumers are moving past celebrity-backed bottles and toward authenticity they can verify.
The smart move for retailers? Stock Cascahuín now, before mainstream saturation compresses your margin on differentiation. Early movers on craft tequila build the reputation — and the customer loyalty — that latecomers can't buy back.
Before you place an order, it helps to understand exactly what you're putting on your shelves — and why this brand carries weight that newer labels simply can't manufacture.
120 Years of Family-Owned Tequila: The Cascahuín Story in 60 Seconds
Here's the short version — because you're busy and this brand deserves your attention.
Cascahuín is one of the oldest continuously operating tequila distilleries in Mexico. Full stop. Founded in 1904, the Rosales family has been producing tequila for over a century, long before "heritage tequila brands" became a marketing buzzword. This isn't a celebrity vanity project or a corporate rollout with a backstory stapled on. It's the real thing.
Every batch traces back to the family's own agave fields or carefully sourced plants. That provenance alone sells bottles. When a customer picks up their Reposado or their Extra Añejo, they're holding something with a verifiable story behind it.
The Rosales Family Legacy Since 1904
Five generations, one distillery, and a track record that predates every celebrity bottle on your shelf by decades. That's the pitch your floor staff needs when learning how to sell craft tequila in liquor stores. Keep it simple and let the history do the heavy lifting.
What NOM 1123 and Additive-Free Certification Actually Mean
Every legitimate tequila distillery has a NOM — a registered production number assigned by the Mexican government. Cascahuín's is NOM 1123. Educated buyers actually look this up. Train your staff to mention it; it's a transparency marker that instantly signals authenticity.
Their additive-free certification matters even more. It means nothing artificial — no glycerin, no oak extract, no caramel coloring — was added post-distillation. This aligns directly with the fastest-growing demand trend in premium agave spirits: consumers who read labels and ask questions. Stock the answer.
Now that you know the story, let's talk product. Because a great backstory only matters if the liquid — and the lineup — can back it up.
