Check the Delhi Duty Free premium gin price list 2026 including of special bottles like 44N Gin, Kalevala Barrel Aged Gin, 6 O'Clock Gin, and more. Delhi Duty Free
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Delhi Duty Free Premium Gin Price List 2026: 44N Gin, Kalevala Barrel Aged Gin, 6 O'Clock Gin, And More

Explore this premium gin collection featuring travel-exclusive bottles, tasting notes, approximate prices and standout picks for collectors and cocktail enthusiasts alike today. Here is everything you need to know about the Delhi Duty Free premium gin price list 2026.

Amit Diwan

The duty free store at IGI Airport is more than a last-minute shopping stop, it is one of the best places in India to discover premium, travel-exclusive gin bottles. In this Delhi Duty Free premium gin price list 2026, we cover 44N Gin, Kalevala Barrel Aged Gin, 6 O'Clock Gin, Bertha's Revenge, the Botanist, Cherrapunji and Hendrick's. This gin selection is built for collectors and enthusiasts alike. So, if you are set to be anywhere near this location, here is the Delhi Duty Free price list 2026 for the finest gin bottles worth picking up before your flight.

Delhi Duty Free Premium Gin Price List 2026

44N Gin

44N Gin is the most expensive bottle on this list also has the most unusual backstory. 44N Gin is made by Comte de Grasse, a distillery working out of Grasse in the south of France, a town better known as the world's perfume capital than for spirits. That connection is not incidental. The gin is produced using techniques borrowed directly from perfumers, including ultrasonic maceration and vacuum distillation, both methods designed to pull delicate aromatic notes out of botanicals without cooking off their character.

Twenty Mediterranean botanicals go into the mix, including bitter orange, rose, jasmine and a juniper relative called cade, and the name itself refers to the geographic coordinates of Grasse. Bottled at 44 percent ABV, it smells closer to a fine fragrance than a typical gin and tastes like it too, bright with citrus up front before settling into something warmer and more floral.

Price: ₹10,490 approx

Kalevala Barrel Aged Gin

Kalevala comes from a small, family run distillery tucked into North Karelia in eastern Finland, named after Finland's national epic, a sweeping collection of folklore and mythology compiled in the 1800s from stories gathered across that same region. The gin itself starts life as Kalevala's regular juniper forward spirit, rests for several months after distillation, and is then transferred into oak barrels, mostly rum casks, for further ageing.

That barrel time is what sets it apart, softening the sharper edges of the botanicals and layering in vanilla, gentle oak spice and a faint caramel warmth. It sits at just under 41 percent ABV and drinks almost like a bridge between gin and a light whisky, which makes it an interesting choice neat or as the base of a richer, barrel aged Negroni.

Price: ₹9,790 approx

6 O'Clock Gin, Brunel Edition

6 O'Clock is made by Bramley & Gage, a family distillery that started out on a fruit farm in Devon before moving into gin. The name itself comes from a family tradition rather than any naval custom, tracing back to a great grandfather who kept a routine evening gin and tonic at six o'clock sharp, a habit that eventually gave the whole range its name.

The Brunel Edition, the version on shelves here, is named after the Victorian engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel and takes the brand's usual botanical mix of juniper, coriander and elderflower and adds green cardamom, nutmeg, cumin and cassia, pushing the ABV up to 50 percent. The result is a noticeably spicier, more assertive gin than the standard bottling, and it holds up particularly well in a gin and tonic finished with a slice of fresh ginger.

Price: ₹7,250 approx

Bertha's Revenge Gin

This one comes with arguably the best story on the list. Bertha's Revenge is made by Ballyvolane House Spirits in County Cork, Ireland, and named after a real cow, a Droimeann breed animal from the village of Sneem who lived to nearly 49, gave birth to 39 calves over her lifetime and earned herself an entry in the Guinness Book of Records before she died on New Year's Eve in 1993.

The gin honours her in an unusual way. Instead of using standard grain spirit, the distillers base it on whey alcohol, a byproduct of local dairy farming that is fermented, distilled and then redistilled with eighteen botanicals including sweet woodruff, cumin, clove and almond. The whey base is what gives the finished gin, bottled at 42 percent ABV, its notably smooth, almost creamy texture, something that sets it apart from nearly every other gin on the market.

Price: Around ₹6,900

The Botanist Hebridean Strength Gin

If the original Botanist Islay Dry Gin is already a favourite of yours, this travel retail exclusive is worth trading up to. It is made at Bruichladdich Distillery on Islay using the same signature blend of twenty two wild, hand foraged island botanicals as the standard bottling, but distilled and blended to a higher strength of 51.5 percent ABV.

That extra proof brings out more of the natural oils in the botanicals, giving the gin a noticeably thicker, more viscous texture and a bolder, more intense flavour built around sweet juniper, cassia and coriander, with wild thyme and sweet gale coming through underneath. It holds its shape well against ice and tonic, which makes it a genuinely useful gin to have on hand rather than just a novelty travel buy.

Price: ₹6,670 approx

Cherrapunji Eastern Craft Gin, with Sohiong Berries

The lone Indian entry here is also one of the more thoughtfully made. Cherrapunji Gin is distilled by Raincheck Earth in Shillong, founded by Mayukh Hazarika, who grew up in Meghalaya and returned home after a career in consumer marketing to build the brand. Its defining choice is water. Rather than drawing from groundwater, the distillery harvests rainwater from Cherrapunji and neighbouring Mawsynram, among the wettest places on the planet, partly as a nod to the irony that these same hills often face water shortages in the dry season.

The gin is built on twelve native botanicals, including GI tagged Khasi mandarin and Assam's Kaji Nemu lemon, and this particular expression adds Sohiong berries, a wild dark cherry that grows in the Khasi hills for a brief six week window each September. The result is a gin with a genuinely local identity, fruity and citrus forward rather than juniper heavy, sold in a reusable steel bottle carrying local artwork.

Price: ₹6,010 approx

Hendrick's Amazonia Gin

The most familiar name on this list also comes with the most surprising twist. Hendrick's built its reputation on the pairing of cucumber and rose, but Amazonia pushes that base in a completely different direction. The gin was inspired by a trip master distiller Lesley Gracie took into the Venezuelan Amazon in 2013 with explorer Charles Brewer-Carías, trekking through the rainforest to sample local plants by rubbing leaves between her hands and smelling them raw, the same rough method distillers use to judge a botanical before it ever touches a still.

That trip left enough of an impression that when Hendrick's built its distillery in Girvan, Scotland in 2018, Gracie insisted on adding a tropical hothouse to grow rainforest botanicals on site. Amazonia keeps the familiar cucumber and rose backbone but layers in pineapple, passionfruit and guava, dialling down the more medicinal, herbal notes typical of the original. Bottled at 43.4 percent ABV, it is bright, fruity and built for long summer drinks rather than a classic Martini, and part of the proceeds from every bottle goes toward tree planting through the charity One Tree Planted.

Price: ₹5,350 approx

Note: All the gin prices listed above have been sourced from the official Delhi Duty Free price list and reflect the latest available rates for 2026. However, airport retail gin prices are subject to change, so it's always a good idea to check the latest rates before making a purchase.