Best Australian Non-Alcoholic Drinks
Australian no-alcohol drinks often land in a fresher, more aromatic lane: native fruit, pepperberry, wattleseed, citrus, river mint, and bush botanicals that read brighter than the heavier amaro-style bottles from Europe.
The best Australian options usually lean into native botanicals
If you want a sense of what makes Australian no-alcohol drinks different, start with the botanicals. The stronger brands do not just copy London dry gin or Italian aperitivo formulas. They bring in native fruit, pepperberry, wattleseed, river mint, and bush-citrus notes that make the drinks smell and drink differently from the usual zero-proof shelf.
Altina is one of the clearest examples. Its bottles lean into combinations like native Australian ingredients, spice, and fruit in ways that feel built for a dinner table or long glass, not just a fake G&T. Brunswick Aces takes a more gin-adjacent route, but still with a distinctly Australian botanical identity. And NON often pushes further into food-pairing territory, with bottles that behave more like acid-driven aperitif drinks than spirit replacements.
This is a category for people who like aroma
Australian bottles often make their case on the nose first. You get herbs, citrus oils, spice, saline edges, fruit skins, and a little bitterness rather than heavy sweetness. That makes them especially good with ice, soda, tonic, or food, and a little harder to love if what you want is something thick and rich. The point here is usually lift and shape, not creaminess.
What to buy first
If you are curious about the category, start with a bottle that clearly lists its botanicals and is meant to be mixed long. That gives you the best chance of tasting what makes Australian no-alcohol drinks distinct instead of flattening everything into one vague “botanical” note.
Bottom line
The best Australian non-alcoholic drinks are bright, aromatic, and a little more adventurous with herbs and native ingredients than many American or European bottles. If you like botanical drinks with some edge and lift, this is a good region to browse.
Where to shop
Use the link below to browse the Australian options and see which bottle style appeals more: brighter aperitif drinks, gin-adjacent bottles, or something more food-pairing friendly.
