Best Non-Alcoholic French 75s

A French 75 should feel sharp, sparkling, and a little elegant — not like lemonade topped with bubbles.

How AFSips approaches mocktail pages

AFSips builds these pages from current bottle and mixer lineups, classic drink structure, and the same question that matters once the glass is poured: would you actually want a second one?

Once the gin and sparkling wine are gone, structure matters even more. The best non-alcoholic versions need a botanical bottle with enough snap and a sparkling wine or soda with a finish dry enough to keep the drink from going soft.

Seedlip, Monday Gin, and a few lighter aperitif-adjacent bottles can all work here, but the proportions matter a lot. This drink falls apart quickly when it gets too sweet.

What helps on this page

A dry sparkling bottle and a gin-style base matter more than any garnish ever will on this drink.

Start drier than you think

French 75s are better when the sparkling component finishes fairly dry. French Bloom Le Blanc, Surely Brut, and other brisk NA sparklers make more sense here than bottles that lean juicy or obviously sweet.

If the bubbles are too soft or fruity, the drink starts drifting into brunch punch territory.

Use a gin-style bottle with snap

Monday Gin and Seedlip Grove or Garden can work depending on the direction you want. Monday gives the drink more obvious gin shape. Seedlip can make it feel lighter and more citrus-herbal.

What matters is keeping enough botanical edge that the lemon and bubbles do not wash the base away.

This drink should stay lean

Use less sugar than you think. In a non-alcoholic French 75, extra sweetness is usually the first thing that makes the drink feel wrong.

Good sparkling, cold glassware, and a restrained hand with citrus often matter more than adding anything else.

Bottom line

The best non-alcoholic French 75s feel bright, dry, and celebratory. Once they get sweet or soft, they stop feeling like a French 75 at all.