BrewDog Non-Alcoholic Beer Review

The BrewDog AF lineup, what the beers actually taste like, and which cans are worth starting with.

How AFSips approaches reviews AFSips writes these reviews from the brand’s current alcohol-free range, tasting notes, style descriptions, and the question that comes up fastest with NA beer: which cans would you actually stock again?

BrewDog’s alcohol-free beers still come with the brewery’s usual personality: hop-forward, loud, and a little less interested in pleasing everyone. The official AF range now includes Punk AF, Hazy AF, Lost AF, Wingman AF, and mixed packs, with Nanny State still part of the wider conversation around the brand’s non-alcoholic side. So this is not one beer. It is several distinct bets on what drinkers might want from alcohol-free craft beer.

That is also why BrewDog tends to split opinion more than the safer middle of the category. If you like hop aroma, bitterness, tropical fruit notes, and beers that still announce themselves, there is something here for you. If you want the quietest, least demanding NA beer possible, this is probably not where you start.

Where to shop

Use the ProofNoMore link for a brand search first. Amazon is the fallback if you want wider marketplace options.

The cans that matter most

Punk AF is the clearest flagship. BrewDog describes juicy tropical fruit, grassy pine, and a solid malt baseline, and that is the right way to think about it. This is the can for people who still want an IPA feel, not just the absence of alcohol.

Hazy AF leans juicier and softer. The official notes point to tropical fruit, grassy notes, oats, and wheat, which is why it lands more like a plush hazy beer than a bitter IPA.

Lost AF is the lighter lager-style option, with zingy citrus, herbal notes, and biscuity malt. If Punk AF and Hazy AF feel too loud, Lost AF is the easier entry point.

Wingman AF brings peach, pineapple, and tropical-fruit energy into a session IPA lane. It is for people who like fruit-forward hop character and do not mind a beer that reads more modern than classic.

Nanny State, where you can still find it, remains the more bitter, more old-school craft choice, with a stronger bitter backbone than the fruitier cans.

Who BrewDog is for

BrewDog is a better match for drinkers who still want style-specific beer language in their NA cans. IPA people, hazy IPA people, and drinkers who like bitterness usually have an easier time here than people who just want a neutral substitute for whatever is in the cooler.

Bottom line

BrewDog’s AF range is worth it when you want non-alcoholic beer with a little swagger left in it. Start with Punk AF if you want the flagship, Hazy AF if you want softer tropical hop character, or Lost AF if you want a straighter lager lane.