Seedlip vs Lyre’s Gin Alternatives

Seedlip and Lyre’s both show up in zero-proof bars, but they are not trying to do the same thing.

Updated May 9, 2026 by AFSips.

How AFSips reviews drinks: We look at the current lineup, published product notes, typical serving style, and how the drink actually behaves once it is poured with ice, tonic, citrus, food, or a real home-bar setup. Read more about our review approach.

Quick picks

Choose Seedlip if

You want botanical drinks

Seedlip is better for herb, citrus, spice, and garden-style serves.

Choose Lyre’s if

You want familiar cocktail shapes

Lyre’s is easier for G&Ts, Collins, Negroni-style drinks, and classic bar recipes.

Buy both if

You build different drinks

Seedlip can handle freshness; Lyre’s can handle more direct spirit replacement moments.

Seedlip and Lyre’s are often mentioned together because they are two of the best-known names in non-alcoholic spirits. But in the glass, they solve different problems.

Seedlip is more botanical. Garden 108 leans green with peas, rosemary, thyme, and spearmint. Grove 42 is citrus-led with orange, lemon, ginger, lemongrass, and Japanese sansho peppercorn. Spice 94 brings allspice, cardamom, citrus, and a longer bitter finish.

Lyre’s is more direct about familiar cocktail templates. Dry London Spirit goes after the London-dry lane with juniper, citrus, orange blossom, and pepper-berry. The broader Lyre’s lineup also makes it easier to build classic drinks because it includes Italian Orange, Italian Spritz, Classico, and other bar-cart substitutes.

For G&Ts

Lyre’s Dry London Spirit is the more obvious G&T bottle if you want a familiar gin direction. Seedlip Grove 42 makes a brighter citrus tonic, while Garden 108 makes a green, cucumber-and-herb version.

For martinis

Neither bottle behaves exactly like gin in a martini, but Lyre’s is the easier first try if you want a more direct gin reference. Seedlip Garden 108 makes sense when you are happy with a chilled botanical drink that uses cucumber, lemon, or a tiny olive-brine accent.

For mixed zero-proof cocktails

Seedlip shines when the drink is built around freshness, citrus, herbs, and soda. Lyre’s is better when you want to borrow the shape of a classic cocktail and keep the drink familiar.

Bottom line

Buy Seedlip if you want botanical drinks that do not need to imitate gin. Buy Lyre’s if you want a more recognizable cocktail toolkit.

Compare both lineups

These bottles make the most sense when you choose by drink style rather than brand name alone.