Gin - Digital Distiller

English Gin

England has more than 200 gin distilleries producing styles that range from crisp London Dry to boldly botanical contemporary craft expressions. Digital Distiller stocks a curated selection of independent English gins from producers who deserve a wider audience.

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England has more than 200 gin distilleries, producing some of the most inventive craft spirits in the world. From crisp, juniper-led London Dry to boldly botanical contemporary expressions, the range and originality of English craft gin is genuinely remarkable. Digital Distiller stocks a curated selection of independent English gins from producers who are harder to find than they should be.

English Gin Styles: A Quick Guide

The style of production, botanical selection, and any post-distillation treatment all shape the final character of a gin considerably. Here is what to expect from each of the main English gin styles stocked here.

London Dry The most tightly defined style. Juniper must be the dominant botanical and no artificial flavours or sweeteners can be added after distillation. Despite the name, it can be made anywhere. Crisp, dry, and built for a G&T or a martini. Browse London Dry Gins
Old Tom Lightly sweetened and slightly richer than London Dry. The original style before dry gin took over in the 19th century. Softer on the palate and excellent in cocktails such as a Tom Collins or a Ramos Gin Fizz. Browse Old Tom Gins
Navy Strength Bottled at 57% ABV or above; the strength historically required to prove the spirit had not diluted gunpowder. Bold, intense, and built for mixing. The extra strength means botanicals hold their character even in cocktails with multiple ingredients. Browse Navy Strength Gins
Contemporary Modern craft gins that go beyond traditional categories. Unusual botanicals, single-origin ingredients, experimental grain bills, or dramatic production techniques define this broad and growing style. Some of the most interesting English gins sit here. Browse All English Gins
Flavoured Gins where fruit, floral, or spiced character is the primary focus, often added via post-distillation infusion. A wide category in terms of quality and ambition, from serious craft expressions to entry-level flavoured spirits. Browse Flavoured Gins

How English Gin is Made: Two Distinct Methods

Most gin drinkers know what goes into gin but fewer know that there are two fundamentally different approaches to how those botanicals are processed. The difference has a meaningful effect on flavour.

One-Shot: All Botanicals Together The most common method. All botanicals are added to the still together, either by macerating in the base spirit overnight or by using a vapour basket above the liquid. The spirit passes through or over all the botanicals simultaneously and the resulting distillate carries the character of the full blend. This is the method used by the vast majority of English craft distilleries. The skill lies in the recipe: getting the proportions right so that no single botanical overwhelms the rest.
Separate Distillates: The Bristol Method A much rarer approach, and a historically significant one. Each botanical is distilled individually in its own dedicated batch, then the resulting distillates are blended together to create the final gin. This allows the distiller to treat each botanical on its own terms: varying maceration time, still temperature, and the point at which the cut is made. The result is a layered, precise flavour profile that is difficult to achieve any other way. Smeaton's Bristol Method Dry Gin is the finest English example of this approach, based on a recipe discovered in the Bristol Archives dating from the 1870s.

Five English Gins Worth Knowing

Five contrasting bottles that together give a good picture of what English craft gin can be. Each represents a different style, methodology, or approach to the spirit.

Gin & Distillery Style & Strength Key Botanicals Tasting Character Perfect For
Dr. Squid Gin
Pocketful of Stones, Cornwall
Contemporary
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40% Alc. Squid ink Sea buckthorn Vanilla Juniper Pours black; turns vivid pink with tonic. Savoury herbs and coastal character on the nose; tart sea buckthorn and smooth vanilla on the palate. Served in an engraved copper flask. Gifts and occasions; gin show-stoppers; those who want something genuinely different
Smeaton's Bristol Method Dry Gin
Bristol Method, England
London Dry
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45% Alc. Tuscan juniper Valencia orange Cinnamon Coriander Each botanical distilled separately and blended. Precise, layered, and exceptionally balanced: pine and heather from the juniper, vivid citrus from hand-cut oranges, warm spice from whole cinnamon bark. Rested three months before release. Serious gin drinkers; dry martini; those curious about the Bristol Method
Henstone Navy Strength Gin
Henstone Distillery, Staffordshire
Navy Strength
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57.3% Alc. Juniper Hops Barley spirit Traditional botanicals Bold and intense. The hop addition gives it an unusual, slightly bitter herbal quality that works exceptionally well in cocktails. The barley spirit base adds body and texture. Holds its character in the most demanding of serves. Cocktail mixing; bold G&T; experienced gin drinkers; navy gin fans
Witchmark Black Lime Single Origin Gin
Witchmark Distillery, England
Contemporary
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Details on product page Juniper Black lime Szechuan pepper Coriander Dark, smoky citrus from the black lime, a numbing tingle from Szechuan pepper, and a clean juniper backbone. A genuinely bold and adventurous spirit built around a single distinctive ingredient. Spice and citrus lovers; adventurous drinkers; unusual gift
The Lakes Classic Gin
The Lakes Distillery, Cumbria
London Dry
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46% Alc. Juniper Black pepper Orange peel Clean and classically structured. Oily orange citrus and piney juniper lead, with a distinctive black pepper finish. Botanicals are steeped overnight and blended with water sourced from the Lake District National Park. Classic G&T; London Dry fans; everyday sipping; those who appreciate provenance
Alex Murray, founder of Digital Distiller Alex's English Gin Recommendations If you want to understand what makes English craft gin genuinely interesting, start with Smeaton's: the Bristol Method produces something with a precision and layered complexity that is hard to achieve any other way. For sheer drama and gift appeal, Dr. Squid from Pocketful of Stones is unmatched. Henstone Navy Strength is the one to reach for if you are serious about cocktails. Witchmark Black Lime is for drinkers who want to be genuinely surprised. The Lakes Classic Gin is the confident, every-occasion bottle that delivers reliably in a G&T.

Frequently Asked Questions About English Gin

What is English gin?

English gin is gin produced in England. While styles such as London Dry can legally be made anywhere in the world, English craft gins typically emphasise local botanicals, small-batch production, and a strong sense of provenance. England has more than 200 active gin distilleries, spanning every style from classic London Dry to adventurous contemporary expressions built around single-origin ingredients.

What makes English gin different from other gins?

English craft distilleries are increasingly defined by their use of locally sourced and single-origin botanicals, grain-to-glass production, and a willingness to experiment beyond traditional recipes. Many grow or forage their own ingredients, giving their gins a genuine sense of place. The freedom to work outside the strict rules that govern some other spirits categories has encouraged a level of creativity that makes the English craft gin category one of the most diverse in the world.

What is the difference between London Dry gin and other styles?

London Dry is the most tightly defined gin style: juniper must be the dominant botanical, no artificial flavours or colours can be added after distillation, and only a small amount of water is permitted post-distillation to adjust strength. Other styles have more flexibility. Old Tom is lightly sweetened. Flavoured gins can include fruit or botanical infusions after distillation. Navy Strength gins are bottled at 57% ABV or above. Contemporary gins may use entirely unconventional botanicals and production methods that fall outside any traditional category.

Which English gin should I try first?

It depends on what you enjoy. For a clean, classic introduction, The Lakes Classic Gin is a well-made London Dry with real Lake District provenance. For something with more complexity and a unique backstory, Smeaton's Bristol Method Dry Gin is exceptional. For sheer drama and gift appeal, Dr. Squid Gin is unlike anything else on the market. Our English Gin Tasting Sets are also a good way to try several styles before committing to a full bottle.

Is English gin the same as London Dry gin?

No. London Dry is a production style that can legally be made anywhere in the world; it is not a geographical indicator. English gin refers specifically to gin made in England, and can be produced in any style, including London Dry, Old Tom, Navy Strength, or contemporary. Most craft gins in our range are English by origin but not all are London Dry by production method.

What tonic goes best with English craft gin?

Match the tonic to the gin's dominant character. For juniper-forward London Dry styles, a classic Indian tonic lets the botanicals speak. For more floral or delicate contemporary gins, a light Mediterranean or elderflower tonic avoids overpowering the spirit. For Navy Strength gins, a full-flavoured tonic can hold its own against the higher ABV. As a general principle: the more characterful the gin, the lighter the tonic should be.

Prefer to explore before committing to a full bottle? Our English Gin Tasting Sets let you try several styles side by side. Or browse our English Gin Bestsellers for the most popular bottles in the range.