TTB Labeling Requirements for Imported Spirits

The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) administers the federal labeling framework that governs every bottle of imported spirits sold in the United States. Compliance is a prerequisite for market entry — labels that fail TTB approval are grounds for shipment refusal, customs holds, and product destruction. This page maps the mandatory elements, the approval mechanics, the classification rules that determine which standards apply, and the points of friction that most frequently delay importer approvals.



Definition and Scope

TTB labeling requirements for imported spirits are the set of mandatory disclosures and approval procedures codified primarily in 27 CFR Part 5 (the Standards of Identity for Distilled Spirits) and 27 CFR Part 7 (Labeling and Advertising of Malt Beverages, though distilled spirits labeling cross-references this structure). The core instrument is the Certificate of Label Approval (COLA), which must be obtained before a labeled imported spirit may be introduced into interstate commerce.

Scope encompasses every distilled spirits product entering the United States for commercial sale — including whiskey, rum, gin, vodka, brandy, tequila, mezcal, baijiu, liqueurs, and specialty spirits. Products imported for personal use in quantities below the duty-free threshold fall outside the commercial COLA requirement, but all commercially sold product must carry an approved label regardless of production country.

The TTB's authority derives from the Federal Alcohol Administration Act of 1935 (FAA Act), codified at 27 U.S.C. §§ 201–219a. The FAA Act prohibits misleading labeling and requires that consumers receive accurate information about identity, age, and origin.

For a broader orientation to the import compliance landscape, the regulatory context for global spirits covers the interplay between TTB, CBP (U.S. Customs and Border Protection), and state alcohol control boards.


Core Mechanics or Structure

Mandatory Label Elements

Under 27 CFR Part 5, every imported spirits label must carry six mandatory disclosure elements:

  1. Brand name — the name under which the product is sold, which may not be misleading as to origin or class.
  2. Class and type designation — a precise, TTB-defined category (e.g., "Scotch Whisky," "Silver Tequila," "Cognac") that determines permissible ingredients, production methods, and minimum age statements.
  3. Country of origin — the country where the spirits were produced. "Product of Scotland," "Product of Mexico," etc.
  4. Alcohol content — expressed as percent alcohol by volume (ABV). Proof labeling is optional but must be accurate if used (proof equals twice the ABV percentage).
  5. Net contents — stated in metric units (milliliters or liters). The standard 750 mL bottle is the most common format; the TTB recognizes specific standard metric sizes.
  6. Name and address of the importer — the U.S. importer of record must appear on the label.

Certificate of Label Approval (COLA)

The COLA is issued through TTB's online portal, myTTB, formerly known as the Permits Online system. Importers submit a digital image of the proposed label with supporting documentation. TTB reviews for compliance with the class and type standards, mandatory element completeness, and prohibited practices (false or misleading statements, certain health claims). A COLA, once issued, carries a unique TTB ID number that appears on the approved label record — this number is traceable in the public COLA Registry.

Label Exemption Certificates

Under 27 CFR § 5.55, a label exemption (rather than a full COLA) may be issued for spirits sold entirely within a single state, for experimental products, or under other narrow conditions. Imported spirits rarely qualify for exemptions because they inherently enter interstate commerce at the port of entry.


Causal Relationships or Drivers

The TTB labeling regime exists because of documented pre-Prohibition and post-Prohibition market conditions in which misrepresentation of spirit identity — false age statements, fictitious geographical origins, inflated alcohol content — was widespread. The FAA Act of 1935 was a direct legislative response to those conditions.

Three structural pressures keep the system strict:

Trade agreement obligations — Bilateral and multilateral agreements, including the U.S.–EU Mutual Recognition Agreement on spirits and the USMCA provisions covering tequila and mezcal, bind the TTB to enforce origin-linked class designations. A bottle labeled "Cognac" that does not originate from the Cognac appellation in France violates both TTB standards and treaty commitments. The geographical indications for spirits framework explains the treaty architecture in detail.

Revenue accountability — TTB collects federal excise tax on distilled spirits. Accurate proof and volume declarations on labels tie directly to tax liability calculations. Under 27 U.S.C. § 211, misrepresentation of alcohol content can constitute a federal offense.

Consumer protection mandate — The FAA Act explicitly prohibits practices that tend to create a misleading impression of a product's age, origin, identity, or quality. The TTB's Industry Circular 2013-1 on non-traditional packaging reinforces that even container shapes and closure types can trigger labeling review if they imply a particular identity.


Classification Boundaries

The class and type system in 27 CFR Part 5 creates the classification architecture that determines which production and labeling rules apply. Key boundaries for imported spirits include:

Products that do not fit an established class and type are labeled as "Distilled Spirits Specialty" with a statement of composition.


Tradeoffs and Tensions

Flexibility vs. standardization — The TTB's class and type system offers clarity but creates friction for innovative products. A Japanese whisky produced partly from rice may not meet the grain-only definition cleanly, forcing either a specialty designation or reformulation. Producers from emerging spirits categories — Korean soju, Chinese baijiu — frequently navigate the specialty category because no TTB-defined class exists for those products. The baijiu and Asian spirits overview addresses these classification challenges.

Country-of-origin labeling vs. blended products — Spirits blended from distillate of multiple origins present a compliance challenge. If a rum is blended in the U.S. from Caribbean and South American distillates, country-of-origin attribution becomes complex. TTB policy requires labeling the country where the spirit was produced (distilled), not where it was blended or bottled.

Importer-of-record liability — The U.S. importer bears legal responsibility for COLA compliance, even when labels are designed by foreign producers. Misaligned communication between foreign producer and domestic importer is a documented source of rejections and delays.

State overlay — TTB approval is a federal floor, not a ceiling. Individual state alcohol control boards may impose additional labeling requirements — front-label health warnings in specific states, for example — that sit on top of TTB mandates. An approved COLA does not guarantee state-level authorization.


Common Misconceptions

Misconception: A COLA approval means the product can be sold anywhere in the U.S.
TTB COLA approval establishes federal compliance only. State distribution rights require separate permits through each state's alcohol beverage control authority. All 50 states maintain independent licensing systems. The spirits distribution channels in the U.S. page maps these state-level requirements.

Misconception: The importer name on the label must be the brand owner.
False. The mandatory element is the U.S. importer of record — the licensed entity responsible for customs clearance and federal compliance. That entity may be a third-party logistics importer entirely separate from the brand owner.

Misconception: Proof and ABV are interchangeable on labels.
They are mathematically related (proof = 2 × ABV) but carry distinct regulatory treatment. ABV expression is mandatory; proof is optional. If both appear on the same label, they must be mathematically consistent. A label showing "80 Proof" but "45% ABV" would constitute an inconsistency that can generate a COLA rejection.

Misconception: Age statements are always required for aged spirits.
Age statements are required only when a spirits class definition mandates them (e.g., straight bourbon whiskey aged less than 4 years must carry an age statement under 27 CFR § 5.74) or when an age claim is made voluntarily. A 12-year Scotch that chooses not to display an age statement is not in violation, but if any age is stated, it must reflect the youngest component in the blend.

Misconception: Foreign label approval (e.g., EU registration) substitutes for COLA.
No foreign approval substitutes for a U.S. COLA. The TTB operates a self-contained approval system. The index of this site provides an orientation to the full regulatory landscape covered across this reference collection.


Checklist or Steps

The following sequence describes the label approval process as structured by TTB rules. This is a procedural map, not legal guidance.

Phase 1 — Pre-Submission Preparation
- Confirm the product's class and type under 27 CFR Part 5 definitions
- Verify country of origin documentation (Certificate of Age and Origin where applicable — required for Scotch, Irish, Canadian, and other designated whisky types)
- Confirm the U.S. importer holds a valid TTB Importer's Basic Permit under 27 U.S.C. § 204

Phase 2 — Label Design Review
- Include all 6 mandatory elements (brand name, class/type, country of origin, ABV, net contents, importer name/address)
- Verify no prohibited statements appear (health claims, misleading origin terms, false age representations)
- Confirm metric net content sizing matches TTB-authorized standard sizes

Phase 3 — COLA Application via myTTB
- Register or log into myTTB portal
- Submit label image in required resolution (minimum 72 dpi; TTB recommends 300 dpi for clarity)
- Complete the application form specifying product type, alcohol content, and production country
- Pay the applicable filing fee (COLA applications for distilled spirits carry no TTB filing fee as of the current fee schedule — TTB does not charge for COLA review per 27 CFR § 5.56)

Phase 4 — TTB Review
- Standard review time: TTB targets 5 business days for non-complex applications; complex applications may take 30+ days
- Respond to any TTB requests for additional information within the specified window (typically 30 days) or the application lapses

Phase 5 — Post-Approval
- Retain COLA documentation; the COLA number must be on file for customs clearance
- Provide COLA copy to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) at port of entry
- Any material label change (new brand name, different ABV, class change) requires a new COLA application


Reference Table or Matrix

TTB Mandatory Label Elements by Requirement Type

Element Required? Notes
Brand Name Mandatory Must not be misleading as to origin or identity
Class and Type Designation Mandatory Must match 27 CFR Part 5 definitions; specialty products require composition statement
Country of Origin Mandatory Country of distillation, not blending or bottling
Alcohol Content (ABV) Mandatory Minimum/maximum ABV varies by class; must be within ±0.3% of stated value
Net Contents Mandatory Metric units; must match a TTB-authorized standard size
Importer Name and Address Mandatory Must be U.S. licensed importer of record
Age Statement Conditional Mandatory if class requires it or if voluntarily stated; must reflect youngest component
Proof Optional If stated, must equal exactly 2 × ABV
Health Warning Statement Mandatory (Federal) Required under the Alcoholic Beverage Labeling Act of 1988 (27 U.S.C. § 215); applies to all alcohol products including imports

Selected Class and Type Origin Requirements

Designation Required Country/Region Governing Instrument
Scotch Whisky Scotland Scotch Whisky Regulations 2009 (UK); enforced by TTB via FAA Act
Irish Whiskey Ireland (Republic or Northern Ireland) Irish Whiskey Technical File; enforced by TTB
Tequila Mexico (designated states) NOM-006-SCFI; USMCA provisions
Mezcal Mexico (designated states) NOM-070-SCFI; USMCA provisions
Cognac Cognac AOC, France EU Regulation 110/2008; U.S.–EU Mutual Recognition Agreement
Armagnac Armagnac AOC, France EU Regulation 110/2008; U.S.–EU Mutual Recognition Agreement
Canadian Whisky Canada 27 CFR § 5.22(b)(4)
Pisco (Peruvian) Peru U.S.–Peru Trade Promotion Agreement

References