Bottle guide

Ready-to-Drink Cocktails

Ready to drink 8 products

Cans and bottles that already feel like a finished drink without mixing.

What to look for

Category fit / Drink fit / Review signals

Category guides help you compare bottles by the job they need to do: mixing, sipping, replacing a familiar drink, or making a simple pour feel complete.

How to choose

Use these before you buy, especially when a few bottles sound similar.

1 Start with the drink or occasion you are replacing.
2 Check sweetness, body, and finish before buying.
3 Use community reviews to see whether it works better for sipping or mixing.

Common mistakes

Most disappointing bottles fail here, not at the category label.

1 Buying the category label without checking the actual flavor notes.
2 Expecting a neat pour to behave like a cocktail build.
3 Ignoring reviews from people using the bottle the same way you plan to.

Recommended products

Compare bottles that fit this style, occasion, or flavor profile. Open a bottle to read or leave reviews.

Submit a missing bottle

Start here

A first pass before you compare every bottle on the shelf.

For ready-to-drink cocktails, start by comparing Blood Orange Elderflower Mimosa, Curious Cocktail Club, Phony White Negroni. Open the bottle that sounds closest to your pour, then use reviews and ABV notes to avoid anything too sweet, too thin, or not strict enough for you.

Mingle Mocktails
Blood Orange Elderflower Mimosa
RTD · 0.0%

Good approachable RTD for brunch and shower traffic.

1 offer
Curious Elixirs
Curious Cocktail Club
RTD / Functional · 0.0%

Easy RTD landing-page inclusion with multiple flavor references.

1 offer
St. Agrestis
Phony White Negroni
RTD / Aperitif Cocktail · 0.0%

Great second product once Phony Negroni is live.

1 offer
The Pathfinder
The Pathfinder Negroni
RTD · <0.5%

Great RTD extension once the core Pathfinder page exists.

1 offer
St. Agrestis
Phony Negroni
Ready-to-drink cocktail · 0.0%

Use when the ritual is a bitter chilled serve with no mixing.

1 offer
Ghia
Le Spritz
Ready-to-drink spritz · 0.0%

Use when convenience matters but the drink still needs bitterness.

0 offers
Ritual Zero Proof
Agave Spirit Alternative
Spirit Alternative · 0.0%

Useful for Margarita and Paloma seekers who want a cocktail-first substitute.

1 offer
Lyre's
Italian Orange
Aperitif · <0.5%

Easy aperitif page inclusion because Lyre's has strong cocktail archetype coverage.

0 offers

Search by the pour

Try these when you know the drink, flavor, or moment better than the category name.

How to compare options

Start with the drinking experience, then move into product pages for reviews, offers, and related guides.

Style Focus on category and flavor direction first so the bottle matches the drink you want to replace.
Use Look for whether a bottle works better for sipping, mixing, or a specific cocktail profile.
Proof Check the ABV type and related notes so you know whether you are buying a strict 0.0 option.

Before you choose a bottle

Use these checks when a few options look close.

Where should I start for ready-to-drink cocktails?

Start with Blood Orange Elderflower Mimosa, Curious Cocktail Club, Phony White Negroni, then open the bottle that sounds closest to the drink or moment you have in mind.

How should I choose between close options?

Choose by flavor first, then occasion. Bitter, botanical, dry, smoky, sparkling, and cocktail-ready bottles solve different problems.

Should I start with the classic drink?

If you are replacing a cocktail, yes. The classic reference helps you know what needs to survive in the zero-proof version.

Are all of these strict 0.0?

Not always. Check the ABV label on each card before you buy, especially if trace alcohol is a hard no for you.