Buffalo Trace Distillery in Frankfort, Kentucky is one of the most decorated and most hunted names in American whiskey. The flagship Buffalo Trace Kentucky Straight Bourbon is the affordable, everyday face of a distillery that also produces some of the most chased bottles on the secondary market. If you care about bourbon, this brand sits at the center of the conversation.
About Buffalo Trace
The distillery traces its lineage back to the late 18th century and operates continuously on a single site on the banks of the Kentucky River. Buffalo Trace runs multiple mash bills under one roof, and the flagship bourbon uses the distillery's well-known rye-recipe Mash Bill #1, the same foundation behind Eagle Rare, Stagg and George T. Stagg. It is a rye-recipe bourbon, not a wheated bourbon, which gives it that signature backbone of baking spice, brown sugar and oak.
Beyond the core label, Buffalo Trace is the home distillery for a remarkable lineup of sister brands and limited releases: Eagle Rare 10 Year, the wheated W.L. Weller range, E.H. Taylor Jr., Blanton's Single Barrel, Sazerac Rye and the annual Buffalo Trace Antique Collection. Many of these are tightly allocated, which means release dates, pricing and availability shift from market to market.
The distillery's experimental program and Single Oak Project have also shaped how the industry thinks about barrel management, mash bills and warehouse placement, and that attention to detail shows up in every tier of the portfolio.
What to expect
- Core Buffalo Trace Bourbon: caramel, vanilla, brown sugar, gentle oak and a clean finish at 90 proof
- Rye-recipe mash bill (Mash Bill #1) across the flagship and Eagle Rare family
- Allocated sister labels including W.L. Weller, E.H. Taylor, Eagle Rare 17, George T. Stagg and the Antique Collection
- Strong value at the entry tier and serious collector interest at the top
- Batch-to-batch consistency on the flagship; significant variation and demand at the allocated tier
- Bottle designs that have become instantly recognizable on any back bar
Buying guide
Where to start: the standard Buffalo Trace Kentucky Straight Bourbon is one of the best-value everyday bourbons in the category and a sensible first pour for anyone new to the brand. From there, Eagle Rare 10 Year is the logical step up for sipping, and Buffalo Trace Single Barrel picks align well with cocktail-forward bars.
Collector bottles: the Antique Collection (George T. Stagg, William Larue Weller, Thomas H. Handy, Eagle Rare 17, Sazerac 18), E.H. Taylor limited editions and the scarcer Weller expressions are genuinely allocated. Pricing and availability fluctuate, and we surface what we can ship when listings go live. Assume nothing is standing inventory at that tier.
Frequently asked questions
Is Buffalo Trace bourbon hard to find?
The standard flagship comes and goes in waves but is broadly available. The Antique Collection, Eagle Rare 17, William Larue Weller and most E.H. Taylor releases are allocated and rarely sit on a shelf for long.
Is Buffalo Trace a wheated bourbon?
No. The flagship Buffalo Trace uses a rye-recipe mash bill. The distillery's wheated bourbon is bottled under the Weller and Pappy Van Winkle labels, which use a different mash bill from the same site.
How does Buffalo Trace compare to Eagle Rare?
They share the same mash bill family. Eagle Rare 10 Year is aged longer and bottled at 90 proof with more oak, leather and dried fruit, while the flagship is brighter, sweeter and more approachable for cocktails.
Is Buffalo Trace a good gift?
Yes. The flagship is a reliable gift for any bourbon drinker, and step-ups like Eagle Rare or Buffalo Trace Single Barrel private selections work well for more serious enthusiasts.
How should I store it?
Upright, out of direct sunlight, at normal room temperature. Once opened, bourbon is stable for years, though flavor will gradually shift as headspace grows.
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