Wine, once the unofficial punctuation mark of long dinners and unhurried conversations, is slowly falling out of favor — and not just because of wellness warnings or tighter wallets. Increasingly, the decline says more about how young people live now than what they choose to drink.
Across developed markets, alcohol consumption has been sliding for years, but wine has taken a sharper hit than beer or spirits. Industry data shows Gen Z is not abandoning alcohol altogether. They are simply skipping wine. Richard Halstead of drinks-data firm IWSR noted there is “little evidence Gen Z is giving up alcohol entirely,” pointing out that beer and spirits continue to grow while wine declines across all price points.
The reason, some argue, is social — not medical. Wine thrives on shared time: meals that linger, tables that stretch into conversation. Those moments are becoming rarer. As more people live alone and socialize through screens, the rituals wine depends on are slowly eroding. The Economist recently described the trend as a “fraying of the social fabric,” a shift away from intimate gatherings toward quicker, more solitary consumption.
Statistics reinforce the mood. Single-person households continue to rise globally, while studies show young adults reporting record levels of loneliness. In Australia, more than two in five people aged 15 to 25 say they feel lonely, often citing fewer opportunities to sit down, talk, and simply be together. “Wine’s changing place in people’s lives reflects broader consumer and social trends rather than any single factor,” said Peter Bailey of Wine Australia.
For the wine industry, the consequences are tangible. Domestic Australian wine sales fell 3 percent last financial year, now well below the decade average, while export markets have softened. Yet Bailey stressed that younger consumers are “not abandoning wine entirely,” noting they are engaging with it differently. Wine, once a daily habit, has become an occasion — and the industry’s future may depend on whether those occasions can still be created.