Distillery

Rosebank Whisky Auction Analysis & Price Trends

Rosebank distillery
Distillery facts, sourced from public records.
Country Scotland
Founded 1840
Status Closed
Website https://rosebank.com
Owner Ian Macleod Distillers Ltd
Wash stills N/A
Spirit stills N/A
WhiskyBase rating 86.97

The Rosebank distillery is a non-existent distillery, the production at which was stopped in 1993. The buildings were converted into a residential and office complexes after 2002.

Production capacity at the time of closure was 560 thousand liters of alcohol per year. A triple distillation, which is a characteristic of Lowland, was used.

There were plans to launch a new distillery in Falkirka that would be using original equipment from Rosebank in 2008; however, during the New Year holidays, distillation cubes with other equipment were stolen and sold for scrap.

Rosebank whisky has a high demand among collectors and investors.

The following releases with potential for price growth could be highlighted:

Aromatic, with suggestions of clover and camomile. Romantic. A whisky for lovers.

— Michael Jackson

Notable Rosebank bottles

Bottles worth a closer look for collectors and investors, for their potential value and rarity.

Rosebank 1990 - 30 years old - Release 1

Rosebank 1990 - 30 years old - Release 1 - 700 ml / 48.6%

avg. price change per year · 2020–2026
avg. price vs. first sale · Nov. 2020
Rosebank 1981 - 25 Year Old - Diageo Special Releases 2007

Rosebank 1981 - 25 Year Old - Diageo Special Releases 2007 - 700 ml / 61.4%

avg. price change per year · 2008–2026
avg. price vs. first sale · July 2008
Rosebank 21 Years Old - Edition 1 - True Love

Rosebank 21 Years Old - Edition 1 - True Love - The Roses - 700 ml / 55.1%

avg. price change per year · 2017–2025
avg. price vs. first sale · Feb. 2017
Rosebank 1981 - 20 Years old - Rare Malts Selection

Rosebank 1981 - 20 Years old - Rare Malts Selection - 700 ml / 62.3%

avg. price change per year · 2008–2026
avg. price vs. first sale · Jan. 2008

Explore Rosebank lots from online auctions

Over 13632 sold and 18 live Rosebank lots in our database. Use the market history to:

  • Compare asking prices with recorded auction results.
  • Find live bottles and choose where to bid.
  • Estimate what a bottle may be worth before buying or selling.

Sign up for full access to sales history, live lots and more.

Top 10 Rosebank lots sold at auction

The most expensive Rosebank bottles sold, by hammer price, across the auctions we track. Prices are in £ by default — click a price to see € and $.


Live Rosebank lots on Catawiki

Rosebank bottles currently open for bidding at the Catawiki whisky auction. The dot marks the closing time; it turns red on the day a lot ends.

Top 20 Rosebank bottles at online shops

Prefer to buy outright rather than bid? These are current retail offers for Rosebank from online shops — compare them and pick the best one. Prices are in £ by default; click a price to see € and $.

Shop Item Details Price Buy
The Whisky Exchange Rosebank 21 Year Old True Love - 70cl / 55.1%

£ 12000.0

Buy it
The Whisky Exchange SMWS 25.4 (Rosebank) 1978 13 Year Old Bot.1991 Sherry Cask - 75cl / 58.9%

£ 7500.0

Buy it
The Whisky Exchange Rosebank 21 Year Old Fascination - 70cl / 49.5%

£ 3500.0

Buy it
Hard To Find Whisky Rosebank (Silent) - Release #1 Single Malt Scotch 1990 30 Year Old - 70Cl | 48.6%

£ 3499.95

Buy it
Hard To Find Whisky Rosebank (Silent) - Release #1 - 1990 30 Year Old - 70Cl | 48.6%

£ 3499.95

Buy it
The Whisky Exchange Rosebank 21 Year Old Fascination - 70cl / 49.5%

£ 3000.0

Buy it
The Whisky Barrel Rosebank 22 Year Old 1992 Old & Rare Platinum - 70cl / 51.4%

£ 2500.0

Buy it
The Whisky Barrel Rosebank 21 Year Old 1992 Old & Rare - 70cl / 52.3%

£ 2500.0

Buy it
The Whisky Exchange Rosebank 1981 / 25 Year Old Lowland Single Malt Scotch Whisky - 70cl / 61.4%

£ 2500.0

Buy it
The Whisky Barrel Rosebank 21 Year Old 1992 Director's Cut - Cask: #10146 - 70cl / 53.8%

£ 2500.0

Buy it
Royal Mile Whiskies Rosebank 1981 Flora and Fauna 63.9% 70cl

£ 2500.0

Buy it
The Whisky Exchange Rosebank 12 Year Old / Bot.1980s / Peck Lowland Whisky - 75cl / 43% / Peck

£ 2500.0

Buy it
Hard To Find Whisky Rosebank (Silent) - Release #2 Single Malt Scotch 1990 31 Year Old - 70Cl | 48.1%

£ 2499.95

Buy it
Hard To Find Whisky Rosebank (Silent) - Connoisseurs Choice - Single Cask #2122 1991 31 Year Old - 70Cl | 53.5%

£ 2199.95

Buy it
The Whisky Shop Connoisseurs Choice Rosebank 1991 31 Year Old #2122 - 70cl 53.5% abv Scotch Whisky Single Malt Lowland

£ 2195.0

Buy it

The chart of monthly trade volumes of the Rosebank distillery. The chart is in direct proportion to the lot quantity and prices, displaying the liquidity of lots on the secondary market and interest in them. Trading volume growth indicates the drawn attention to distellery

The chart of lot price fluctuation by month of the Rosebank distillery. The lot average price chart indicates the growth or fall of the investment attractiveness of whisky over time.

The chart, representing traded lot quantity by month of the Rosebank distillery. The chart displays the popularity and seasonal dependence of the quantity of the lots auctioned online.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common questions that collectors and investors ask about Rosebank whisky.

A few factors determine what a Rosebank bottle sells for:

  1. Identifying the bottle: Start by pinning down exactly which release you have — the bottling year, alcohol strength, and age all matter. Two bottles that look similar can be very different releases.
  2. The specific release and its condition: Rosebank has had many releases over the years, and which one you have has the biggest effect on value. Condition counts too: the state of the label, the fill level, and the packaging.
  3. Where you buy or sell: The venue affects the price. Bottles often go for less at auction than at retail. If you are selling privately, recent auction results are usually the most realistic benchmark — just remember the auction house takes a commission.

You can also look up a bottle on Whisky Hunter to see what it has sold for at auction. Past results won't give you an exact figure, but they show the range similar bottles have traded in.

The same bottle can fetch different prices for a few reasons:

  • Who's bidding: Each auction draws a different set of bidders, and how much they are willing to pay on a given day sets the final price.
  • Where the auction is held: Demand varies by region, especially when a Rosebank release is hard to find in a particular market.
  • When it's held: Timing matters. Broader market mood and seasonal demand both move prices up and down.

There's no single best venue — it depends on a few things:

  • Your location: Where you are affects what you can buy and sell, and at what cost.
  • Shipping: The cost and hassle of shipping a bottle, either to sell it or after buying it, can make or break a deal.
  • Auction platforms: Auctions tend to reflect the going market price, but commission rates, the bidder base, and timing cause prices to differ from one platform to the next.
  • Market conditions: Checking current prices and past results helps you spot when it's a good time to buy or sell.

Working out the best venue for a specific bottle comes down to weighing these factors. Our analysis tools let you compare a bottle's results across auctions and regions, so you can decide with the actual numbers in front of you.

No one can reliably predict how a Rosebank bottle's value will move. Past auction prices tell you where it has been, not where it is going. Over a short window — say the last month or two — recent sales give a rough sense of current value, but anything longer than that is much harder to call.

Prices are driven by supply and demand, which in turn depend on rarity, age, the brand, the wider economy, and what buyers happen to want — none of which are predictable.

Markets do tend to move in cycles, and a dip is sometimes followed by a recovery. But that's a tendency, not a rule, and it's not a basis for an investment decision on its own. If you are considering whisky as an investment, it's worth using historical data and, where it helps, getting professional advice.

In short: treat whisky as a long-term interest rather than a sure bet. As with any investment, there is real risk of losing money, and past performance is no guarantee of future results.

A cask of Rosebank can be a rewarding thing to own, but it comes with real risks and complications. Some things to think through before you commit:

  1. It's a specialised investment:

    Cask ownership can pay off, but only if you understand and accept the risks that come with it.

  2. Storage:

    Look into where the cask is stored — the costs, the conditions, and the regulations — since all of these affect how it matures.

  3. Transferring ownership:

    Make sure ownership is properly documented and transferred through the correct legal process, so your claim to the cask is secure.

  4. Fraud:

    Cask scams do happen. Check the ownership details carefully and vet the seller before parting with any money.

  5. Buying at auction:

    Buying through an established auction house tends to be safer, as they usually vet sellers and confirm that the ownership transfer is legitimate.

  6. Doing the research:

    Our platform holds records of casks sold or listed at auction, which you can use to get a sense of the market. This blog article walks through how to analyse cask sales using the site.

In short, a cask investment in Rosebank calls for a solid grasp of the market, the legal side, and the practicalities of ownership and storage. Our data can help you research the decision, but the choice — and the risk — is yours.

Whether a Rosebank bottle is worth collecting depends on a handful of things:

  • Rarity: Limited editions and discontinued bottles tend to draw the most collector interest.
  • Reputation: Well-regarded brands and bottlings usually hold their standing among collectors.
  • History: Bottles tied to a notable event or person can carry extra appeal.
  • Condition and packaging: The bottle, label, capsule, and box all affect how a bottle is valued.
  • Market trends: Current demand and collector sentiment shape how sought-after a bottle is.
  • Personal taste: Your own preferences and how a bottle fits your collection matter as much as anything.

Adding a Rosebank bottle to your collection is ultimately a personal call, shaped by your interests, budget, and what you are trying to build. Our platform lets you compare options and past results so you can make that call with good information.

  • We work to keep the data accurate and complete. Our team gathers it from reliable public sources, using a mix of automated tools and manual checks.
  • We aim for accuracy, but mistakes can still slip through. You can cross-check any figure against the original source, and we recommend doing so when it matters.
  • Alongside the raw data, we provide tools to help you read market trends and gauge what a particular bottle is worth.

The platform is an information resource, not a substitute for professional advice. We provide the data as-is and it is not investment advice — weigh the risks yourself and seek professional guidance when you need it.

Back to all distilleries