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Scapa 16 Year Old
January 2026

Scapa 16 Year Old

If tropical fruit juice was a whisky, this’d be it. We’ve officially partnered with Scapa for its launch, exclusive to Club Members in Australia.

United Kingdom

Colour Vibrant amber

Nose Juicy mango, vanilla cream, leather and hints of clementine peel

Palate Silky and creamy with apple pie, vanilla fudge, and baked pineapple leads into mulled spices and bright tropical notes on the finish.

Overview

After nearly a decade away, Scapa 16 Year Old is returning to the world.

It’s one of Scotland’s most idiosyncratic, delicious, and underappreciated drams, and whether you’ve not heard of it or not, get ready for one heck of a re-introduction.

This age statement dram is everything you wouldn’t expect from a whisky from the Islands. It’s completely unpeated, hugely fruity and 100% matured in American oak. Scapa has one of the smallest distillery setups in Scotland and it’s a thoroughly hands-on process. To bog down in the whisky geek side of things for a minute, the state-of-the-art equipment has everything pointing towards a fruity new make spirit: long fermentation, stainless steel washbacks, a Lomond wash still, horizontal lyne arms, and shell and tube condensers.

Paired with a full, 16 year American Oak maturation on the Orkney Island coast and you’ve got an overflow of juicy mangoes, vanilla cream, baked pineapple and mulled spices. Delish! We’re so, so happy that Scapa are bringing this tropical fruit bomb back for the first time in nearly a decade; AND they’ve bumped the ABV up to 48% so there’s more flavour than ever.

Hype is so high on this launch that bottles are already being snuck into the country and selling for $270… but we’ve got your back. Club Members got an exclusive first dibs in Australia as this launches globally for just $196. 

Not yet a Member of Australia’s biggest whisky community? Join Free Today and you’ll have access to some of the best drams in the industry.

THE SPECS

Price: $196.00

Age: 16 Years Old

ABV: 48%

Maturation: American oak

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Scapa Distillery's History

Perched on the windswept shores of Scapa Flow, just south of Kirkwall on Orkney’s Mainland, Scapa Distillery has been quietly shaping its own corner of Scotch whisky history since the late 19th century. With Highland Park a mere 800 metres up the road, Scapa is part of a small and storied Orcadian whisky lineage, deeply influenced by Norse heritage, maritime life, and the rugged northern climate. Even its name reflects this past; Scapa is derived from a Norse word meaning “boat”, a nod to the Viking roots that still echo through the islands.

Founded in 1885 by Glasgow blending firm Macfarlane & Townsend, Scapa was established during a boom period when blenders were eager to secure distinctive malt whisky for their recipes. John Townsend, one of the firm’s principals, served as General Manager until 1919, when the distillery was sold to the Scapa Distillery Company. That same year, disaster struck when a fire nearly destroyed the site entirely. Salvation came in dramatic fashion, as sailors from the nearby Grand Fleet formed a human chain, hauling buckets of seawater to extinguish the flames and save the distillery.

Despite being rebuilt, Scapa’s fortunes remained turbulent. The distillery fell silent in 1934 when the Scapa Distilling Company went into liquidation, before being revived two years later under the ownership of Bloch Bros. In 1954, Scapa changed hands again, this time to Canadian drinks group Hiram Walker, later absorbed into Allied Distillers. Modernisation followed, including the installation of a Lomond still in 1959 and a refurbishment in 1978 — important changes that would help define Scapa’s distinctive spirit style.

Due to an oversupply of whisky, production ceased in 1994, and for a time Scapa’s future looked uncertain. Limited runs were carried out by the neighbouring Highland Park team from 1997 to prevent the otherwise neglected equipment from falling into disrepair, but by 2004 the distillery faced permanent closure. Instead, a £2.1 million restoration project breathed new life into Scapa. The revival was marked by the release of a 14 Year Old single malt, a significant moment in establishing Scapa as a standalone single malt rather than a blending component. When Pernod Ricard took ownership in 2005, full production recommenced, the range was refreshed, and the flagship expression evolved into a 16 Year Old.

Today, Scapa remains something of a rarity in modern Scotch whisky. It is one of the last manually operated distilleries in Scotland, staffed around the clock, and known for its long fermentations. While once they were reaching an industry-leading 120 hours, fermentation is now up to 70 hours, with a seven-day distilling week. The fruit-forward wash is distilled through a Lomond-style still with a substantial copper neck and purifier pipe, promoting high reflux and contributing to Scapa’s famously juicy, oily new make that's often cited as one of the most vibrant in Scotland.

Maturation takes place exclusively in first-fill American oak casks, hand selected from Tennessee and Kentucky and aged on Orkney. These casks lend Scapa its signature soft vanilla sweetness, balancing the distillery’s fresh, orchard-fruit character. 

With the opening of a visitor centre in 2015 and the introduction of an expanded core range—now including 10, 16 and 21 Year Olds, Scapa has firmly claimed its place as one of Scotland’s most distinctive and quietly compelling Island distilleries.

Scapa 16 Year Old Scapa 16 Year Old

Distillery Facts

Region: Islands

Origin: Scapa Distillery, St Ola, Kirkwall, Orkney, KW15 1SE, United Kingdom

Founded: 1885

Water Source: Orquil Springs and Lingro Burn

Washbacks: 8, Steel

Stills: 2 (1 wash - Lomond, 1 spirit - Straight Ogee)

Capacity: 1,000,000 litres of alcohol per annum

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