null

Non Alcoholic Vermouth

Non Alcoholic Vermouth

Spirits, Mixers & Aperitifs · Vermouth

Non-alcoholic vermouth alternatives

The aromatized wine that anchors the martini, Manhattan, and Negroni — in alcohol-free sweet (rosso) and dry styles. Featuring Lyre’s Dry Vermouth and Aperitif Rosso, Roots Divino Bianco and Rosso, Blutul Blanc, and VERSIN. Essential for building stirred classics in a zero-proof program.

Shop the Catalog
Wine Spirits, Mixers & Aperitifs True Alcohol Alternatives Ready to Drink Notable
Shop by Style · Spirits
All Spirits Aperitif / Digestif Gin Liqueur Mezcal / Tequila
Rum Vermouth Whiskey Mixer  
Shop by Program Level
01 · Entry
Foundational
02 · Medium
Core
03 · Luxury
Reserve

Shop non-alcoholic vermouth below — the aromatized wine that anchors stirred classics. A dry style builds the martini, a rosso the Manhattan and Negroni. Stock both alongside your base spirits and a bar can run the full stirred repertoire alcohol-free. Mix-and-match volume pricing applies across the full spirits catalog.

Building a cocktail program? Our three-tier playbook shows how a zero-proof bar grows from entry-level pours to luxury, Michelin-level bottles.

  • Product
  • Qty in Cart
  • Quantity
  • Price
  • Subtotal
  • Total: items /

Adding your products to cart

Frequently Asked Questions

Non-alcoholic vermouth questions

What is non-alcoholic vermouth?
Vermouth is an aromatized, herb-infused wine used to build stirred cocktails. A non-alcoholic vermouth recreates that bittersweet, botanical character — usually from dealcoholized wine and herbal extracts — so martinis, Manhattans, and Negronis can be made alcohol-free.
What’s the difference between sweet (rosso) and dry vermouth?
Sweet (rosso) vermouth is richer and used in Manhattans and Negronis; dry vermouth is lighter and crisp, used in martinis. Stocking both lets a bar cover the full range of vermouth-based classics without alcohol.
What is a good non-alcoholic substitute for vermouth in a martini or Negroni?
For a martini, Lyre’s Dry Vermouth steps in for dry vermouth one-for-one. For a Negroni or Manhattan, Lyre’s Aperitif Rosso or Roots Divino Rosso replaces sweet vermouth in the same proportion, keeping the build unchanged.
Should I stock dry or rosso vermouth first?
If your menu leans on martinis, start with a dry like Lyre’s Dry Vermouth; if it leans on Negronis and Manhattans, start with a rosso such as Roots Divino Rosso. Most bars end up carrying both, since together they unlock nearly every stirred classic.
Which non-alcoholic vermouth brands do you carry?
Our vermouth range includes Lyre’s Dry Vermouth and Aperitif Rosso, Roots Divino Bianco and Rosso, Blutul Blanc, and Espadafor VERSIN — covering sweet, dry, and bianco styles.
Can I buy non-alcoholic vermouth wholesale?
Yes. Zepeim supplies non-alcoholic vermouth wholesale to restaurants, hotels, bars, and retailers nationwide. Register for a trade account to see pricing and order by the case.