Why imported spirits see weak demand during the 2026 Dragon Boat Festival?

15th July 2026 | Shanghai, China

Imported Spirits Did Not See the Expected Holiday Lift

Across Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Chengdu, imported spirits moved slowly during the 2026 Dragon Boat Festival. For many importers, the holiday did not bring the sales boost they had hoped for.

The main reason is that gift-buying behavior in China has changed. During the festival, consumers were drawn more to zongzi ① boxes, health products, and fruit gift sets than to heavy alcohol gifts. In that context, 700ml gift-boxed spirits often felt too formal and less suitable for the occasion.

When consumers did buy alcohol, they tended to choose either well-known brands or gift sets with strong price competitiveness. That was the reality on the ground. Festival demand was not broad-based; it was concentrated in products that either had strong brand recognition or offered clear value.

Old Inventory Made the Situation Worse

The situation was further complicated by inventory pressure. Many importers entered the festival period with 2025 stock still in warehouses. As a result, promotional budgets were used more to clear aging stock than to support new seasonal campaigns.

This is a familiar issue in China’s imported spirits market. If inventory is already slow-moving, a festival period rarely solves the problem. Instead, it often exposes weaknesses in pricing, pack selection, and stock planning.

Why This Matters for Exporters

For exporters, the Dragon Boat Festival is a useful reminder that Chinese holidays do not automatically create strong spirits demand. If you treat every festival as a sales opportunity, you may end up pushing the wrong product, into the wrong channel, at the wrong time.

The main lesson is that format, brand strength, and price positioning matter more than the holiday itself. Exporters also need to align with their importers in advance to make sure the product is positioned correctly. In this market, consumers are not buying simply because it is a festival. They are choosing products that are familiar, competitively priced, and appropriate for the occasion.

For exporters, that means three things:

  • Do not overestimate festival-driven demand
  • Match the offer to what Chinese consumers actually buy
  • Support products with strong brand recognition or clear value
  • Avoid shipping large volumes unless the market has already shown real pull
  • Work with buyers on realistic stock planning and promotional timing

The broader takeaway is simple: if the product does not fit the occasion, the festival will not rescue the sell-in. Exporters who understand this will be in a much better position to protect their brand, support their partners, and avoid unnecessary inventory pressure.

A More Realistic View of Festival Sales

For the Dragon Boat Festival, imported spirits performed best when they were positioned for brand recognition and value, not for broad festive gifting. Smaller assumptions and tighter stock planning are the smarter approach.

In China’s changing market, success often comes from reading the cultural signal correctly before you load the container.

Note:① zongzi, a dumpling made of glutinous rice wrapped in bamboo or reed leaves

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