About
Major Lowland malt whisky distillery built by William Grant & Sons adjacent to the Girvan grain distillery complex. Opened by Prince Charles in 2009. Eight copper pot stills (four wash, four spirit) modeled after Balvenie, producing up to 12 million LPA — one of Scotland's largest malt distilleries. Designed to produce up to five different spirit styles from light and floral to heavily peated. Primarily supplies malt for Grants blends, Glenfiddich, and Balvenie. Some single malt releases under the Ailsa Bay name.
Production Details
House Style
sweet smoke, vanilla, citrus
The Ailsa Bay Tale
The Ayrshire coast stretches wild and windswept where the Firth of Clyde meets the Irish Sea, and here, in the shadow of Ailsa Craig's volcanic dome, William Grant & Sons planted their industrial ambition in 2007. The new distillery rose beside their existing Girvan grain complex, a calculated expansion that would reshape the Lowland whisky landscape.
Prince Charles arrived in 2009 to formally open what had become one of Scotland's largest malt distilleries, its copper gleaming against the grey coastal sky. Eight pot stills—four wash, four spirit—stood arranged like sentinels in the stillhouse, their forms echoing the graceful necks of Balvenie far to the north. But size here serves strategy, not vanity.
The Penwhapple Reservoir feeds these stills with soft Lowland water, the same source that has nurtured this corner of Ayrshire for generations. Yet Ailsa Bay's true innovation lies not in its water or its scale, but in its chameleon nature. The distillery was engineered to produce five distinct spirit styles within the same walls—from delicate, floral expressions to the heavily peated drams that roll like coastal fog through the large-scale mash tun and stainless steel washbacks.
This flexibility reflects the modern Scotch whisky trade, where blending houses demand variety and consistency in equal measure. Most of Ailsa Bay's twelve million litres annually disappear into the Grant's portfolio—Glenfiddich, Balvenie, and their signature blends—the distillery serving as both workhorse and innovator for one of Scotland's most successful family firms.
The sweet smoke that characterizes Ailsa Bay's house style drifts across the Lowland landscape, carrying hints of vanilla and citrus on the Atlantic breeze. Here, where industrial capacity meets artisanal tradition, the distillery represents Scotland's whisky future: adaptable, ambitious, and deeply rooted in the coastal terroir that shapes every drop.
The stills will run tomorrow as they did yesterday, their rhythm steady as the tides that wash Ailsa Craig.