Glenturret
ActiveAbout
Claims to be Scotland's oldest working distillery, founded in 1763 in Crieff, Perthshire. Formerly home to Towser, the world-record mouser cat (28,899 mice). Rebranded under Lalique luxury ownership since 2019, pivoting to ultra-premium single malt positioning with Bob Dalgarno as whisky maker.
Production Details
The Glenturret Tale
In the sheltered glen where Loch Turret spills into the Turret Burn, time moves differently. Here, beneath the Ochil Hills in Perthshire, the oldest working distillery in Scotland has been drawing water from the same highland source since 1763, when the world was younger and whisky-making was still finding its voice.
The Hosh—as locals knew this pocket of land near Crieff—seemed destined for distilling. The burn tumbles down with just enough force, the barley grows sweet in Perthshire soil, and the glen cups the operation like cupped hands protecting a flame. When John Drummond took the license in 1818, he understood what the founders had grasped: this place makes whisky not because it can, but because it must.
Walk into Glenturret's stillhouse today and you'll find just two copper companions—one wash still, one spirit still—standing like old friends in conversation. This isn't accident but intention. With capacity for 2,900,000 litres annually, these stills could work harder, faster, but that would change the conversation entirely. The copper here has time to think, time to breathe between runs. Each batch becomes a meditation rather than a race.
The water flowing from Loch Turret carries more than minerals—it carries memory. The same highland source that fed the stills when they fell silent in 1921, when Scotland's whisky industry stumbled through darker decades. The same water that welcomed them back to life in 1957, when production resumed and the glen exhaled again. Through ownership changes—Highland Distillers, Edrington, finally the Lalique Group in 2019—the water never stopped flowing, never stopped waiting.
Perhaps that's why Towser felt so at home here. The legendary mouser who stalked these warehouses for nearly twenty-four years understood something about patience and persistence. Her 28,899 confirmed kills weren't just pest control—they were a masterclass in dedication to craft. Every mouse caught was a cask protected, a future dram preserved.
Under Lalique's stewardship, with whisky maker Bob Dalgarno at the helm, Glenturret has shed its tourist-friendly Famous Grouse associations for something more ambitious. The Jaguar E-type collaboration speaks to this transformation—luxury meeting heritage, innovation honoring tradition. These aren't just whiskies; they're statements about what Scotland's oldest working distillery believes it can become.
Standing in that stillhouse, listening to the gentle murmur of spirit finding its way through copper, you understand the audacity of the claim. Not the oldest distillery—that honor belongs to ruins and memories. The oldest working distillery. The emphasis falls on that middle word like a heartbeat. Working. Still here. Still flowing. Still transforming Loch Turret's gift into something that will outlast us all.
In the Perthshire hills, where time moves differently, Glenturret keeps working.
Equipment
Production Process
Notable Features
- Claims to be Scotland's oldest working distillery
- Famous for Towser the cat who caught 28,899 mice
- Home to The Famous Grouse Experience visitor centre
- Has visitor centre and distillery tours available
- Produces limited edition releases including Jaguar E-type collaboration