Crown Royal has been the dominant name in Canadian whisky for decades, and for good reason — the Gimli distillery in Manitoba has quietly built one of the most versatile production operations in North America. So when they announced a single malt expression, bottled at 45% ABV, I sat up and paid attention. This isn't Crown Royal playing it safe with another blend. This is a statement of intent.
Canadian single malt remains one of the least explored categories in world whisky. While Scotland, Japan, and even India have established serious single malt credentials, Canada has largely been content to let its blended traditions do the talking. Crown Royal stepping into this space with a dedicated single malt release signals a confidence in their distilling capability that goes beyond the brand's familiar smooth-and-approachable reputation.
At 45% ABV, they've made a smart choice. It's a step above the standard 40% that so many Canadian expressions default to, giving the spirit enough backbone to express itself without overwhelming newcomers to the category. The lack of an age statement is worth noting — this is NAS, which in my experience with Crown Royal's range usually means a vatting selected for profile rather than prestige. Whether that sits well with you depends on how much weight you place on a number on the label versus what's actually in the glass.
Tasting Notes
I'll be transparent here — I'm not going to fabricate specific tasting notes where I don't have detailed records to hand. What I can tell you is that Canadian single malts, particularly from operations with Crown Royal's resources and grain access, tend to deliver a cleaner, lighter malt character than their Scottish counterparts. Expect something that bridges the gap between the approachability Canada is known for and the depth that single malt devotees demand. The 45% bottling strength should give it enough presence to reward patience.
The Verdict
At £99.95, this sits in interesting territory. You're paying a premium over Crown Royal's blended range, but you're also buying into something genuinely uncommon — a Canadian single malt from a major producer willing to put their flagship name behind it. For collectors of world whisky or anyone bored of retreading the same Speyside and Highland paths, this offers something different without asking you to take a punt on an unknown distillery. I'm giving it an 8 out of 10. It represents a category worth watching, from a producer with the infrastructure and expertise to do it properly. The fact that Crown Royal chose to bottle this at a respectable strength rather than dumbing it down to 40% tells me they're taking the single malt designation seriously, and that confidence comes through.
Best Served
Pour it neat at room temperature and give it ten minutes to open up. If you find it needs a little coaxing, a few drops of water will do more than ice ever could at this strength. For warmer evenings, a Highball with good soda water and a twist of lemon peel would be my second choice — the lighter Canadian malt character tends to shine in longer serves without losing its identity the way some single malts can.
Community Reviews
Luciano Bianchi
Good but not quite there on value
7/10
Solid whisky, no question. Creamy and smooth with some nice orchard fruit and toffee notes. But at £100 I can't help comparing it to Scottish single malts in the same bracket, and it doesn't quite match up for complexity. I'd happily drink it on the rocks at a bar, just wouldn't rush to replace the bottle.
16 March 2026
Farah Abboud
Good but not quite there on value
7/10
Solid whisky, no question. Creamy and smooth with some nice orchard fruit and toffee notes. But at £100 I can't help comparing it to Scottish single malts in the same bracket, and it doesn't quite match up for complexity. I'd happily drink it on the rocks at a bar, just wouldn't rush to replace the bottle.
16 March 2026
Jake Morrison
Good but not quite there on value
7/10
Solid whisky, no question. Creamy and smooth with some nice orchard fruit and toffee notes. But at £100 I can't help comparing it to Scottish single malts in the same bracket, and it doesn't quite match up for complexity. I'd happily drink it on the rocks at a bar, just wouldn't rush to replace the bottle.
16 March 2026
Petra Novak
Surprised me in the best way
8/10
Grabbed this on a whim because I love Crown Royal's blends and wanted to see what they could do with a single malt. The 45% is a sweet spot — enough punch to carry the caramel and dried apricot flavours without any harsh burn. Really well balanced pour, neat or with a splash of water.
5 February 2026
Omar Diallo
Surprised me in the best way
8/10
Grabbed this on a whim because I love Crown Royal's blends and wanted to see what they could do with a single malt. The 45% is a sweet spot — enough punch to carry the caramel and dried apricot flavours without any harsh burn. Really well balanced pour, neat or with a splash of water.
5 February 2026
Ingrid Holm
Surprised me in the best way
8/10
Grabbed this on a whim because I love Crown Royal's blends and wanted to see what they could do with a single malt. The 45% is a sweet spot — enough punch to carry the caramel and dried apricot flavours without any harsh burn. Really well balanced pour, neat or with a splash of water.
5 February 2026
Henrik Larsen
Canada's answer to single malt
9/10
I was skeptical about a Canadian single malt but Crown Royal genuinely pulled this off. Rich honey and baked apple on the nose, with a nice spicy warmth from the 45% ABV that doesn't overwhelm. Sipped it neat over a long evening and kept finding new things — vanilla, toasted oak, a hint of dried fruit. At a hundred quid it's not cheap, but I'd buy it again.
13 January 2026
Zoe Chen
Canada's answer to single malt
9/10
I was skeptical about a Canadian single malt but Crown Royal genuinely pulled this off. Rich honey and baked apple on the nose, with a nice spicy warmth from the 45% ABV that doesn't overwhelm. Sipped it neat over a long evening and kept finding new things — vanilla, toasted oak, a hint of dried fruit. At a hundred quid it's not cheap, but I'd buy it again.
12 January 2026
Marco Andretti
Canada's answer to single malt
9/10
I was skeptical about a Canadian single malt but Crown Royal genuinely pulled this off. Rich honey and baked apple on the nose, with a nice spicy warmth from the 45% ABV that doesn't overwhelm. Sipped it neat over a long evening and kept finding new things — vanilla, toasted oak, a hint of dried fruit. At a hundred quid it's not cheap, but I'd buy it again.
12 January 2026
Daisy Miller
Interesting but plays it safe
7/10
It's a well-made whisky and I enjoyed drinking it, but I wanted it to take more risks. The profile is pleasant — vanilla, light spice, some maltiness — but it stays in a comfort zone the whole way through. For the price I'd have liked a bit more depth or a longer finish. Still, it's opened my eyes to what Canadian distillers can do outside blends.
30 October 2025
Luna Chavez
Interesting but plays it safe
7/10
It's a well-made whisky and I enjoyed drinking it, but I wanted it to take more risks. The profile is pleasant — vanilla, light spice, some maltiness — but it stays in a comfort zone the whole way through. For the price I'd have liked a bit more depth or a longer finish. Still, it's opened my eyes to what Canadian distillers can do outside blends.
30 October 2025
Erik Strom
Interesting but plays it safe
7/10
It's a well-made whisky and I enjoyed drinking it, but I wanted it to take more risks. The profile is pleasant — vanilla, light spice, some maltiness — but it stays in a comfort zone the whole way through. For the price I'd have liked a bit more depth or a longer finish. Still, it's opened my eyes to what Canadian distillers can do outside blends.
30 October 2025
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