DTC wine sales entered 2025 with equal parts optimism and uncertainty. After two years of volatility, the industry recalibrated — and came out with a sharper understanding of what truly drives sustainable revenue.
The biggest lesson?
The wineries winning in DTC today aren’t the ones with the flashiest campaigns — they’re the ones with the strongest operational foundation.
In 2026, competitive advantage will come from:
unified commerce
membership experience design
data-driven workflows
targeted segmentation
predictable revenue systems that create stability, not spikes
These predictions emerge from the shifts observed throughout 2025, particularly around club retention, mobile checkout, event-driven acquisition, and holiday performance.
See the 2025 Highlights + 2026 Vision Infographic for the full strategic picture.
2025 proved that reliable DTC growth isn’t built on broad discounting — it’s built on experience, structure, and segmentation. Industry-wide stabilization revealed key momentum areas:
wine clubs re-established themselves as the backbone of DTC
ecommerce and mobile conversion became operational KPIs
event-to-club pipelines became more predictable
automation created meaningful time savings for lean teams
This means 2026 won’t require reinventing DTC.
It will demand extending what already works — with deeper focus and cleaner execution.
If you want a full breakdown of the trends that shaped this year, revisit 2025 Highlights & Lessons Learned.
For years, wineries treated tasting room, ecommerce, club, and events as separate tracks.
In 2026, they merge into a single revenue system built around:
one customer identity
one behavioral dataset
one transactional view
one unified workflow
This isn’t just a technology shift — it’s an experience shift.
Customers don’t think in channels; they think in moments.
In a unified system:
a tasting room visit becomes a club acquisition moment
a holiday gift becomes a reorder opportunity
an event signup becomes a membership anchor
a shipping reminder becomes a trust-building touchpoint
Unified commerce ensures that every interaction compounds value rather than living in silos.
Discounts once carried club programs.
In 2026, experience becomes the product.
Members now join clubs because:
they identify with the story
they value insider access
they enjoy the events
they want to support a craft producer
This trend became clear in 2025 as wineries adopted:
segmented onboarding
intentional tier benefits
experiential perks instead of generic %-off
In 2026, wineries will:
design tiers around experiences, not pricing
build journeys with purposeful touchpoints
use segmentation to increase AOV
strengthen retention through value, not urgency
Membership design becomes a true strategic capability.
Wineries have been collecting data for years.
2026 is the year they activate it.
Operators will use behavioral data to:
refine club benefits
personalize reorder prompts
segment gift buyers vs members
optimize holiday offerings
identify event topics that lead to membership
Data will move from reports → workflows.
Examples:
A gift subscriber receives a three-message onboarding sequence that introduces the brand story.
Event attendees receive 48-hour follow-up invitations tied to the winemaker’s voice.
Churned members receive seasonal reactivation offers matched to their history.
Small, behavior-based adjustments create outsize revenue impact.
In 2026, holiday results won’t just close the year — they’ll forecast the next quarter.
Patterns from 2025 revealed:
earlier gifting
higher mobile checkout
more single-bottle and bundle purchases
strong reorder signals by late January
This behavior indicates continuing intent, not one-time purchases.
Expect:
elevated club signups in early Q1
repeat orders from holiday gift buyers
higher engagement among seasonal shoppers
smoother onboarding cycles
Wineries that build structured, segmented holiday campaigns will enter the new year ahead of pace.
For specifics on what worked, see the Holiday Campaign Recap.
In 2025, wineries discovered that light automation created heavy operational relief.
In 2026, automation shifts from:
campaigns → journeys
volume → timing
noise → relevance
Automation won’t replace human touch — it will create space for it.
Expect:
welcome sequences that feel like personal notes
reorder prompts aligned to buyer history
event follow-ups that feel like invitations
thank-yous that reinforce brand story
For small DTC teams, automation becomes a multiplier of human connection.
2026 success comes from four foundational plays:
Start with what members value — then create benefits that build long-term loyalty. Pricing comes last.
Your CRM, ecommerce, tasting room, and club tools must align around a single customer record.
Build bundles, segment offers, and plan workflows that extend beyond December.
Start with five essential workflows:
welcome
reorder
thank-you
event follow-up
seasonal reminder
Small systems create margin for meaningful interactions.
What’s the biggest trend of 2026?
Unified commerce: one customer identity across all channels.
Do discounts still matter?
Yes, but they’re no longer the primary reason people join clubs.
How can smaller wineries stay competitive?
Through thoughtful membership design and intentional onboarding.
Will events still convert into clubs?
Even more: especially with 48-hour follow-ups.
Does holiday predict Q1?
Yes. Holiday momentum drives early-year acquisitions and reorders.
How should wineries use automation?
As a time-saver that enhances, not replaces, human connection.
Which data matters most?
Behavioral segmentation: who buys what, when, and why.
Is ecommerce still growing?
Yes, especially mobile checkout during seasonal moments.
Do wineries need new tech for unified commerce?
Not necessarily, just connected systems and a shared customer identity.
What’s the first step toward 2026 readiness?
Map your workflows and identify where channels duplicate or miss revenue signals.
2026 will be shaped by clarity, connection, and operational maturity.
Wineries that unify their channels, design intentional membership experiences, use data to guide daily decisions, and leverage holiday momentum as a strategic asset will enter the year with predictable growth, not seasonal spikes.
These predictions are grounded in the real shifts of 2025:
club stability
segmented offers
mobile-first behavior
event-driven acquisition
earlier, higher-volume holiday buying
The opportunity now is to move from insight to execution.
To apply these predictions to your own winery, download the 2026 Roadmap for DTC Wineries.