The direct-to-consumer channel has always been a resilient engine for wineries. But in 2025, something subtle — and important — changed.
DTC sales became smarter: more predictable, more operationally mature, and more deeply tied to the guest experience.
Growth this year wasn’t driven by splashy campaigns or deeper discounts. It came from systems, workflows, and membership experiences that made revenue steadier all year long.
This was a year of clarity revealing:
how customer behavior is shifting,
what drives wine club stability,
why data now guides every operational decision, and
how the holiday season influences performance across the entire calendar.
Industry data confirms it: year-over-year growth returned to the DTC channel after two years of volatility, powered by ecommerce strength, event-driven acquisition, and better club retention. (Silicon Valley Bank State of the Wine Industry, 2024)
See the full 2025 Highlights + 2026 Vision Infographic.
Three major forces defined the year:
After two years of churn pressure, clubs stabilized, especially for wineries with:
clear tiers
simplified benefits
intentional onboarding
Growth leaned toward quality over quantity. Wineries prioritized segmentation to increase AOV, avoiding blanket discount tactics.
(Sovos DTC Shipping Report, 2025)
Mobile performance and checkout speed became revenue-critical. During peak gifting windows, 56% of purchases occurred on a mobile device. (NielsenIQ, 2025)
The most successful operators applied retail-style tactics:
tighter windows
timed promos
clear gift bundles
urgency without fatigue
Higher conversion, lower discounting.
Guests who engaged in tasting rooms or events were in a buying mindset and wineries that followed up within 48 hours converted best into membership.
(Wine Business Monthly, 2024)
The industry learned: the event isn’t the moment. The relationship begins when guests go home.
Small but consistent automations delivered outsized operational relief:
pickup reminders
reorder nudges
thank-you sequences
pre-shipment alerts
club welcome flows
For 2–4 person DTC teams, these added back hours each week.
Three behavioral shifts defined the year:
Members want connection: craft, story, terroir, and real people behind the wine.
Discount-led clubs experienced churn.
Value-led clubs grew.
Holiday gifting volume increased and purchasing began earlier, shifting from last-minute buying to intentional, planned gifting.
Long-term memberships still grow, but only when the value is unmistakably clear.
Consumers expect:
discovery
checkout
gift notes
shipping options
…all in a single, frictionless mobile flow.
Mobile is no longer a secondary experience, it is the primary one.
Holiday performance now signals:
Q1 reorder behavior
membership retention through spring
club acquisition potential
lifetime value from gift buyers
Seasonal volume has become a leading indicator, not a year-end spike.
Read the Holiday Campaign Recap.
The core takeaway is simple:
In DTC wine sales, operational depth is the new competitive advantage.
Systems matter more than campaigns.
The winning operators are shifting toward:
unified commerce platforms
membership experience design
behavior-led segmentation
streamlined service workflows
data-informed decision making
These themes shape the 2026 predictions.
Five takeaways that drive results:
Club Architecture Is Strategic
Benefits should compound value, not dilute it through discounts.
Segmentation Drives AOV
Treat locals, travelers, gift buyers, and members as distinct groups.
Event Follow-Up Converts
Assign someone to own the 48-hour outreach window.
Automation Saves Time
Simple sequences outperform complex funnels.
Mobile Is the Primary Customer
Build backwards from the phone in a guest’s hand.
What drove DTC growth in 2025?
Stabilizing clubs, stronger holiday performance, and unified ecommerce workflows.
Did discounts impact churn?
Yes — discount-heavy clubs saw higher churn.
Why was mobile checkout so important?
Over half of holiday purchases were made on mobile.
Are events still strong for club acquisition?
More than ever, especially with quick follow-up.
Did gifting grow in 2025?
Yes — earlier and higher-volume purchasing.
How does segmentation affect AOV?
Relevance increases spend more than generic offers.
Did wineries automate more?
Most adopted simple automations with high ROI.
Why unify commerce?
Real-time visibility across TR, club, ecommerce, and events boosts profitability.
Does DTC depend on advertising?
Not primarily — workflow efficiency outperformed ad spend.
What will drive 2026?
Membership design, unified systems, and data-driven optimization.
2025 proved that predictable DTC revenue comes from operational clarity.
The wineries that grew the most unified their systems, simplified club architecture, embraced mobile, leveraged events for acquisition, and used segmentation to increase AOV.
As 2026 planning begins, focus on:
unified commerce
intentional membership design
building data into your everyday decisions
Download the 2026 Roadmap for DTC Wineries to turn these insights into next year’s growth strategy.