The Smell of the Shoreline
You don’t ease your way into Laphroaig 10. It grabs your collar and drags you straight to the Atlantic. This is not gentle smoke drifting from a fireplace. It is seaweed drying on rocks, iodine in the air, and a bonfire that’s been fed all night.
Few whiskies divide opinion as cleanly as this one. For some, it’s medicinal chaos. For others, it’s the moment they realised whisky could taste like a place. Laphroaig 10 doesn’t try to round its edges to please a wider audience. It doubles down on identity.
And identity is exactly what keeps it relevant.
Who Is This For?
Drinkers who actively seek medicinal peat and coastal intensity. Those curious about classic Islay character and willing to embrace bold, uncompromising flavours.
Overall Character
Medicinal, maritime, and assertively smoky. Brine, iodine, citrus, and sweet malt locked inside a peat-driven framework.
Production Style
Laphroaig uses heavily peated malted barley and traditional copper pot stills. The spirit is matured primarily in ex-bourbon American oak casks, many stored in coastal warehouses exposed to Atlantic conditions. The 10-year-old is bottled at 40% ABV, maintaining the distillery’s signature medicinal profile.
Nose
Immediate iodine and antiseptic smoke. Seaweed, damp rope, and coastal brine rise quickly. Beneath the peat lies vanilla sweetness and lemon zest. There’s charred oak and a faint medicinal sweetness that defines the style. It is intense but recognisably structured.
Palate
Medium body. Slightly oily texture, though the 40% ABV keeps it leaner than its cask strength sibling. Tar, smoked barley, and brine lead. Sweet vanilla and a flash of green apple provide contrast before pepper and oak dryness tighten the mid-palate. The alcohol is fully integrated, but the lower strength slightly trims depth and texture.
Finish
Long and smoky. Ash, sea salt, and lingering medicinal notes dominate. A soft sweetness returns late, though peat remains firmly in control. It tapers gradually rather than collapsing.
Strengths
Distinctive medicinal peat profile.
Clear coastal identity.
Consistent structure and balance.
Limitations
40% ABV slightly restricts mouthfeel and mid-palate expansion.
Polarising flavour profile by nature.
It doesn’t try to convert sceptics, it simply waits for the right palate.
Value & Use Case
A foundational Islay bottle for those exploring peat. Excellent as a reference dram when comparing smoky styles. Best enjoyed when you want clarity and intensity rather than subtle nuance.
Similar Whiskies
Ardbeg 10 – Similar smoky intensity. Advantage: Higher ABV and sharper precision. Disadvantage: Less medicinal character.
Lagavulin 16 – Similar peat foundation. Advantage: Greater maturity and oak integration. Disadvantage: Lower raw intensity.
Caol Ila 12 – Similar coastal smoke. Advantage: Cleaner, fresher peat profile. Disadvantage: Less medicinal depth.
Final Verdict
Laphroaig 10 remains one of the most recognisable peated malts in the world. It is bold, unapologetic, and deeply tied to its coastal origins. While the 40% ABV slightly limits its full potential, the core identity remains powerful and coherent.
Love it or not, you will remember it.
Score
Nose – 89 / 100
Palate – 87 / 100
Finish – 88 / 100
Balance – 88 / 100
Overall – 88 / 100

