The Georgia Senate introduced Bill 456 on February 3 to relax some regulations on craft breweries, potentially allowing increased sales and limited self-distribution. The measure aims to support the state's struggling beer industry amid ongoing closures in metro Atlanta. Industry advocates, including the Georgia Craft Brewers Guild, support the changes for fostering local economic growth.
Metro Atlanta's craft beer scene has encountered difficulties in recent years, with persistent reports of brewery closures. Senate Bill 456, introduced to the Georgia Senate on February 3, seeks to address some of these challenges by easing restrictions on what consumers can purchase from breweries and how breweries can distribute their products.
The bill would authorize breweries to increase individual daily consumption limits at permitted premises, subject to certain conditions. It would also permit sales of small quantities of product off-premises. Currently, customers can purchase 72 12-ounce cans or 288 ounces—equivalent to one case—for take-home daily. Under the proposed bill, this limit would rise to three cases per customer per day.
Thomas Schoolhouse Brewing co-owner Matt Mont explained the potential impact in a phone call. 'What this means is if they want to pick up restaurant inventory from their warehouse, then they can sell it direct to the restaurant, bypassing the distributor drive,' Mont said. He added that he has over 150 locations in the state to which he sells beer, but the process through distributors takes significant time.
Additionally, the bill would allow breweries to self-distribute up to 1,000 barrels per year within their home county, operating warehouses for this purpose. This provision could enable fresher product delivery and reduce reliance on the state's three-tier distribution system, which currently requires breweries to go through distributors for wholesale sales to restaurants and other establishments.
The Georgia Craft Brewers Guild attended a recent post on the bill and believes it addresses consumer complaints and regulatory challenges without increasing risks to the self-distribution system. 'Georgia’s wholesalers work when the statewide system works,' a Guild statement reads, emphasizing a focus on ensuring beer is delivered efficiently and responsibly.
The bill is likely to receive a hearing before the Senate Regulated Industries and Utilities Committee in the coming weeks. An opinion piece notes that Georgia ranks 43rd nationally in craft breweries per capita and argues that modernizing laws like this could aid downtown revitalization efforts across the state by supporting small manufacturers. A reference to brewery-to-brewery collaboration was removed from a substitute version of the bill presented on Tuesday.
According to the Georgia Department of Revenue, breweries generated $29.2 million in excise tax revenue in 2024, contributing to public coffers while maintaining safety standards.