Podcast Summary: Business Wars
Episode: Athletic Brewing and the NA Beer Revolution | Is NA Here to Stay? | 3
Date: April 23, 2026
Host: David Brown
Guest: Kate Bernot (Food & Beverage Reporter, Industry Analyst, Certified Beer Judge)
Episode Overview
This episode explores the meteoric rise of non-alcoholic (NA) beer, focusing on Athletic Brewing’s role as a pioneer in this market. Host David Brown and guest Kate Bernot analyze how NA beer has shed its longstanding stigma, what’s driving its popularity with Millennials and Gen Z, and whether the trend is more than a passing craze. The episode also examines innovations in NA brewing, industry competition, changing marketing narratives, and the impact on the wider hospitality sector.
Key Discussion Points & Insights
The Evolution and Stigma of NA Beer
- Past Perceptions: NA beers were once seen as bland or even repulsive, often maligned as the "decaf of beers."
- David Brown (00:26): "Back in the day, non alcoholic beers had, let's call it a stigma. Sour and skunky or bland at best...why settle for the decaf of beers over any number of other non alcoholic beverages?"
- Turning Point: The 2017 launch of Athletic Brewing changed the conversation, offering craft-style NA brews without sacrificing flavor or authenticity.
Guest’s Background and Beer Judging
- Kate Bernot’s Journey: Started on a newspaper copy desk, transitioned to food and beverage reporting in a dynamic craft beer scene.
- Kate Bernot (04:29): "I thought, hey, I think, I think there's something going on here."
- Beer Judging: She’s a certified judge, which involves rigorous written and tasting exams.
- Kate Bernot (05:36): "They give a written and an in person tasting exam for this? They sure do."
- What Makes a Good Beer: Judging is based on how well a beer meets a style’s 'platonic ideal' (appearance, aroma, flavor, mouthfeel, balance).
- (07:05): "So you're evaluating the sample in front of you against the ideal version of those things."
Dramatic Improvement in NA Beer Quality
- Marked Progress: Significant leaps in variety and flavor over the past five years.
- (08:20): "I cannot overstate the degree to which the quality of these beers has improved over the last five years."
- Favorite NA Beers:
- Guinness 0.0 ("All of the rich flavor is there." – 09:02)
- Athletic and Sierra Nevada NA IPAs
- Deschutes Black Butte Porter
Why NA Beer Selection Exploded
- Supply & Demand:
- Number of NA brands skyrocketed from a handful (Coors NA, Odoul’s, St. Pauli Girl) to 200+ (11:06–12:08).
- Consumer demand increased: "There is obviously some pent up consumer demand for better tasting and more flavor variety." (12:39)
- Mainstream Adoption: NA beer is no longer reserved for nondrinkers only; it appeals to health-conscious drinkers and moderates.
Brewing Techniques: From Old-Fashioned to High-Tech
- Traditional Methods:
- Arrested fermentation often produced half-finished, bland NA beers.
- Modern Innovations:
- Specialized yeast strains, vacuum distillation, reverse osmosis, and proprietary (often closely guarded) methods like those pioneered by Athletic Brewing:
- (14:31): "Today we have more advanced techniques like yeast that just naturally produces very little alcohol...more advanced methodology, and better knowledge sharing."
Memorable Quote:
- David Brown (15:54): "Better brewing through science, I guess!"
- Kate Bernot (16:44): "Athletic was revolutionary in both the technological process of brewing non alcoholic beer as well as the marketing..."
Athletic Brewing’s Industry Impact
- A New Gold Standard:
- Athletic built the first significant craft NA beer brand with proprietary processes and its own facilities (16:44–17:59).
- Synonymous with NA beer: "Give me an Athletic" is analogous to brand dominance.
- Maintains leadership despite rising competition.
Marketing NA Beer: The Lifestyle Play
- Narrative Shift: Athletic positioned NA beer as compatible with health, activity, and moderation—not merely as a sobriety product.
- Kate Bernot (21:52): "The challenge for some of these non alk brands is not to demonize or vilify alcohol, but to promote...health and moderation and choice."
- Mainstream Consumers: Most people buying NA beer also buy regular beer—the vast majority are not abstainers (24:46–24:50).
- Aspirational Branding: Athletic’s name and marketing evoke active, health-conscious lifestyles.
- (23:39): "It's aspirational...whether they are athletes or not, it makes them think that they possibly could be."
Segmentation & Category Confusion
- Brand Positioning: Increasingly vital as the market crowds; brands must differentiate on flavor and lifestyle (26:52).
- Hop Water & Adjacent Categories: Hop water is an emerging "cousin"—hoppy like IPAs, but more seltzer than beer.
- (27:36): "If you like LaCroix and you love IPAs, that product is for you. If you don't like either of those things, you're going to struggle."
- Alternative Beverages: THC-infused NA beers, zero-proof spirits, craft mocktails—all increase consumer choice but create confusion and require education.
- (29:04): "Building a category is extremely difficult, especially when it's a category as...intimate and personal as something you're going to put inside your body."
The Business & Demographic Context
- Non-alcoholic Beer as a Lifeline: With beer consumption dropping (especially among younger consumers), NA is one of the only segments showing reliable growth.
- (30:42): "Beer has lost a ton of volume...so beer has been shedding sales...and then suddenly you have non alcoholic beer come along and post really strong consistent year over year growth."
- Moderation & Responsibility: NA beer aids both revenue and public image for major breweries.
Is the NA Boom a Bubble?
- Growth Slowing but Steady: High growth rates are leveling off as the market matures (32:23).
- Market "Winnowing": Expectation that after a rush of new brands, only the strongest will remain over time—similar to the hard seltzer boom (32:23–33:38).
The Hospitality Response
Bars, Restaurants, and NA Offerings
- New Revenue Streams: More establishments are stocking premium NA beverages and craft mocktails (35:31–36:45).
- Margins: NA beer and non-alcoholic cocktails can be as profitable as alcoholic drinks, aiding bottom lines.
- (36:46): "Alcohol margins pay the bills...the challenge is to sort of see the same or similar margins from non alk products..."
- On Tap Challenges: Draft NA beer is rare due to the lack of alcohol’s antibacterial properties. Lines must be scrupulously clean.
- (37:12): "In addition to the flavor it provides, alcohol is antibacterial..." (C: 37:40)
- Consumer Price Perception: Many consumers balk at paying full beer prices for NA products; but small scale production and high-tech processes mean costs can be similar or higher (39:57–40:22).
Expanding Beyond Beer
- Zero-Proof Spirits & Mocktails: Growth in zero-alcohol spirits and high-end mocktails; some priced at $12–$14 per drink.
- Premium ingredients and consumer demand for complexity drive price points (41:17).
- Bar/Restaurant Trends: Focus is shifting from syrup-based mocktails to complex, crafted drinks requiring sophisticated ingredients and processes.
Memorable Moments and Notable Quotes
- Kate Bernot (09:02): “I’m a huge fan of the Guinness 00...the texture is phenomenal. All of the rich flavor is there.”
- David Brown (12:08): "You’d always have O’Doul’s, right?"
- Kate Bernot (24:46): “It is not just most, it is the vast majority of households.”
- Kate Bernot (27:36): “If you like LaCroix and you love IPAs, that [hop water] product is for you. If you don’t like either of those things, you’re going to struggle.”
- Kate Bernot (29:04): “There’s a ton of consumer confusion because these are new categories, and building a category is extremely difficult, especially when it’s as personal as something you put inside your body.”
- Kate Bernot (36:46): “Alcohol margins pay the bills...the challenge is to see the same or similar margins from non-alk products.”
Timestamps for Key Segments
- [00:26] The stigma and evolution of NA beer
- [04:29] Kate Bernot’s career path and motivations
- [05:36] The beer judging process explained
- [08:20] Dramatic improvement in NA beer quality
- [09:02] Kate’s favorite NA beers
- [11:06] Market explosion: supply and demand for NA beers
- [13:08] Can NA beer taste like “the real deal”?
- [14:31] How NA beer is made: science & innovation
- [16:44] Athletic Brewing’s unique impact and marketing
- [21:52] The NA narrative: health, moderation, and marketing
- [24:46] NA beer consumers are overwhelmingly also alcohol drinkers
- [26:52] Brand positioning, hop waters, and alternative beverages
- [29:04] Building new beverage categories and consumer confusion
- [30:42] NA beer as a lifeline for the struggling beer industry
- [32:23] Market saturation and the “bubble” question
- [35:31] Bar and restaurant adaptation; NA’s effect on hospitality
- [37:12] Why NA beer on tap is rare
- [39:57] Price perceptions and the economics of NA beer
- [41:17] The rise of mocktails and non-alcoholic spirits in bars
- [43:07] Kate and David’s personal NA favorites
Conclusion
The NA beer revolution, led by innovators like Athletic Brewing, has fundamentally shifted consumer perceptions, the retail landscape, and the hospitality sector. While initial explosive growth is slowing as the market matures, and competition will likely thin, NA beer is positioned as a new, lasting fixture—supported by health trends and evolving drinking habits. Both beer aficionados and casual drinkers now have more—and better—choices than ever.
For further insight, check out Kate Bernot’s reporting in Bon Appetit, The Washington Post, VinePair, and the Sightlines podcast from Good Beer Hunting.