Mexican Spirits, fully explained.
Every protected denomination. Every traditional regional distillate. Every fermented ancestor. Every modern Mexican spirit. The producers, the species, the science, and the cultural context.
Four layers, never collapsed.
Mexican spirit names get tangled because four different kinds of information share the same words. We keep them separate.
- 1
Legal category
A protected designation under Mexican law — like Tequila, Mezcal, Raicilla, Bacanora, Sotol, Charanda, Comiteco.
- 2
Traditional name
A regional spirit that may or may not have its own DO — like Pox, Tuxca, Lechuguilla, Palmilla, Bingarrote.
- 3
Production term
A method or style — like Ensamble, Pechuga, Capón, Clay-pot still, Filipino still.
- 4
Plant / local name
A species or its local vernacular — like Tobalá (Agave potatorum), Cuixe (one form of A. karwinskii), Bilia.
The seven protected DOs.
Tequila, Mezcal, Raicilla, Bacanora, Sotol, Charanda, Comiteco. Every protected category under Mexican IP law, with current regulatory state through May 2026.
Bacanora
Sonora's outlaw agave spirit. Distilled from Agave angustifolia (locally called pacífica) across 35 municipalities of the Sierra Madre Occidental in eastern Sonora, illegal from 1915 to 1992, granted a Denomination of Origin in 2000, and governed today by NOM-168-SCFI-2004 in transition to NOM-186-SCFI-2024.
Charanda
Mexico's protected rum. Distilled from sugarcane grown on the red volcanic soils of central Michoacán, restricted to 16 designated municipalities, governed by NOM-144-SCFI-2017 and protected as a Denomination of Origin since 2003.
Comiteco
The protected spirit of Comitán, Chiapas, and the only major Mexican distillate built from a multi-base ferment of aguamiel (fresh agave sap from Agave americana) and piloncillo (unrefined cane sugar). Granted Geographical Indication status on 25 September 2025, an IG and not a full Denomination of Origin.
Mezcal
Mexico's broadest agave-spirit category. Distilled from dozens of agave species across thirteen denominated states, governed by NOM-070-SCFI-2016 and protected as a Denomination of Origin since 1994. Produced in three legal classes (Mezcal, Mezcal Artesanal, Mezcal Ancestral) and required by law to be 100% agave.
Raicilla
A western-Jalisco agave spirit, protected as a Denomination of Origin since 2019. Distilled in seventeen designated municipalities (sixteen in Jalisco plus Bahía de Banderas in Nayarit) from several permitted agave species, split into two formally recognized sub-styles: Sierra (mountain) and Costa (coastal).
Sotol
Mexico's Chihuahuan Desert spirit, distilled not from agave but from the Dasylirion genus. Protected as a Denomination of Origin since 2002 across Chihuahua, Coahuila, and Durango, governed by NOM-159-SCFI-2004, and at the center of a live cross-border IP dispute with Texas producers.
Tequila
Mexico's most-recognized spirit. Distilled exclusively from Blue Weber agave across 181 specific municipalities in five denominated states, governed by NOM-006-SCFI-2012 and protected as a Denomination of Origin since 1974.
Verified producers.
Tequila NOMs cross-checked against the CRT registry. Mezcal palenques with their maestro mezcaleros and family lineages.
818 Tequila
The celebrity tequila brand founded in 2021 by Kendall Jenner, produced at a contract distillery in Amatitán, Jalisco; the specific facility identifier is not publicly disclosed by the brand.
A Medios Chiles
An artisanal mezcal from San Pablo Etla, Oaxaca, made by maestro mezcalero Don Fortino Ramos in a conical earthen oven and fermented in Sabino-wood vats, with batches timed to the full moon and a wide range of cultivated and wild agaves.
ArteNOM Selección 1146
The Añejo expression in Jake Lustig's curated ArteNOM Selección series, bottled from Enrique Fonseca's La Tequileña (NOM 1146) in the town of Tequila, Jalisco; an independent-bottler release rather than a single-distillery brand.
ArteNOM Selección de 1414
The Reposado bottling in Jake Lustig's ArteNOM Selección series, a US-based independent-bottler project that releases small batches of tequila under the producing distillery's NOM number; the 1414 expression sources from a Valles-region distillery in the town of Tequila, Jalisco, the same facility that today houses Diageo's Don Julio production.
Bozal
A curatorial mezcal brand that bottles wild and semi-wild agave releases sourced from a network of palenques across Oaxaca, Guerrero, and Durango; founded by Eli Gunst under 3 Badge Beverage, returned to Mexican ownership in November 2024 when Maguey Imports acquired the label.
Caballito Cerrero
A Jiménez family distillery in Amatitán, Jalisco, founded in 1950 by Don Alfonso Jiménez Rosales (an earlier co-founder of Herradura) that bottles its agave spirits as destilado de agave rather than tequila so it can preserve heritage varietals and pre-DO methods the modern tequila standard discourages; the source of the "Chato" varietal that lent its name to the local-name shorthand.