Direct answer: Yes. Deep Eddy Vodka announced closures affecting its Dripping Springs site, with production continuing at its Buda facility and the Dripping Springs tasting room transitioning out in 2026. The company plans to shift consumer-facing efforts back to Austin and pursue subleasing of the Dripping Springs site to a different vodka producer.[4][5]
Key details
- Closure scope: The Dripping Springs tasting room and visitor center will close, and the site will transition to a sublease with another operator. Production remains at the Buda facility in nearby Texas.[3][5]
- Timeline: The Dripping Springs tasting room is slated to close later in 2026, with the site ceasing as a Deep Eddy production location by mid-2026; tours and events at that site will end as the space transitions.[1][5]
- Production focus: Deep Eddy Vodka production continues at the Buda facility, which remains the brand’s main distillery and bottling site; there will be no changes to output or staffing at the Buda operation.[1][3]
- Strategic shift: Heaven Hill Brands stated it will refocus consumer-facing efforts in Austin, pursuing local partnerships and brand experiences while maintaining production in Texas.[5][1]
Illustration of impact
- For visitors: Dripping Springs location will no longer offer tastings or tours after the transition date; public access to the tasting room ends while production stays in Buda.[5][1]
- For the brand: All Deep Eddy vodka continues to be produced in Buda, supporting ongoing distribution and product availability while shifting marketing and events emphasis to Austin.[1][5]
If you’d like, I can compile a concise timeline with exact dates from the sources and summarize any official statements from Heaven Hill or Deep Eddy for quick reference. I can also pull local location details or map the two Texas sites for you. Citations:,,,.[3][4][5][1]
Sources
The latest additions to Deep Eddy’s distillery and production facility Deep Eddy Vodka’s young production facility in Buda, Texas became fully operational in August of 2017. The Buda distillery has the capacity to produce over 5 million cases per year and employs roughly 55 people operating on a two-shift schedule. The distillery is also home to Deep … Continue reading “A growing Buda”
heavenhill.comHeaven Hill Brands, the privately held owner of Evan Williams Bourbon, said Thursday it acquired fast-growing Deep Eddy Vodka, which has doubled its volume annually since its introduction in 2010.
www.wsj.comDeep Eddy Distillery, makers of Deep Eddy Vodka in Dripping Springs, Texas has announced plans for expansion from 1 million to 5 million cases per year.
www.distillerytrail.comHeaven Hill Brands is to end operations at one of its Deep Eddy vodka sites in Texas.
www.just-drinks.comDeep Eddy Vodka announced it will close its Dripping Springs tasting room later this year as the Austin-based brand shifts its focus back to the city where it w
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www.chron.comThe vodka brand is closing facilities, including a tasting room and visitors' center.
www.thestreet.comHeaven Hill Brands will close Deep Eddy’s Dripping Springs distillery after investing millions, shifting focus to Austin and future growth initiatives.
thedailypour.com