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Loch Lomond 12 Year Old Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky

Loch Lomond 12 Year Old Highland Single Malt Scotch Whisky

7.5 /10
EDITOR
Type: Single Malt
Age: 12 Year Old
ABV: 46%
Price: £43.75

Loch Lomond is a name that divides opinion in whisky circles, and I think that's precisely why it deserves your attention. The 12 Year Old Highland Single Malt arrives at a confident 46% ABV — non-chill filtered, if the strength is any indication — and at £43.75, it sits in that increasingly competitive bracket where a bottle has to work hard to justify its place on your shelf. Having spent time with this one, I believe it makes a fair case for itself.

Style & Character

What strikes me about the Loch Lomond 12 is its positioning. This is a Highland single malt that doesn't chase the heavily sherried or aggressively peated trends dominating the market right now. At twelve years of age and bottled at 46%, it signals a whisky that wants to be taken on its own terms — old enough to carry some weight, young enough to retain vitality. The higher bottling strength is a welcome choice; too many distilleries at this price point water their expressions down to 40% and call it a day. Here, you're getting something with genuine texture and presence in the glass.

The Loch Lomond range has always occupied an interesting space in the Scottish whisky landscape. It's not a household name in the way Glenfiddich or Macallan might be, and perhaps that works in its favour. There's no premium markup for prestige here — what you're paying for is the liquid, not the marketing. For a twelve-year-old single malt at this strength, the pricing is genuinely competitive. You'd struggle to find many Highland malts offering comparable age and ABV without creeping well past the fifty-pound mark.

The Verdict

I'm giving the Loch Lomond 12 a score of 7.5 out of 10. It earns that mark by doing something increasingly rare in the mid-range single malt category: offering honest value without cutting corners on strength or maturation. This isn't a whisky that will rewrite your understanding of Scotch, and it doesn't need to be. What it does is deliver a well-constructed Highland malt at a price that respects the drinker's wallet. For someone building out their collection, or looking for a dependable evening dram that won't cause guilt when you pour a second measure, this fits the brief neatly.

Where it sits in my estimation is as a solid weeknight malt — the kind of bottle you reach for when you want something considered but uncomplicated. It's a whisky that rewards attention without demanding it, and at this price, that balance is harder to find than you might expect.

Best Served

Pour it neat and give it a few minutes to open in the glass. At 46%, it has enough backbone to stand on its own, but a small splash of water — no more than a teaspoon — will soften the edges and let the mid-palate develop more fully. This is also a malt that would work beautifully in a Highball with quality soda water if the weather calls for something longer, though I'd encourage you to try it straight first. The strength is there for a reason.

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Duncan Cairns
Duncan Cairns
Senior Whisky Reviewer

Duncan has spent two decades judging Scotch whisky at competitions from the International Wine & Spirit Competition to the World Whiskies Awards, developing a palate that prizes balance and terroir ab...

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