The Cut — June 15, 2026 — SE02E50 — Heaven Hill Just Undercut Eagle Rare 17

In this episode
Monday’s Cut opens with the value move that resets the premium bourbon shelf. Heaven Hill confirmed the Elijah Craig 18-Year Straight Bourbon at $89.99 this week — the brand’s first formal 18-year age statement, with 6,000 bottles in the initial cohort through standard retail distribution and a pre-allocation deadline of June 27. The comparison point…
Mentioned in this episode: E.H. Taylor, Buffalo Trace, Eagle Rare, Wild Turkey, Heaven Hill, Elijah Craig, Parker’s Heritage, Bardstown
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The Cut — June 15, 2026 Episode: Monday, June 15, 2026
This is The Cut.
Dried fruit, toasted oak, and a finish that runs long after the glass is down — that’s what nearly two decades in the barrel earns you. This week, Heaven Hill confirmed you can get there for $89.99 through a normal store shelf.
I’m John from Chasing the Unicorn Podcast.
Here’s where we want to end up: Elijah Craig 18-Year Straight Bourbon, $89.99, on a retailer’s pre-allocation list before June 27.
Here’s what makes it tricky. Heaven Hill fills retailer priority lists before the formal announcement reaches most buyers. The stores that maintained interest queues for E.H. Taylor Warehouse C got first notification when that window opened. Stores that waited for the press release lost their position. The same mechanism runs here. The deadline that matters isn’t when the news goes wide — it’s June 27, when priority lists close.
Here’s the move. Call the retailer where you’ve bought Heaven Hill products before and ask if they’re holding a pre-allocation list for Elijah Craig 18-Year. If they are, get on it. If they’re not, find the store in your market that is.
The value case is the industry story this week. Buffalo Trace Antique Collection’s Eagle Rare 17 — seventeen years, $99 MSRP, distributed through state lotteries — is the closest shelf-comparable at this tier. Elijah Craig 18-Year is a year older, ten dollars cheaper, and available through Heaven Hill’s normal retail network. That’s not a close call on access or price.
The age statement is what backs it. When a label says 18 years, that’s a federal guarantee: every drop in the bottle spent at least eighteen years in the barrel. Not the average — the minimum. Heaven Hill filed that TTB label approval with inventory to match it. The barrels going into EC18 were laid down no later than 2008 — through the financial crisis, through the pandemic, through the current market correction — before any of this week’s confirmation was possible. When a first-ever age statement appears on a label, it doesn’t mean a distillery made a decision this week. It means they made a decision nearly two decades ago and held the line.
The Chase this week. Wild Turkey Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 is the Spotlight — and today is the last day at primary retail. Seventeen years, 116.4 proof, 11,400 bottles nationally from Eddie Russell. The flavor runs deep: caramel, dried apricot, and toasted oak on the nose; layered vanilla and black pepper, leather and raisin on the finish. Eddie Russell recommends three to five drops of water to open it at that proof. It’s $199.99 today. Pre-sale secondary is already tracking $280 to $320 without a single published review. After today, the only path is secondary. This is worth the chase.
Also on the list: the Kentucky Bourbon Festival VIP Master Class with Conor O’Driscoll — September 17 through 20 in Bardstown, fewer than 120 tickets remain. That’s the Heaven Hill Master Distiller leading a small-group tasting with pours from the BiB portfolio and Parker’s Heritage Collection — context you won’t get at retail. And the under-$80 tier is quiet this edition — nothing qualifies, and we’d rather say so than fill the slot. Full read on all three is in today’s Cut Daily on our website. Free.
A word of caution on the EC18 timing. June 27 is the pre-allocation close, but the national retailer window doesn’t open until the week of July 7. The bottles ship in the July-to-August window. You’re not buying bourbon today — you’re reserving a position for a transaction that settles a month from now. The price of being wrong is a list registration. The price of not acting is paying secondary in September. The odds of getting EC18 at $89.99 after today fall fast once those lists close. Know which risk you’re taking before you decide this can wait.
One more thing before we close — today’s American Whiskey Industry Brief on Patreon runs the Flight: E.H. Taylor Old Warehouse C BiB against Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C926, side by side, in the Father’s Day premium gift range. Same federal Bottled-in-Bond credential, very different bottles. The Father’s Day shipping math and the verdict are waiting.
That’s The Cut. The full American Whiskey Industry Brief is at patreon.com/ChasingTheUnicornPodcast. I’m John Schuster. Thanks for joining me. Your unicorn is out there.
The Cut Daily
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Informational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing here is investment advice. Verify before buying, trading, or bidding. We are not liable for errors or financial losses.
Heaven Hill just undercut Eagle Rare 17. Elijah Craig’s first-ever 18-year straight bourbon confirmed at $89.99 through standard retail — that’s a full year of additional age on the BTAC benchmark at ten dollars less, arriving through a store shelf instead of a state lottery. The pre-allocation closes June 27.
Heaven Hill confirmed this week that the Elijah Craig 18-Year Straight Bourbon — the brand’s first formal 18-year age statement — will retail at $89.99, with 6,000 bottles in the initial cohort and a pre-allocation deadline of June 27. That announcement lands in the same 72-hour window where Wild Turkey’s Master’s Keep Triumph 2026 closes its primary-market access today, Father’s Day is six days out, and the Kentucky barrel tax phase-out posted its first documented balance sheet impact. Today’s edition covers what the EC18 MSRP means for the premium shelf, which Father’s Day access window still clears a ground-shipping deadline, and what the real data says about whether the gifting window actually grows the bourbon category.
Heaven Hill’s Elijah Craig 18-Year Straight Bourbon has a price: $89.99. That was confirmed June 13 via preliminary retailer communications from Heaven Hill, four days after the federal TTB approved the label. The initial release covers approximately 6,000 bottles nationally, with a pre-allocation close of June 27 for priority retail accounts. The national retailer window opens the week of July 7.
To understand why $89.99 matters, a quick reference: the Buffalo Trace Antique Collection’s Eagle Rare 17 — a 17-year Kentucky straight bourbon distributed through state lotteries — carries a $99 MSRP you can only access by winning a drawing. Elijah Craig 18-Year is a year older, ten dollars cheaper, and available through Heaven Hill’s normal retail network. That is not a close call on value.
The production case starts in 2008. Heaven Hill had to fill those Bernheim Distillery barrels no later than that year and commit them to an 18-year maturation cycle — through the 2008 financial contraction, through the pandemic disruption, and through the current market correction — before any of this week’s news was possible. The result is now the longest age statement the Elijah Craig line has ever carried.
The MSRP also positions EC18 in direct competition with Michter’s US★1 10-Year (around $99–$119) and Old Forester Birthday Bourbon (historically $129–$149) for the sub-$150 premium event tier. Heaven Hill has no equivalent expression at this tier in its current lineup. Now it does, at a price point that makes the competitive arithmetic unusual.
The pre-allocation close is June 27. Heaven Hill’s retailer lists fill before the formal announcement reaches most consumers. The stores that maintained interest queues for the E.H. Taylor Warehouse C BiB were first-notified when that window opened and accessed better positions than stores that waited for the press release. The same mechanism applies here.
“Aged 10 years” on a label means something specific: the youngest drop of whiskey in the bottle is at least 10 years old. If there’s older whiskey blended in — some 12-year, some 14-year — the label still reads 10, because the rule is the age of the youngest drop, not the average.
“No Age Statement” (NAS) means the distillery isn’t committing to a minimum. They might be using 6-year whiskey. They might be using 12-year. They might be blending across a range.
An NAS bourbon isn’t automatically worse. The Elijah Craig Barrel Proof series carries no age statement because Heaven Hill wants flexibility to blend the best barrels regardless of when they were filled — a legitimate reason. But the Barrel Proof’s average age has typically run 12 to 14 years in recent batches.
The 18-Year declaration is different. It’s a legally binding floor: every drop in every bottle of EC18 is at least 18 years old. That’s not marketing language. It’s a federal guarantee verified by the TTB approval process. Heaven Hill could not have filed that label unless the inventory exists to back it.
Age statements disappear from labels when distilleries stretch younger stock into a previously older expression. When an age statement appears for the first time, it means the distillery has built genuine inventory depth at that tier — the commitment was made nearly two decades ago, not this week.
What this changes: Age statements are promises. NAS labels are possibilities. When a new age statement appears, trace the commitment backward. Eighteen years of patience is the actual product.
Floor erosion is how much a bottle’s market price has dropped from its recorded high. Elijah Craig Barrel Proof C926 peaked at $138.00 in secondary markets after its TTB confirmation at a series-record 130.4 proof — buyers speculating before retail stock arrived bid the price up. As C926 inventory hit national distribution in the June 14–21 window, that speculative premium compressed toward $115 realized on Bottle Spot. This is the normal secondary arc for an allocated-but-widely-distributed bourbon: the price discovery happens before retail arrives, peaks when secondary is the only access path, and corrects as shelves fill. The 16.7% correction is not a warning signal — it’s the market working as it should. C926 is still $79.99 at retail in most markets. The gap between $79.99 MSRP and $115 secondary is a real premium, but it’s been shrinking as stock expands. Buying at $115 secondary right now means paying a 44% premium for the same bottle you can find at retail for $79.99 if you check two or three stores this week.
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