Cognac vs. Brandy: Key Differences and Why They Matter
All cognac is brandy, but not all brandy is cognac — a sentence that sounds like a riddle but is actually French law. This page breaks down what separates these two categories, how geography and regulation draw the line, and why that distinction shows up on the shelf in both quality signals and price tags.
Definition and scope
Brandy, in the broadest sense, is a spirit distilled from fermented fruit juice — most commonly grapes. It is made on every continent that grows fruit, under dozens of regional names and regulatory frameworks, with almost no single global standard binding them together.
Cognac is a specific, legally protected subset of brandy. Under French appellation d'origine contrôlée (AOC) rules administered by the Bureau National Interprofessionnel du Cognac (BNIC), cognac must be produced in the Cognac region of southwestern France — specifically within the Charente and Charente-Maritime departments, plus small portions of Deux-Sèvres and Dordogne. The grapes must come from one of six defined crus, the distillation must use copper pot stills (alembics charentais), and the spirit must age for a minimum of two years in French oak barrels. The full technical requirements are codified in the French Code Rural, with import recognition enforced in the United States through the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB).
That geographic lock is absolute. A producer in California, South Africa, or Armenia cannot legally call their grape brandy "cognac" — regardless of how closely they replicate the method.
For a deeper look at how the appellation system structures the entire category, the cognac appellation and AOC rules page covers the regulatory architecture in detail.
How it works
The difference is not just geography — it is a layered stack of constraints that have no equivalent in generic brandy production.
The cognac production chain, from vineyard to bottle:
- Grape varieties — At least 90% of the blend must come from Ugni Blanc (also called Trebbiano), Folle Blanche, or Colombard. Ugni Blanc alone accounts for roughly 98% of plantings in the region, according to the BNIC.
- Fermentation — No sugar addition is permitted during fermentation. The base wine is thin and high-acid by design — approximately 7–9% ABV — which concentrates flavor compounds during distillation.
- Double distillation — Two passes through copper pot stills are mandatory. The first produces a brouillis at roughly 28–32% ABV; the second brings the spirit to approximately 70% ABV.
- Oak aging — A minimum of two years in Limousin or Tronçais oak barrels (never new barrels for extended aging). Most commercial releases far exceed this floor — XO-grade cognac requires a minimum of 10 years under rules updated by BNIC in 2018.
- Dilution and bottling — Distilled water is added to bring the spirit to at least 40% ABV before bottling.
Generic brandy from outside the appellation carries none of these specific obligations. A Spanish brandy like Brandy de Jerez has its own DO framework, but uses a solera aging system, different grape varieties, and sherry-seasoned barrels. An American brandy produced in California may be column-distilled, aged in American oak or not aged at all, and bottled at a wide range of proof points. The production flexibility is enormous — which is why the category ranges from very cheap to genuinely excellent, without a shared quality floor.
Common scenarios
When the distinction matters most:
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Buying a gift — The AOC designation on a cognac label functions as a quality guarantee in a way that "brandy" alone does not. A bottle labeled cognac has met 12-plus mandatory production criteria before it left France. The cognac grades explained page maps the VS/VSOP/XO ladder that helps narrow choices further.
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Mixing cocktails — A well-made California or Peruvian brandy can perform excellently in cocktails at a lower price point than cognac. The Sidecar, the Brandy Alexander, and the Vieux Carré all predate any contemporary premium cognac pricing, and many bartenders deliberately choose non-cognac brandy for high-volume applications.
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Collecting and investment — The secondary market for aged spirits treats cognac as a distinct asset class. Vintage cognacs from houses like Rémy Martin, Hennessy, and Courvoisier command auction prices measured in hundreds to thousands of dollars per bottle. Generic brandy, with rare exceptions, does not participate in that market.
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Reading a label — A bottle that says "French Brandy" is not cognac. A bottle that says "Armagnac" is also not cognac — it is a neighboring protected appellation with its own distinct rules, covered in detail on the cognac vs armagnac page.
Decision boundaries
The practical question for most buyers is whether the cognac designation justifies the price premium in their specific use case.
For sipping neat or lightly diluted, the structured aging and controlled production of cognac deliver a consistency and complexity that most unregulated brandies cannot reliably match. For mixing, the calculus shifts — the aromatic integration that makes a great VSOP shine neat can be partially masked by citrus and sugar anyway.
The broader reference overview at the site index provides orientation across all the dimensions of cognac — from production science to market behavior — for anyone building a fuller picture of where cognac sits inside the larger spirits world.
The most important thing the cognac-versus-brandy comparison reveals is that "brandy" is a production method, and "cognac" is a place. That distinction is not marketing. It is enforced by French appellation law, recognized by U.S. import regulations, and protected under bilateral trade agreements between the European Union and the United States.
References
- Bureau National Interprofessionnel du Cognac (BNIC) — Official cognac regulatory and promotional body; source of production statistics and AOC requirements
- U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) — Standards of Identity for Distilled Spirits — Governs how cognac and brandy are labeled and sold in the United States
- European Commission — Protected Designations of Origin and Geographical Indications — EU GI register covering cognac's protected status
- French Code Rural et de la Pêche Maritime — Underlying French statutory framework for AOC designations including cognac