Known for their bold flavours and global appeal, Australian wines have long been a fixture on shelves from Seoul to Stockholm. But recent reports of counterfeit Australian wine bottles infiltrating international markets raise fresh concerns about the vulnerability of Australia’s key export product. Our wine industry could readily come under attack from a shadow economy of fakes.
It was recently reported that counterfeit bottles of the iconic Australian wine Yellow Tail were circulating in the UK once again. Though the brand’s owner, Casella Family Brands, has noted that this specific incident may have stemmed from an earlier case, the warnings echo a wider, ongoing concern. Counterfeit wine is a real issue and it is a persistent threat to both reputation and revenue, especially for successful export-driven producers like those in Australia.
Fake bottles of premium wines can be slipped into legitimate distribution chains by increasingly sophisticated criminal networks. These operations often go beyond the crude forgery of a label, replicating bottles, capsules, and even serial numbers with alarming precision. The result: counterfeit wines that not only undermine brand equity but, more crucially, pose health risks to unwitting consumers.
For Australian producers, whose export markets are lifelines, especially after years of trade headwinds with China, the threat is more than hypothetical. It’s structural.
A Vineyard’s Best Defence: Trade Marks
What can producers do when wine fraud doesn’t just erode trust, but pours it out by the glass?
The answer starts with strong intellectual property (IP) hygiene, particularly trade marks. Robust trade mark protection in key export markets remains the foundation of legal recourse. Without it, rights holders are often powerless to act when fakes emerge on foreign shelves.
Also, wineries should think beyond just trade mark protection for their name or label. Distinctive packaging elements like packaging colours, designs, custom bottle shapes, embossed features, or unique closures can also be protected and enforced as valuable brand assets. Safeguarding these design elements helps build brand recognition and offers an extra layer of defence against copycats.
Registered marks are the beginning. The savviest brands file customs notices with border authorities, effectively deputising customs officials as brand enforcers. These notices empower agencies to detain shipments suspected of infringing trademarks, providing a crucial frontline defense.
Tech-Enabled Trust
Beyond legal protections, technology can also provide ways to secure trust. From QR codes and holographic seals to NFC chips and blockchain-backed authenticity systems, winemakers are experimenting with ways to secure the journey from vineyard to shelf. We are already seeing this in the EU where they were researching blockchain technology under their project TRACEWINDU.
The idea being to permanently record every stage of wine production, right from grape cultivation, fermentation, bottling to distribution. All of that information could be accessed via a QR code on the label. A consumer could scan the code to get the full history of the wine. There is also some ground breaking research happening in this area that utilizes laser-induced graphene (LIG) chipless RFID tags embedded in corks.
This approach aims to provide a cost-effective and non-cloneable solution for authenticating wine bottles (see, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-97613-z).
Bottles Talk. So Should Consumers
But even the most high-tech systems falter without education. Wine brands must also invest in raising consumer awareness: how to spot a fake, how to report suspicious bottles, and how to dispose of empty bottles so they don’t become vessels for fraud. Looking for misspellings, changed words, and errors in punctuation can be easy ways to spot counterfeits.
For really good counterfeits, you’d have to go a step further and look at the label texture or colour. Public campaigns whether through retailers or direct-to-consumer channels can be potent deterrents in their own right.
The Bigger Picture
Safeguarding a wine brand is about ensuring that when a consumer in Berlin, Boston, or Bangkok picks up an Australian bottle, they’re tasting what the winemaker intended and not a counterfeit concoction in a familiar glass.
For Australia, where wine exports contribute over $2 billion annually to the economy, the stakes are more than reputational. They’re economic and existential.
The global wine market will only become more complex. But with proactive IP enforcement, technological vigilance, and consumer engagement, Australian wine brands can ensure they’re not just known worldwide but trusted.
This article was written by Aparna Watal, partner at Halfords IP.