Amarula

Cream liqueur originating from South Africa


title: "Amarula" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["cream-liqueurs", "fruit-liqueurs", "south-african-brands", "south-african-cuisine", "south-african-alcoholic-beverages", "food-and-drink-introduced-in-1983"] description: "Cream liqueur originating from South Africa" topic_path: "geography/south-africa" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amarula" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Cream liqueur originating from South Africa ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox drink"]

FieldValue
nameAmarula
imageGlass of Amarula 2.jpg
captionGlass of Amarula
typeCream liqueur
abv17%
manufacturerSouthern Liqueur Company
originSouth Africa
introducedSeptember 1989
flavourMarula
ingredientsSugar, cream and the fruit of the African marula tree
relatedSpringbokkie
::

| name = Amarula | image = Glass of Amarula 2.jpg | caption = Glass of Amarula | type = Cream liqueur | abv = 17% | proof = | manufacturer = Southern Liqueur Company | distributor = | origin = South Africa | introduced = September 1989 | discontinued = | colour = | flavour = Marula | ingredients = Sugar, cream and the fruit of the African marula tree | variants = | related = Springbokkie | website = | region =

Amarula is a cream liqueur from South Africa. It is made with sugar, cream and the fruit of the African marula tree (Sclerocarya birrea) which is also locally called the elephant tree or the marriage tree. It has an alcohol content of 17% by volume (34 proof). It has had some success at international spirit ratings competitions, winning a gold medal at the 2009 San Francisco World Spirits Competition. It has the taste of slightly fruity caramel.

History

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a7/Wikimania_2025_-Día_3-_08.jpg" caption="A bartender serves Amarula. Nairobi, Kenya."] ::

Amarula was first marketed by Southern Liqueur Company of South Africa (the current trademark owners and wholly owned subsidiary of Distell Group Limited) as a liqueur in September 1989, the Amarula spirit having been launched in 1983.

In 2023, Distell was acquired by Heineken Beverages, and with that the Amarula brand.

Flavors

  1. Amarula Cream Liqueur 17% ABV
  2. Amarula Ethiopian Coffee Cream Liqueur 15.5% ABV
  3. Raspberry, Chocolate & African Baobab Cream Liqueur 15.5% ABV (launched in 2019)
  4. Amarula Vanilla Spice Cream Liqueur 15.5% ABV
  5. Amarula Vegan Liqueur 15.5% ABV
  6. Khanyisa Limited Edition 15.5% ABV - Proceeds go towards rehabilitating Khanyisa, an orphaned albino baby elephant cruelly injured in a poacher's snare.

Elephant-associated marketing

African bush elephants enjoy eating the fruit of the marula tree. Because of the marula tree's association with elephants, the distiller has made them its symbol and supports elephant conservation efforts, co-funding the Amarula Elephant Research Programme at the University of Natal, Durban. For marketing efforts, it produces elephant-themed collectible items.

The brand supports elephant research to protect elephants and conserve the population. In 2002, the Amarula Elephant Research Program (AERP) was launched under the direction of Rob Slotow, a professor at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, South Africa. This primarily researches the way of life, the range of movement and the behavior of the African elephant with the aim of protecting the habitat of the elephants and securing their future in the wild.

In 2025, the brand made an Urban art project called "Elephant Heart" to support Elephant Sanctuary Brazil. A sculpture made out of disco ball circled several places of São Paulo until reaching Beco do Batman, where it would stay at ZIV Galery.

Awards

  1. Amarula Raspberry, Chocolate & African Baobab Cream Liqueur (Master - Liqueur Masters 2022)
  2. Amarula Cream Liqueur (2022 Best South African Cream - World Liqueur Awards)

Distribution

Outside of South Africa, Amarula has had particular success in Brazil. Introduced in the country in the 90s, Amarula is the most popular creamy liqueur in Brazil, having 15% of the market share and consumption growing 44% between 2019 and 2024. Brazil is 8% of the global volume of Amarula.

In 2019, Amarula and brazilian company Rei do Mate made a Co-branding recipe of Amarula Cappuccino.

References

References

  1. "Amarula Cream Liqueur: Ratings and Review Summary for Amarula".
  2. Datta, P.T. Jyothi. (July 7, 2007). "Capturing the taste of Africa". Kasturi & Sons.
  3. Mason, Jessica. (2023-04-27). "Heineken completes Distell and Namibia Breweries acquisition".
  4. https://www.theheinekencompany.com/newsroom/heineken-successfully-completes-acquisition-of-distell-and-namibia-breweries-to-create-heinek
  5. "Amarula Khanyisa".
  6. Admin135. (2018-03-09). "It’s Marula time, gets your trunks out!".
  7. "Preliminary results of the Pilanesberg Elephant Project". University of Natal.
  8. (November 19, 2007). "Amarula launches on-pack Win-an-Elephant promotion". Metropolis International Group.
  9. (2014-05-04). "The Amarula Elephant Research Programme".
  10. Mensagem, Meio &. (2025-08-01). "Amarula se volta à arte urbana com Coração de Elefante".
  11. Kiely, Melita. (2022-11-02). "The Liqueur Masters 2022 results".
  12. "WORLD'S BEST CREAM WINNERS".
  13. Masango, Gugulakhe. (April 5, 2007). "Amarula gunning for top spot". Fin24.
  14. "Amarula celebra 30 anos no Brasil como líder absoluta na categoria de licores cremosos – Portal e TV Fator Brasil".
  15. Buarque, Daniel. (2025-09-15). "Geração Z não bebe? Para Amarula, jovens dão impulso a expansão. E Brasil lidera".
  16. Varejista, Imprensa. (2019-07-25). "Rei do Mate e Amarula se unem em ação de co-branding para criar nova receita".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

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