The 6 Best Ultra-Premium Tequilas to Buy Now in 2026
Courtesy of Fuenteseca Reserve
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The global spirits market may have slowed down, but the popularity of tequila has skyrocketed over the past few years. And in the segment’s ultra-premium tier, so have the prices.
These exclusive drams aren’t relying merely on elegant decanters to justify their price tags: The best bottles in this ascendant crop also deliver on flavor and rarity. “It’s like driving a Bugatti,” says José María Dondé Rangel, a New York City–based tequila expert and beverage director. “How many of them were made, and how many people can actually get inside the car and drive it? It’s the same with tequila—how many people will get to drink the 25 ounces inside a high-end bottle?” Made in small batches with time-tested production techniques (which exclude the use of flavor-enhancing ingredients or additional sugars), they also appeal to drinkers whose preferences have shifted to cleaner spirits. “The real driver is people wising up to [the use of ] additives,” says Mcson Salicetti, C.E.O. of the beverage consultancy Bar Libations & Co. “They’re hunting for traditional, clean tequila and are happy to pay for the good stuff.”
But should you put the top-shelf tequila into a margarita? Faith Chen, director of the Oak Room at the Post Oak Hotel in Houston, makes a $150 cocktail with Clase Azul Gold customers love, but there are some bottles you should treat more like a fine Scotch. “If it were Jose Cuervo 250th Anniversary, which is sold for $650 a pour here, I would recommend having it neat and at room temperature to really embrace the aromas.”
Here, we’ve assembled a list of the most luxurious tequilas to try now—no salted rim required.
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Cielo x Extra Añejo


Image Credit: Cielo Tequila To be classified as extra añejo, tequila must be aged for a minimum of three years. This expression, created by master distiller Arturo Fuentes, goes well beyond that, spending a full decade in oak barrels. The result is a decadent and complex sipping spirit, with rich notes of dark chocolate, oak, vanilla, butterscotch, and ripe fruit.
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Clase Azul Día de Muertos Edición Limitada: Recuerdos


Image Credit: Clase Azul Clase Azul is one of the best-known high-end tequila brands, and it’s just as famous for what’s inside the bottle as it is for its striking packaging. Recuerdos is simple in terms of maturation but complex in flavor. The blend was aged from 12 to 38 months in first-use whiskey barrels, with some of the agave roasted in a pit oven to give it a bit of smokiness, along with notes of orange marmalade, baking spice, citrus, and grassy agave.
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Tequila Purisima


Image Credit: Courtesy of Tequila Purisima Purisima might just be the most exclusive tequila you can (or can’t) get. Interested parties must apply for a “member privilege” code to check out online. Right now, the brand only offers a blanco, made with natural spring water in its own distillery, which delivers a crisp minerality and flavors of citrus, pepper, and fresh agave.
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Fuenteseca Reserva Extra Añejo 21 Year


Image Credit: Fuenteseca Reserva A 10-year-old tequila is rare; a 21-year-old tequila is nearly unheard-of. Master distiller Enrique Fonseca carefully controlled Fuenteseca’s maturation environment, aging the liquid in ex-wine and whiskey barrels to maximize the effects of the wood without overpowering the spirit inside. The rich spice and fruit notes contribute to a sipper unlike anything you’ve ever tried.
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Dobel Grandes Maestros: Francisco Toledo Edition


Image Credit: Maestro Dobel Tequila Dobel’s corporate sibling, Jose Cuervo, dominates the mass market, but the brand is famous for its quality and for introducing the world’s first cristalino in 2008. This tequila marks another first—it was aged for three years in virgin American oak and then finished for up to four months in mezcal casks. The result is layers of subtle smoke that swirl beneath a foundation of black pepper, spice, vanilla, and roasted agave.
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Tears of Llorona Aztec Eagle


Image Credit: Courtesy of Tears of Llorona Another Fonseca project, the small-batch Tears of Llorona is distinctly different from Fuenteseca. Aztec Eagle arrived in late 2025 after aging for five years in three different types of barrels—sherry, Scotch whisky, and brandy. Layers of flavor overlap as you sip, veering from dark chocolate and subtle smoke to ripe tropical fruit and buttery vanilla.







