Skip to main content

Get Started in the World of Beer Trading

The Beer Exchange, Beer Trading
Image used with permission by copyright holder
For fans of craft beer, the search for new brews quickly becomes an integral part of the hobby.

The distribution areas for some of the country’s highest rated beers rarely tend past their own state lines. Once you’ve exhausted the variety on your local shelves, you’ll find that vacations become sidelined with trips to visit new bottle shops and breweries. If beer travel isn’t an option, you may also find it impossible to locate a package store that ships cross-country without shipping fees that triple the price of your order.

That’s where beer trading comes in.

The good news: you’re not alone in your quest for new beer. There are thousands of like-minded individuals around the world who are looking for new bottles and cans to line their cellar shelves. Websites devoted to beer trading have sprung up to fill that niche.

One of the most full-featured communities to embrace the beer trading phenomena is The Beer Exchange. Users post a profile on the website with beers they have available for trade and beers they’re interested in receiving. The site then automatically matches traders based on those lists, or you can browse individual users and their collections.

The Beer Exchange features an eBay-like trader rating system, so you can feel confident in making your transaction with experienced, trustworthy partners. Once you propose a trade, you can work out all of the specifics about your trade, including adding any “extras” to help fill out your box and share a bit of beer karma.

Many beer traders use platforms like The Beer Exchange to find “whales,” hard to find, exclusive, limited-release beers. Getting access to those can be tough for new traders with small cellars and limited resources. However, there are plenty of users also interested in “local-for-local” swaps who just want to experience beer from around the country, regardless of its perceived worth or scarcity.

Access to The Beer Exchange is free, but advanced features are available for a $5 monthly subscription. The premium add-ons include receiving notifications when specific beers are added to a user’s list, dollar value calculators to determine your trade and cellar worth, and the ability to easily export your beer list.

Editors' Recommendations

Lee Heidel
Lee Heidel is the managing editor of Brew/Drink/Run, a website and podcast that promotes brewing your own beer, consuming the…
Super Bowl of Beers: The Best Brews from San Francisco and Kansas City
2020 super bowl beers best of san francisco kansas city fieldwork feature

While the highly anticipated ads may tell you otherwise, what you drink this Super Bowl Sunday doesn’t have to be generic suds. In fact, you can drink some great stuff from in and around the two cities represented in this year’s matchup.

As the Kansas City Chiefs get set to take on the San Francisco 49ers, another rivalry comes to life — that of craft beer from the two American cities. We’ve picked three of our favorites from the Bay Area and the city that sits in two states to suit up and fetch a W in the name of beer excellence.

Read more
2 New Whiskey-Beer Collaborations to Drink Now
brooklyn four roses

Wintertime is the season for dark beers like stout and porter, and beer that has been aged in a whiskey barrel offers a particularly warming sensation with added notes of oak, vanilla, and spice. There are two new barrel-aged beers available just in time for the holidays, both from craft breweries that have collaborated with some top-tier whiskey distilleries.

First up is the brand-new Barrel-Aged Baltic Porter from Harpoon Brewery, which has locations in Boston and Vermont. Not too far from the Vermont facility is the WhistlePig distillery, so it made perfect sense for the two companies to work together on this new beer. They decided to take the brewery's already successful Baltic Porter and age it in WhistlePig rye whiskey barrels for a period of time. The resulting beer is sweet and malty, with hints of vanilla, baking spice, and dried fruit that pop throughout each sip. According to Dan Kenary, CEO and co-founder of Harpoon, the plan was to reintroduce this beer with what he calls a special edge. “We thought, what better way to foster innovation than to partner with our neighbors at WhistlePig," he said in a press release, "bringing our brewers and their talented distillers together for a meaningful and delicious collaboration.”

Read more
Merrell and Dogfish Head Team Up to Make Beer and Trail-Running Shoes
Merrell Dogfish Head Sea Quench Shoes

You know why a beer tastes so good after you mow the lawn, right? It's because beer tastes so good at all times. But also because beer is packed with vitamins and minerals that your body needs and craves all the more after you have been out there sweating in your yard.

And what also leads to a lot of sweating? Trail running. It follows, then, that beer will also taste great after this most excellent form of exercise. But don't grab just any brew after you log those overland miles, instead crack open a beer from Dogfish Head that's so perfect for après trail running that Merrell, a company noted for its excellent trail running shoes, just had to be a part of it.

Read more