Just two bottles of The Dalmore 52-Year-Old exist. One was auctioned at Sotheby’s Hong Kong in May 2025, fetching 500,000 HKD. The other remains in the distillery’s own archive, untouched. The message is unmistakable: this isn’t about scaling rarity. It’s about defining it.
And for serious collectors — especially those thinking in decades, not quarters — that distinction matters.
Precision over Production
Matured in American white oak ex-bourbon casks, then finished in a Matusalem Oloroso sherry butt, this single malt was bottled at 40% ABV and presented in hand-blown crystal with a sterling silver stag emblem. It’s not just what’s inside the bottle — it’s the philosophy outside it. This is not a line extension. It’s a statement piece.
While Macallan may still dominate the secondary market charts, The Dalmore is moving differently. It’s asserting cultural capital, not just resale value. The 52 isn’t a liquid asset. It’s a cultural artifact.
Rare spirits, once a niche slice of the WAX Vault, are now one of the fastest-growing categories on the platform. Since Q2 2024, we’ve seen a 27% increase in policy-bound whisky entries. And Dalmore — alongside Yamazaki and Glenfarclas — is driving much of that volume.
Insure the Irreplaceable
When one of two bottles in the world ships across continents, insurance isn’t an afterthought — it’s the protocol. We’ve handled transcontinental transfers for collectible spirits that required temperature-controlled logistics, double-blind chain-of-custody handling, and same-day underwriting.
It’s not a flex. It’s a necessity.
The Dalmore 52’s insurance profile is on par with an early Journe or a high-grade copy of Action Comics #1. Value density, fragility, and provenance all demand bespoke coverage — and fast.
And collectors know it. The average declared value of new spirits policies on WAX is up 34% since 2023.
In a world where noise is currency, The Dalmore 52 whispers. It doesn’t flood shelves or seed influencer kits. It creates its own gravity. And it reminds us that collecting, at its best, is slow, deliberate, and deeply personal.
You don’t stumble into a bottle like this. You chase it, plan for it, protect it.
And if you’re lucky enough to hold it — even for a moment — you insure it like the history it is.