The best non-alcoholic spirits for mocktails are the ones that deliver structure—aroma, bitterness, spice, and length—so your drink reads as a true cocktail, not a substitute.

What makes a non-alcoholic spirit “best” for mocktails?

A great zero-proof spirit should do three things well. First, it should carry aromatics (think juniper, oak, smoke, spice) so the first sip feels dimensional. Second, it should bring a touch of grip—a gentle dryness, bitterness, or warmth that keeps citrus and sweetness in check. Third, it should stay present after dilution, because mocktails inevitably meet ice, soda, and stirring.

Some NA spirits are designed mainly for sipping; others are made to mix cleanly into classics like a G+T, Old Fashioned, or Margarita-style build. If mocktails are your goal, prioritize spirits with a defined “lane” (gin-style, whiskey-style, agave/mezcal-style) so recipes translate naturally.

Little Saints was created for that exact purpose: zero-proof spirits with real cocktail energy—botanical lift, oak depth, or smoky spice—plus functional ingredients chosen for calm and clarity.

Which type of non-alcoholic spirit is best for your mocktail style?

If you already know what you love to drink, start there. The quickest path to a great mocktail is choosing a spirit that matches the cocktail’s backbone—then keeping everything else classic.

If you crave bright and herbaceous, look for a gin-style profile—juniper, coriander, citrus, and a crisp finish. If you like slow, contemplative sips, a whiskey-style NA spirit with oak, vanilla, caramel, and spice can anchor stirred drinks. And if your nights call for smoke and spice, a mezcal-inspired spirit brings that golden-hour warmth that makes citrus feel grown.

Little Saints makes this decision simple with three distinct lanes:

  • St. Juniper for gin cocktails with a botanical flair—juniper, birch, cardamom, angelica root, coriander, plus cucumber and citrus lift.
  • St. Oak for Old Fashioneds and whiskey-style builds—American and French oak extracts with vanilla, caramel, and spice.
  • St. Ember for mezcal-inspired mocktails—Palo Santo with ginger and cardamom, built for margarita- and paloma-style drinks.

Choose the lane, then build your ritual.

How do you build a mocktail that tastes like a real cocktail?

Start with a spirit that can hold its own—then treat the rest like a classic recipe. A reliable formula is: spirit + acid + sweet + bitter/aromatic + dilution.

  • Acid (citrus) brings brightness and makes botanicals pop.
  • Sweetness should support—not dominate. When the drink tastes “too sweet,” it usually needs bitterness, salt, or extra citrus.
  • Bitterness & aromatics are the difference between a drink that’s refreshing and one that’s memorable. Think gentian, citrus peel, herbs, spice, or oak.
  • Dilution is part of the design. Stir for silky texture. Shake for lift. Top with soda for length.

A simple way to upgrade almost any mocktail: finish with an expressed citrus peel, a cucumber ribbon, or a pinch of salt. Small details read as craft.

With Little Saints, the spirit is already doing the heavy lifting—so your mocktail stays elegant even when it’s easy.

St. Juniper
$42.99
St. Oak
$42.99
St. Ember
$42.99
The Flasks Trio
$29.99
The Top Shelf Spirits Set
$149.99

Which Little Saints spirit is best for the mocktail you want to make?

If you’re making a G+T, gimlet, or anything crisp and botanical, reach for St. Juniper. Its juniper-led profile (with cardamom, angelica root, coriander, and a cool cucumber note) keeps citrus bright and soda snappy—exactly what you want in tall, refreshing builds.

If you’re building a stirred, spirit-forward mocktail—Old Fashioned-inspired, Manhattan-adjacent, or simply “something dark and complex”—choose St. Oak. Oak extracts plus vanilla, caramel, and spice give you that warm, composed finish that makes a low-sugar cocktail feel complete.

If your go-to is margarita, paloma, or smoky citrus, St. Ember brings the edge: Palo Santo with ginger and cardamom, designed to stand up to lime, grapefruit, and salt.

When in doubt, a set is the most elegant way to cover your bases: one botanical, one brown, one smoky. Your mocktail menu becomes effortless.

Which non-alcoholic spirit is best for mocktails: gin-style, whiskey-style, or mezcal-style?
What makes a non-alcoholic spirit taste less “sweet” in a mocktail?
Is St. Juniper meant to replace gin in mocktails?
Is St. Oak a good non-alcoholic spirit for an Old Fashioned-style mocktail?
What’s the best non-alcoholic spirit for margarita or paloma-style mocktails?
Do Little Saints spirits include functional ingredients?
Should you start with a set if you’re exploring the best NA spirits for mocktails?