White Rum Reviews & Tasting Notes
White rum reviews, information, tasting notes and serving suggestions. Find out more about your favourite white rums and their distilleries, and discover new rums with the 'You Might Also Like...' recommendations!
While 'white rum' is a conventionally used rum categorisation, there's so much more that defines a rum than it's colour; from the raw materials, distillation process, ageing, blending, filtration, and addition of sugar and sweeteners, to the flavour profile, character, complexity and provenance. The white rum category contains a hugely diverse range of products - always remember to look beyond the colour!
Want to add your rum to the World Rum Guide? Contact Us
While 'white rum' is a conventionally used rum categorisation, there's so much more that defines a rum than it's colour; from the raw materials, distillation process, ageing, blending, filtration, and addition of sugar and sweeteners, to the flavour profile, character, complexity and provenance. The white rum category contains a hugely diverse range of products - always remember to look beyond the colour!
Want to add your rum to the World Rum Guide? Contact Us
White Rum Reviews: A - Z
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All white rums reviewed have been tasted independently by the World Rum Guide's expert tasting panel, offering our opinions and tasting notes alongside information and key facts about each rum. All details are verified as correct at the time of publishing and whilst reviews are regularly updated, information may have changed.
What is White Rum?
The name is a little misleading – most ‘white’ or ‘silver’ rums are in fact clear liquids, as they are typically young rums which have not been aged after distillation. All styles of rum start life as this clear spirit.
However, some producers create more complex white rums by ageing them for many years (during which time it becomes golden or dark) and then filtering out the colour. The result is a matured and flavoursome white rum.
However, some producers create more complex white rums by ageing them for many years (during which time it becomes golden or dark) and then filtering out the colour. The result is a matured and flavoursome white rum.
How to Choose a White Rum
Coming Soon
How to Serve White Rum
If you’re enjoying a Daiquiri, Mojito or a Piña Colada, it almost certainly contains a white rum. Visit our Rum Cocktail Guide to discover servings and recipes for classic white rum cocktails.