Willie's Remedy Review: Is It Worth $70 a Bottle?
Bonnie Mellott | July 14, 2026
Willie's Remedy is probably the single most-asked-about product on this channel, so it's about time I gave it a real, honest review. Quick disclosure up front: I'm not sponsored by or affiliated with Willie's Remedy, and never have been. This is just my actual take after drinking a lot of it.

What Is Willie's Remedy?
It's a hemp-derived THC "social tonic" — Willie Nelson's THC-infused answer to a spirit, legal at the federal level under the 2018 Farm Bill. If you want the full breakdown of how that legality actually works, I covered it in detail here. This post is just about whether the drink itself is any good.
How Does It Taste?
Good, honestly. It comes in a 5mg and a 10mg version, and I've tried both side by side — the flavor is virtually identical between them, a light grapefruit-citrus taste that mixes well into almost anything. It's not trying to imitate a specific spirit, which actually makes it more versatile: it works in a margarita, a fizz, a cosmo, pretty much wherever you'd normally reach for something citrus-forward.
Dosing: 5mg vs. 10mg
5mg is a solid starting dose if you're new to THC drinks. My own sweet spot lands around 10mg. One real piece of advice: measure it carefully. It goes down easy, almost too easy, and it's genuinely simple to overserve yourself if you're not paying attention to how much you're pouring.
The Real Complaint: The Price
Here's the part I actually need to talk about, because it's the single biggest thing people bring up. Willie's Remedy runs close to $70 a bottle at retailers like Total Wine, and it's even pricier ordering online. When I posted my first review, the comments were full of people saying the same thing: it's too expensive.
They're not wrong. So I did something about it — I compared the actual lab results.

Grind with Gratitude sits on the shelf right next to it for about half the price — roughly $35. I scanned both bottles' COAs (the QR-code lab results every legitimate THC drink brand publishes), and they're manufactured in the same facility, same bottle size, same 10mg-per-serving strength. The only real difference is that Willie's Remedy spends serious money on national marketing, and Grind doesn't. (Full disclosure: after I posted about this price gap, Grind's team sent me a few bottles to try — the COA comparison itself is public information you can verify yourself.)
To be clear, I'm not saying "cheapest wins" as a blanket rule. I've also tried the bargain-bin THC shots people love to recommend as an even cheaper alternative, and they taste like it — more gas-station energy drink than something you'd actually want to build a cocktail around. Grind is the rare case where you get a very similar product for less, not a worse product for less.
So, Is Willie's Remedy Worth It?
If brand recognition and being able to grab it off the shelf at Total Wine matters to you, Willie's Remedy is a genuinely well-made drink and I understand the appeal. But if you're mixing cocktails at home and don't care whose name is on the label, Grind with Gratitude gets you the same lab-verified strength for about half the cost — and that's before you even talk about the finished cocktails.
Speaking of which, I've built three real cocktails around Willie's Remedy specifically — a Shotgun Willie's Margarita, a Blue Eyes Crying in the Fizz, and a Red Headed Stranger Cosmo — worth trying whichever bottle you end up with.
Bottom Line
- Taste: Good — light citrus, works in almost any cocktail
- Dosing: 5mg or 10mg, measure carefully
- Price: ~$70+/bottle, and that's the real sticking point
- Alternative: Grind with Gratitude, same lab-verified strength, about half the price
THC products are intended for adults 21 and older. Effects vary by person and product. THC will show up on a drug test. Start with a low dose, allow adequate time before consuming more, and don't drive after use. This post contains affiliate links — if you buy through them, Cocktail Underground may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.