Wrexham Lager Beer Company
Microbrewery
in
Wrexham,
Wrexham,
Wales 🏴
Associated Venue: Wrexham Lager Shop
Established in 2011
Contact
Description
In 1882, two German Immigrants, Ivan Levinstein and Otto Isler, set forth to brew lager beer in the UK. Later their company was acquired by Robert Graesser. He aimed his sights to the export market under the Wrexham Lager ‘Ace of Clubs’ brand. In 2000 brewing in Wrexham - in the meantime the company was acquired by Carlsberg - came to a halt and the brewery was demolished.
Martin Jones MP (South Clwyd), a local retiring civil servant and ex-employee (microbiologist) of Wrexham Lager appreciated what the brewery stood for and strived to keep its memory alive at his own expense, negotiating with Carlsberg for the ownership of Wrexham Lager Brewing Company and its subsidiary brands. He managed to procure the rights to all but the Ace of Clubs brand (sold off to Scottish & Newcastle, now part of Heineken) for the modest sum of £1 and with that he set his sights on building a brewery.
The Roberts family, who run a number of local businesses in Wrexham, were interested in investing in a microbrewery as a new venture and were considering brewing ale until they came across Martin in the most ironic of places, at the local pub! Soon a deal was struck and the Wrexham Lager brand was revived once again. With a new premises in the centre of Wrexham that opened in 2011, the ex-head brewer of Wrexham Lager, Ian Dale, at the helm of brewing operations with a state-of-the-art German brew house at his disposal and a new logo to modernise the brand, Wrexham Lager can now look to the future with the aim to re-establish itself as the pride of Celts once again!
Martin Jones MP (South Clwyd), a local retiring civil servant and ex-employee (microbiologist) of Wrexham Lager appreciated what the brewery stood for and strived to keep its memory alive at his own expense, negotiating with Carlsberg for the ownership of Wrexham Lager Brewing Company and its subsidiary brands. He managed to procure the rights to all but the Ace of Clubs brand (sold off to Scottish & Newcastle, now part of Heineken) for the modest sum of £1 and with that he set his sights on building a brewery.
The Roberts family, who run a number of local businesses in Wrexham, were interested in investing in a microbrewery as a new venture and were considering brewing ale until they came across Martin in the most ironic of places, at the local pub! Soon a deal was struck and the Wrexham Lager brand was revived once again. With a new premises in the centre of Wrexham that opened in 2011, the ex-head brewer of Wrexham Lager, Ian Dale, at the helm of brewing operations with a state-of-the-art German brew house at his disposal and a new logo to modernise the brand, Wrexham Lager can now look to the future with the aim to re-establish itself as the pride of Celts once again!
5.8/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 6
44cl can from Factory Foods & More
Thin white head. Clear golden pour. Light bitterness. Very average
Thin white head. Clear golden pour. Light bitterness. Very average
Tried
from Can
on 17 May 2026
at 18:31
7/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 7.5
Flavor 6.5
Texture 7
Overall 7.5
Clean, mid-golden colour with a white frothy head, average retention and light lacing. Some decent malts at first, with a touch of Pils-spiciness. Then, some mineral notes come out with a tad medicinal nose. The taste is malty with a little sweetness, mild corn and hints of fresh herbal hops in the finish. A mid-bodied, kind of slick mouthfeel with a little dryness. A decent lager, that goes down smoothly.
Tried
from Can
from
LCBO #624 - Innes Rd. & Tenth Line
on 17 May 2026
at 05:09
6.1/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5.5
Flavor 6.5
Texture 7
Overall 6
Keg draught at the Fat Boar, Wrexham. Deep gold, clear with visible carbonation and a thin to medium white head. Corny and corn syrupy aroma, with notes of grain. Maybe a touch of citrus. So often these sorts of lagers taste better than they smell, and this is no exception. A little malt-heavy, while keeping light, sweetbutnot saccharine, with light lemony notes. Thin to medium body with heavy carbonation.
Tried
from Draft
at
Fat Boar, Wrexham
on 14 May 2026
at 18:51
5.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5.5
Flavor 5.5
Texture 6
Overall 5.5
33cl bottle from Home Bargains 11:36 PM 16 Aug 24
Tried
from Bottle
from
Home Bargains (T.J Morris Ltd), Nationwide
on 10 May 2026
at 13:12
6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 6
330l bottle from Co-Op, Barmouth. Golden colour, bubbly white foam head and aroma of malt, barley, herbal. Taste is sweet malty, grain, caramel, boiled sweet hints, with straw and earthy bitterness. Medium bodied, soft carbonation, drying bitter finish. Quite drinkable.
Tried
from Bottle
from
Co-operative Supermarket (Various Locations)
on 19 Apr 2026
at 17:01
6.1/10
—
Appearance 5
Aroma 6
Flavor 6.5
Texture 7
Overall 6
Can (11/15/24) from Total Wine & More, W. Hollywood. Lightly hazy gold, trace sparkle, thin head quickly fading to a ring, no lacing. Aroma is subtle corn, cardboard. Taste is strong, sweet corn, European bittering hops. Smooth, frothy texture, soft carbonation and finish as taste with mild lingering bitterness. Decent strength in taste and substantial body but aroma and flavor are pretty standard (boring) for the style. Glad to have the opportunity to tick a beer from Wales!
Tried
from Can
from
Total Wine & More - W. Hollywood
on 12 Mar 2026
at 04:10
6.9/10
—
Appearance 7
Aroma 7
Flavor 7
Texture 7
Overall 6.5
330ml bottle from Noz after cycling back from Wicres. Clear gold, white head. Decent pilsner overall with a glowing lager malt sweetness, moderate bitter close.
Tried
from Bottle
on 11 Mar 2026
at 07:34
6.1/10
—
Appearance 8
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 5.5
8th March 2026
Near clear gold beer, small bubbly off white head. Fairly soft palate, a little dry, reasonable fine carbonation on the back end. Sweet malts, too sweet, some lager tang. Mellow soft pine and a little ripe orange. Weird, a very long way from the worst lager I've had and, there is the basis for a decent one here but, less sweet, more crisp and more fucken hops please!
Near clear gold beer, small bubbly off white head. Fairly soft palate, a little dry, reasonable fine carbonation on the back end. Sweet malts, too sweet, some lager tang. Mellow soft pine and a little ripe orange. Weird, a very long way from the worst lager I've had and, there is the basis for a decent one here but, less sweet, more crisp and more fucken hops please!
Tried
from Bottle
on 08 Mar 2026
at 19:13
6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 6
Flavor 6
Texture 6
Overall 6
Draft, half pint. @"The Drunk Monk", Wrexham (Wales) 19/02/2026
[#8.877 Global - #93 Wales - #1 Wrexham Lager Beer Company (My Welsh Brewery #37)]
Pours clear golden with some visual carbonation and a white head. Aroma: subtle corn grains, light floral and cereal. Taste: sweet malts and corn. Oversweet palate. Drinkable.
Next one, please!
[#8.877 Global - #93 Wales - #1 Wrexham Lager Beer Company (My Welsh Brewery #37)]
Pours clear golden with some visual carbonation and a white head. Aroma: subtle corn grains, light floral and cereal. Taste: sweet malts and corn. Oversweet palate. Drinkable.
Next one, please!
Tried
from Draft
at
The Drunk Monk
on 19 Feb 2026
at 18:05
5.6/10
—
Appearance 6
Aroma 5.5
Flavor 5.5
Texture 5
Overall 6
Decent at this alcohol level
Mild malty and mild herbal
[Can from Varnaveien in Rygge, Norway]
Mild malty and mild herbal
[Can from Varnaveien in Rygge, Norway]
Tried
from Can
from
Varnaveien Mineralvann
on 07 Feb 2026
at 19:10