How to Use LiquorMapper: Find Any Bottle in Oregon
Oregon’s state-run liquor system means every bottle of spirits sold in the state flows through OLCC-licensed stores. The upside? All that inventory data is public. LiquorMapper pulls from this data daily to help you find exactly what you’re looking for without calling around or driving store to store.
This guide walks through everything the tool can do.
LiquorMapper is an independent project and is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission.
The Basics: Search for a Product
The main page at liquormapper.com opens to an interactive map of Oregon with a search bar.
To find a specific bottle:
Type a product name in the search bar. As you type, suggestions appear showing matching products along with how many stores currently stock them. Click a suggestion to select it, or keep typing and hit Enter to search.
The map immediately updates to show only the stores carrying that product. Click any marker to see the store name, address, and a link to view that store’s full inventory.
Example: Searching “Buffalo Trace” shows every Oregon store with Buffalo Trace in stock right now. Searching “Blanton’s” might show 145 stores statewide—a dramatic change from a few years ago when you’d be lucky to find it anywhere.
Brand Family Search
Some searches benefit from casting a wider net. If you’re interested in everything from a particular brand—say, all Weller expressions or the full Maker’s Mark lineup—look for the “(All Products)” option in the autocomplete dropdown.
Selecting “Absolut (All Products)” returns every Absolut variant: original, citrus, vanilla, the lot. This is useful when you’re brand-loyal but flexible on the specific expression.
Filtering Your Search
Below the search bar, you’ll find filters to narrow results:
Category lets you browse by spirit type: bourbon, scotch, tequila, vodka, gin, rum, and so on.
Size filters by bottle format. The standard 750ml is most common, but you can also search for 375ml half-bottles (great for gifts or trying something expensive), 1L, 1.75L handles, or 50ml minis.
Price range sets minimum and maximum. Useful if you’re shopping for a gift in a specific budget or hunting for bottles over $100.
When you apply filters and search, the map shows only stores matching all your criteria. A badge appears confirming your active filters.
Browse Products Page
If you’d rather browse than search, click “Browse Products” in the navigation. This opens a catalog view of every product currently available in Oregon.
The sidebar offers the same filters—category, size, price—plus a sort option. You can sort by popularity (most stores carrying it), price low-to-high, or alphabetically.
Each product card shows the bottle name, category, size, price, and how many stores stock it. Click “Find on Map” to jump directly to the main search with that product pre-loaded.
This page is useful for discovering what’s actually available. Wondering what Irish whisky Oregon carries? Filter to the whisky category, search “Irish,” and browse what’s in the state system.
Store Inventory Pages
Every Oregon liquor store has its own inventory page showing exactly what’s on shelves right now.
You can reach these pages by clicking a store marker on the map and selecting “View Full Inventory,” or by navigating directly if you know the store. The URL format is:liquormapper.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/store_inventory.html?id=XXXX
The store page displays the complete product list with search and filter options. This is helpful when you’re already planning to visit a specific store and want to see what else they carry while you’re there.
Mobile vs Desktop
On desktop, the layout shows a sidebar with search and filters alongside a large map. You can resize the sidebar by dragging its edge.
On mobile, the interface adapts to a single-column layout. Search and filters appear at the top, with the map below and a scrollable store list at the bottom.
Both versions offer the same functionality—mobile just reorganizes the layout for smaller screens.
Tips for Getting the Most Out of It
Check in the morning. Inventory data updates daily. If you’re hunting something popular, morning searches show the freshest data before stores open and bottles move.
Use exact product names for precision. Selecting from the autocomplete dropdown ensures you’re searching the exact product code in the system. Typing freehand does a fuzzy search, which might return related but different products.
Combine filters strategically. Looking for a nice gift bottle under $60? Set the price filter, choose 750ml size, and browse by category. Looking for a half-bottle of something premium to try before committing? Filter to 375ml and set minimum price to $40.
Bookmark stores with great selection. If you find a store that consistently stocks what you like, bookmark its inventory page. Easier than searching every time.
Understand the update cycle. Inventory data updates daily from OLCC’s public records. A bottle showing “in stock” might sell between updates and your visit. For allocated or limited products, calling ahead is still smart.
What LiquorMapper Doesn’t Do
The tool shows what’s in the OLCC system—it doesn’t include private wine shops, grocery store beer and wine sections, or bars. Oregon’s control state system only covers distilled spirits sold through licensed liquor stores.
It also doesn’t show exact bottle counts. You’ll see that a store carries a product, but not whether they have one bottle or twenty. For rare stuff, that matters.
And it can’t predict restocks. If every store shows zero for a product, that means it’s either out of stock statewide or not currently distributed in Oregon.
Getting Started
Head to liquormapper.com and try searching for something. Start with a bottle you’ve been meaning to find, or browse by category to see what’s out there.
The whole point is to save you time—fewer calls, fewer wasted trips, more drinking what you actually wanted.
Data sourced from publicly available OLCC inventory records and updated daily. LiquorMapper is not affiliated with the Oregon Liquor and Cannabis Commission.