Canadian non-alcoholic beverage sales hit one hundred and ninety-nine million dollars in the latest NielsenIQ tracking, up twenty-four percent year over year. This is not a Dry January bump that fades by February. It is a structural category shift happening faster than most operators are planning for.
Three signals confirm this is permanent. Technomic Canada's "Liquid Assets" report named NA beverages a top five Canadian foodservice trend for 2026. Seventy percent of consumers say they would rather order a viral drink at a restaurant than recreate it at home. GLP-1 medication patients report lower alcohol tolerance, reshaping demand in the eighteen-to-forty-five demographic that drives the most beverage spend. The Restaurant Association of Canada has separately named NA on-tap as a top trend for 2026.
For Canadian operators, the summer peak matters more than the yearly average. TFI Canada data shows cold coffee consumption jumps from twenty-one percent to over thirty percent during summer months. Ice cream volumes hit seventeen thousand three hundred and ten kilolitres in July. These categories spike hard, and operators who are not stocked lose revenue to competitors who are.







