Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl is a collectable Scotch whisky from Longrow aged 14 years. Based on 337 recorded auction lots across 107 months of trading data, the current median hammer price is £75, with the most recent sale at £130. Over the trading window, prices have ranged from £43 (low) to £200 (high). Accounting for lot-to-lot variation, a realistic valuation range for Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl is £120–£140 (±8% around the latest sale).
Year-on-year, Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl is down 10.3%, with a 6-month trend of +2.6% (up). wsky1 aggregates hammer prices from major public Scotch whisky auctions including Scotch Whisky Auctions, Whisky Auctioneer, and Bonhams. All prices are in GBP and exclude buyer's premium (typically 24–28% additional at major houses). Past auction performance is not a guarantee of future value.
Longrow is a whisky distillery. Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl is an age-stated bottling at 14 years old.
Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl is a standard release without strong scarcity signals such as a single vintage, a long age statement, a single-cask outturn or a limited edition. Its secondary-market value is driven mainly by ongoing auction demand for Longrow rather than by built-in rarity.
These are scarcity and demand signals drawn from the bottle's own attributes — they describe the bottle, not a prediction of future price. Not investment advice.
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Latest sale
£130
24-month median
£75
24-month high
£200
24-month low
£43
Estimated value · likely range
£120–£140 ±8%
Auction hammers swing lot to lot with condition, fill level and timing. Treat this band — not a single figure — as the bottle's value.
Seen at: Scotch Whisky Auctions · Whisky Hammer
Cross-house median
£75
Median hammer price blended across every recorded sale at all 2 auction houses below — a single figure that smooths house-to-house variation.
| Auction house | Price points | Latest hammer | Median |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scotch Whisky Auctions | 211 | £130 | £72 |
| Whisky Hammer | 4 | £120 | £135 |
| Month | Median | Lots |
|---|---|---|
| July 2026 | £130 | 1 |
| June 2026 | £130 | 1 |
| April 2026 | £130 | 1 |
| March 2026 | £110 | 2 |
| December 2025 | £130 | 2 |
| November 2025 | £140 | 2 |
| October 2025 | £127 | 6 |
| August 2025 | £140 | 2 |
| March 2025 | £130 | 4 |
| February 2025 | £140 | 2 |
| November 2024 | £160 | 2 |
| September 2024 | £120 | 2 |
The latest hammer price for Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl at auction is £130. Across the most recent 24 months of auction data, the median hammer price is £75, with a high of £200 and a low of £43. All prices are in GBP and exclude buyer's premium. Data is aggregated from major auction houses including Scotch Whisky Auctions, Whisky Auctioneer, and Bonhams.
Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl is down 10.3% year-on-year based on monthly median hammer prices. Over the past 6 months it has moved up 2.6%. Past auction performance is not a guarantee of future value.
Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl regularly appears at major Scotch whisky auction houses including Scotch Whisky Auctions (Scotland), Whisky Auctioneer (Scotland), Just Whisky, Whisky Hammer, and Bonhams. The current median hammer price is £75 (excluding buyer's premium). At most major houses, buyer's premium adds 24–28% on top of hammer for the buyer; sellers typically receive the hammer price minus a sales commission of 5–15%.
Over the past 12 months Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl has moved down 10.3%, with a current median hammer price of £75. The bottle has been observed at auction across 337 recorded lots in our database. wsky1 provides hammer-price data for informational purposes only — not investment advice. Whisky is an illiquid alternative asset; secondary-market value depends heavily on bottle condition, fill level, label integrity, and timing.
wsky1 ingests public auction results from major auction houses (via direct scraping of Scotch Whisky Auctions, Whisky Auctioneer, Bonhams, and Whisky Hammer, plus aggregated data from WhiskyHunter). For each bottle, we group hammer prices by year-month and compute the median price per month. The figures shown — latest £130, 24-month median £75 — are derived from this monthly-median methodology. All prices are hammer prices in GBP, excluding buyer's premium.
No. All prices on wsky1 are hammer prices only. Buyer's premium at major Scotch whisky auction houses currently runs at 24–28% on top of the hammer price. A bottle of Longrow 14 Year Old (1970s) 75cl that hammers at £130 would cost the buyer approximately £164 all-in including buyer's premium.
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