Anejo Tequila
Jose Cuervo Tequila Extra Anejo Reserva De La Familia
Don Julio 1942 Anejo Tequila

Maestro Dobel 50 Cristalino Extra Anejo Tequila

1800 Milenio Extra Anejo Tequila

Komos Cristalino Anejo Tequila
El Tesoro Tequila Anejo Paradiso

Don Julio Ultima Reserva Extra Anejo Solera Aged Tequila

Clase Azul Anejo Tequila
Esperanto Anejo Tequila
Cincoro Anejo Tequila

Don Julio Anejo Tequila

Komos Extra Anejo Tequila
Casamigos Anejo Tequila

Clase Azul Ultra Extra Anejo Tequila
Don Julio Tequila Anejo Claro 70th Anniversary
Gran Patrón Piedra Extra Anejo Tequila
Codigo 1530 Extra Anejo Origen Tequila

Don Julio Tequila Anejo 10 x 50ml | Mini Alcohol Bottles

Adictivo Tequila Extra Anejo

Cincoro Blanco, Reposado, Anejo Tequila Bundle

Cantera Negra Extra Anejo Tequila

Eight Reserve By 818 Anejo Reserve Tequila

Herradura Ultra Anejo Tequila

El Tesoro Extra Anejo Tequila
Anejo Tequila
Read more about Anejo Tequila
Añejo Tequila — Aged in Oak, Built for Sipping
Añejo is the tequila category that bourbon drinkers fall for first. By Mexican law, an añejo must rest in oak barrels no larger than 600 liters for a minimum of one year (and no more than three — past that, it becomes extra añejo). That year in wood transforms the bright, grassy character of unaged blanco into something deeper: vanilla, caramel, dried fruit, baking spice, and toasted oak. Most añejos rest in ex-bourbon barrels, which is why so many of them taste like a bridge between Mexico and Kentucky.
Bourbon Central's añejo selection covers every tier of the category. Start with 1800 Añejo ($45.09) for an under-$50 gateway pour with butterscotch, baked apple, and a soft oak finish. Step up to Don Julio Añejo ($62.99) — the textbook American benchmark, aged 18 months in white oak — or Casamigos Añejo ($62.99), the bottle that converts bourbon-only drinkers thanks to its 14 months in former American whiskey casks. For something rarer, Tequila Ocho Añejo ($78.09) is the single-estate pick that lets you taste real terroir, with each release labeled by the specific rancho the agaves came from.
At the splurge end, Don Julio 1942 ($159.99) needs no introduction — two and a half years in white oak, served in the iconic agave-shaped bottle — and Clase Azul Añejo ($539.99) pairs 25 months of multi-cask aging with a hand-painted ceramic decanter that doubles as a display piece.
For tasting notes, side-by-side comparisons, and the cocktails añejo was made for, read our 2026 Añejo Tequila Buyer's Guide and the new Tequila Old Fashioned Recipe Guide. New to agave spirits altogether? Our Mezcal vs. Tequila Guide covers where añejo fits in the broader Mexican spirits family.
Keep exploring with the related categories — Reposado, Extra Añejo, Mezcal, and the full Tequila & Mezcal collection — or browse our best-sellers to see what's moving fastest right now.