Top Seven Worlds Costly Bottles of Alcohol

1. $1,060,000 - Diva Vodka
This bottle of vodka comes from Scotland and its price is the result of how much "bling" you would like your bottle to have. The bottle can be encrusted with dear gems: diamonds, rubies, sapphires.
Fully silly, so let’s move along to the following item, which is almost just as ludicrous, but then after that it’s smooth sailing.
2. $255,000 - Spluch Tequila
The bottle is made from solid platinum and white gold which was showcased in Mexico Town on October twenty-six, 2006. The bottle was acquired by a personal collector on July twenty, 2006. Because of the sale, the Tequila Ley .925 company broke the Guinness World Records for the costliest bottle of spirits sold.
3. $160,000 - Castle Lafite 1787
This bottle originally bought from France by Thomas Jefferson, who was a keen wine collector. This bottle is a Bordeaux and was sold at an auction in 1985 to Christopher Forbes. A lot of the price comes from the proven fact that Thomas Jefferson once owned this bottle - his initials are etched into it. You can read more about this wine and others (some on this list) here at Forbes.
4. $90,000 - Castle dYquem 1787
This bottle is a white and was sold latterly (2006) to an "American Client". This wine is from the same year as the costliest red ever sold (the Castle Lafite above). "one must remember that there's substantial nostalgia linked with such a bottle. In 1787 when peasants in Bordeaux were picking these grapes Marie Antoinette was going to have her head sliced off in the French Revolution, and James Watt was developing the steam engine." (Antique Wine Reports)
5. $75,000 - The Macallan
Fine and Rare Collection, 1926, 62 Years Old originally listed at $38,000, a bottle was sold to a South Korean businessperson in 2005 for $75,000. The oldest and most sought-after of Macallans revolutionary Fine & Rare Collection is now sold out. It still is feasible to taste this absolutely unique Scotch whisky at the Old Homestead Steakhouse in the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa in Atlantic Town, N.J. Nonetheless it sells for a nosebleed-inducing $3,300 per dram (one / 8th of an oz / shot). I could make a separate list of better things worth doing with $3,300. And I thought that I was mad when I acquired 2 lowballs of Johnnie Hiker Blue for $30 each...
6. $51,000 - Wray and Nephew Jamaican Rum (1940)
The bottle shown to the left, bottled in the 1940s by the Jamaican distillers Wray and Nephew, and containing blends that date back as far as around 1915 has the privilege of being what is thought to be the world’s most expensive bottle of rum. The bottle which is being displayed at Europe’s first rum holiday, Rum Fest, is priced at £26,000. The bottle, which is one of 4 unopened bottles of the stuff in the world, represents the lost convention of the Wray and Nephew Rum. The idolization of the Mai Tai cocktail drained their rum supplies in the 1930s. To stay alongside of demand, the distillery modified their production techniques. The bottle so represents the opportunity to the Mai Tai as it was initially conceived. That is, if any person ever opens the bottle.
7. $43,500 - 1775 Sherry from the Massandra collection
This bottle sold at Sothebys London (an auction house) in 2001. The Massandra collection is among the best in the world and has been about since the mid 19th century. There is little special about this wine apart from its age. It's also pre American Revolution.