Some cookies used are essential to providing a service, while others help us improve your experience and provide us with insights into how the site is being used.
For more detailed information about the cookies we use, see our Cookies page.
Necessary cookies enable core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility. You may disable these by changing your browser settings, but this may affect how the website functions.
We'd like to set Google Analytics cookies to help us to improve our website by collecting and reporting information on how you use it. The cookies collect information in a way that does not directly identify anyone. For more information on how these cookies work, please see our 'Cookies page'.
We'd like to allow Social Media cookies to provide a richer experience. These cookies will allow us the ability to list Fife Council tweets and Facebook posts, Google maps, audio clips & Videos on some of our pages. Our videos use Youtube's privacy-enhanced mode.
These cookies allow us to show relevant adverts to the content you are viewing. They also provide the ability to deliver targeted online advertising across other platforms like Facebook, Google, Instagram and the Quantcast network.
Managing Director - Ian Palmer
Based: Whitecraigs Road Glenrothes
Employees: 12 full time
The Inchdairnie Distillery is an independent scotch whisky producer and was established in 2011. Owned by John Fergus and Co. Ltd, it is a £10 million, technologically advanced and energy efficient distillery that took just 18 months to complete. It occupies seven hectares of land to the west of Glenrothes and has 12000 square meters of warehousing. Production of whisky for blends and single malts began in 2015 with its own single malt due to mature in about 10 years.
Inchdairnie Distillery achieved Living Wage accreditation in 2019. They have always paid the living wage but sought accreditation because they were keen to be recognised by employees, other businesses and the wider community as a responsible employer.
Ian Palmer (Managing Director) said:
“We have always been a living wage employer and we want others to know that. We employ a small number of people to produce large quantities of whisky, so we need to have people with skills and pay them good wages. We located our business in Glenrothes because there are people with those skills in the local area. We could have based our business in a more remote location but finding the right staff would have been more difficult.”
He added: “As a business we are keen to identify with Fife and be a ‘Fife’ distiller. We want to help make Glenrothes a good place to work.”