There is something quietly thrilling about standing inside a working distillery, watching copper stills catch the light while the warm, grainy perfume of Arkansas grain fills the air around you. That is exactly what greets you the moment you step through the doors of Rock Town Distillery, tucked inside a beautifully repurposed warehouse in Little Rock’s SoMa neighborhood, just a short walk from the hustle of Main Street.
Rock Town holds a distinction that still gives locals a reason to brag: it was the first legal distillery in Arkansas since Prohibition. Founded in 2010 by Phil Brandon, the operation started small and stubbornly local, sourcing its grains from Arkansas farms and bottling every drop right here in the Natural State. More than a decade later, that commitment hasn’t wavered. When you sip a glass of Rock Town bourbon, you are tasting Arkansas wheat, Arkansas corn, and Arkansas water — and that specificity of place is something you can genuinely taste.
The distillery offers guided tours that walk you through the entire production process, from the grain room to the barrel house, where rows of white oak casks quietly do their slow, transformative work. Your guide will explain the science behind fermentation and distillation in a way that manages to be genuinely fascinating without ever feeling like a lecture. By the end of the tour, you’ll find yourself looking at a glass of whiskey with a different kind of respect.
After the tour, you land in the tasting room, which is where things get really enjoyable. The lineup is more expansive than most visitors expect. Rock Town produces bourbon, rye, gin, vodka, and a rotating roster of limited releases and single-barrel expressions that are only available at the distillery itself. The staff behind the bar are knowledgeable and enthusiastic — they’ll help you find exactly what suits your palate, whether you’re a seasoned whiskey drinker or someone who is just beginning to explore American spirits.
The space itself is worth noting. Industrial bones — exposed brick, heavy timber beams, polished concrete floors — give the tasting room a relaxed, unpretentious character. It never feels like a tourist trap. It feels like a real place where real things are made, which is exactly what it is.
Rock Town also hosts private events, cocktail classes, and special release nights that draw a loyal local following. If you time your visit right, you might find yourself at a barrel-pick event, swirling through samples with a roomful of Arkansas whiskey enthusiasts who take their craft spirits every bit as seriously as people in Kentucky do.
Whether you’re a dedicated spirits traveler or simply someone who appreciates places with genuine soul, Rock Town Distillery delivers an experience that is rooted, flavorful, and thoroughly worth an afternoon in Little Rock. Bring a friend, take the tour, and don’t leave without picking up a bottle to take home.