Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) Price, Value & Investment Data

Avg. latest price
(as of 2026-06-24)
£30.00
Annualized return
(since 2015-04-01)
▼ -7.31%
12-month change
▼ -25.00%
Liquidity score
100.00%
All-time high
£70.00
All-time low
£10.00
Transactions (total)
674
Transactions (6 mo)
15

Liquidity score: based on historical data, there is a ~100.00% chance that you can sell this bottle on the secondary market at its actual market value.

Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label): Price History

The Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old is a well-known blended scotch whisky, first established by John Walker, a Scottish grocer. (The brand is now owned by the multinational company Diageo.) Our research shows that it has been listed over 600 times on different whisky auction sites. With that, Johnnie Walker 15 is considered a fairly frequently listed and very popular bottle of the secondary market. On this page, we collect all the hard-data and information that we currently have about it!

Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) bottle

How much is a bottle of Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) worth?

As of June 2026, a bottle of Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) is worth about £30.00 on the UK secondary market — the average hammer price across recent auctions. Over the last 12 months the average price has fallen by 25.00%.

Prices for this bottle have been highly volatile over its auction history. It peaked at £70.00 in April 2015 and bottomed at £10.00 in August 2024. The chart above shows every individual auction sale alongside the monthly average.

Important qualitative insights about the Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) whisky

Is it still produced? No — it was a special/limited edition. (This is a new datapoint in our dataset and not yet fully reviewed, so occasionally it may be wrong.)

Taste profile: not yet in our database. (Coming soon…)

Is Johnnie Walker 15 (Green Label) a good investment?

When we evaluate Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) as an investment, we look mainly at two factors: its past performance (annualized return) and how easy it has historically been to sell (liquidity score).

Based on these factors, we consider it an average investment historically, because:

  • it delivered a below-average annualized return: -7.31%
  • it was easy to sell on the secondary market: in ~100.00% of cases a buyer paid the requested price

Is it worth investing in a bottle of Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) right now?

No one can tell where prices will be in a month, a year or a decade. What we do know is what it is worth today:

Other editions of this whisky

Here are a few other editions of Johnnie Walker 15 (Green Label) that we have found on the secondary market:

We have not yet found any special editions of this whisky, but that does not necessarily mean they do not exist. We may update this section in the future, so please check back later. Please note that we do not list special editions with fewer than 100 transactions in the last 7 years on our website due to insufficient data.

Related whiskies

Frequently asked questions about Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label)

Is Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) a good investment?

Historically we consider it an average investment: -7.31% annualized return since 2015-04-01, with a 100.00% liquidity score.

How easy is it to sell Johnnie Walker 15 Years Old (Green Label) on the secondary market?

Based on historical auction data there is a ~100.00% chance of selling Johnnie Walker 15 (Green Label) at its actual market value; 15 bottles changed hands at auction in the last 6 months.

For more info, visit the Johnnie Walker brand’s website: Johnnie Walker.

Should you invest in this whisky right now?

Before you put money into this bottle, it is worth checking which whiskies are performing best on the secondary market right now. We keep these top lists updated for you:

Disclaimer: past performance is never a guarantee of future results. The information on this page is here to help you, but it is not investment advice nor personal financial advice. Investing in any asset class is risky — you do so at your own risk.
Data last updated: 2026-06-24