Cointreau orange liqueur bottle on a dark bar.

Cointreau

Cointreau

The triple sec the rest measure themselves against. Cointreau is bitter orange, sweet orange, French neutral spirit, distilled clean to 40% ABV. The Margarita and Cosmopolitan are both built on it. If you only buy one orange liqueur, this is it.

Cointreau orange liqueur bottle on a dark bar.
ABV
40%
Country
France
Distillery
Cointreau, Saint-Barthelemy-d’Anjou
Owner
Remy Cointreau
Founded
1875
Style
Triple sec (curacao)
Price band
$30-40 (US) / AU$60-80
Best mixer
Lime, tequila, vodka, gin

What it tastes like

Bright bitter orange peel, gentle sweet orange, hint of vanilla, dry finish. Cointreau is drier than most triple secs (no syrupy heaviness) and rounder than dry curacaos.

Drinks at 40% ABV with structure. Holds up in shaken cocktails where lesser triple secs fade.

How to drink it

Margarita, Cosmopolitan, Sidecar, White Lady, Long Island Iced Tea. Anywhere a recipe says triple sec or orange liqueur.

Decent neat or over ice with a slice of orange. The brand calls this serve a Cointreau Fizz with soda and lime; it’s lovely on a hot day.

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How a French confiserie became the orange liqueur standard

Edouard Cointreau founded the company in 1849 making fruit liqueurs in Saint-Barthelemy-d’Anjou. The Cointreau triple sec recipe arrived in 1875 and locked in the modern style: clean neutral spirit, bitter and sweet orange peels, multiple distillations.

The brand merged with Remy Martin in 1990 to form Remy Cointreau. Production has stayed at the original distillery in France ever since.

Cointreau vs other triple secs

Cheap triple sec is sugar-water with orange flavour. Cointreau, Combier, Pierre Ferrand Curacao, and Grand Marnier are the proper grown-up versions. Cointreau is the most neutral; the others bring more character (Combier is brighter, Pierre Ferrand is fuller, Grand Marnier is cognac-based and richer).

Best cocktails to make with Cointreau

Cointreau is the triple sec for serious cocktails. Margaritas, Cosmos, Sidecars, all need it.

How it stacks up

How Cointreau compares to other orange liqueurs.

Liqueur Character Best for
Cointreau Clean, bitter and sweet orange, dry Margarita, Cosmo, Sidecar
Grand Marnier Cognac-based, richer, sweeter Sidecar, B-52, sipping
Pierre Ferrand Curacao Fuller, drier, brandy-aged Margarita, Sidecar, classic cocktails
Combier Brighter, sweeter Margarita, Cosmo
Generic triple sec Sweet, watery, cheap Avoid where possible

Substitutions and swaps

Cointreau is the triple sec default; sub it carefully.

Recipe says triple sec?

Cointreau is the upgrade. Use it whenever the recipe says triple sec or orange liqueur unless specified otherwise.

Recipe says Grand Marnier?

Cointreau is drier. Drink will run brighter; lose the cognac depth. Add a barspoon of brandy if you want that back.

Out of Cointreau in a Margarita?

Use 5ml extra agave nectar plus a teaspoon of orange juice. The drink loses balance but works.

Want it in a Pina Colada?

Don’t. Pina Colada doesn’t need orange. Save the Cointreau.

Want a budget swap?

Combier or any halfway-decent triple sec is fine for cocktails where the orange isn’t the lead. Generic triple sec is too sweet.

Skip if

You want syrupy sweetness. Cointreau is drier than most triple secs.

You want cognac character. Grand Marnier is the right call.

You’re sipping and want orange dessert. Drambuie or Tia Maria are the pivot.

Where to buy Cointreau

Where to buy

Cointreau is at every bottle shop and most supermarkets. Premium-priced but versatile.

Frequently Asked Questions

Direct answers to what people ask about this bottle.

What is Cointreau?

Cointreau is a French triple sec (orange liqueur) made in Saint-Barthelemy-d’Anjou since 1875. It uses bitter and sweet orange peels distilled with neutral spirit and bottles at 40% ABV. Owned by Remy Cointreau.

Is Cointreau a triple sec?

Yes. Cointreau is a premium triple sec. The triple sec category covers any orange-flavoured liqueur made by triple-distilling spirit with citrus peels. Cointreau, Combier, and Pierre Ferrand Curacao are the premium examples.

What does Cointreau taste like?

Bright bitter orange peel, gentle sweet orange, hint of vanilla, dry finish. Less syrupy than cheap triple secs. Drier than Grand Marnier.

Cointreau vs Grand Marnier?

Different liqueurs. Cointreau is neutral-spirit-based, drier, brighter. Grand Marnier is cognac-based, richer, sweeter, more complex. Cointreau for shaken cocktails; Grand Marnier for stirred or sipping.

Why is Cointreau expensive?

The neutral spirit is high-grade, the orange peels (bitter from Haiti and sweet from Spain) cost real money, the multiple distillations require time. The 40% ABV also means more spirit per bottle than the 30% ABV cheap triple secs.

Can you drink Cointreau neat?

Yes. Pour into a small glass over an ice cube with an orange peel. The brand serves it as the Cointreau Fizz with soda water and lime, a brilliant summer drink.

Is Cointreau gluten-free?

Yes. Made from sugar beet alcohol and orange peels.

What is the best cocktail to make with Cointreau?

A Margarita: 60ml tequila, 30ml Cointreau, 25ml fresh lime, salt rim. Or a Cosmopolitan: 45ml citrus vodka, 15ml Cointreau, 30ml cranberry, 15ml fresh lime.

DL
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Last updated April 26, 2026 · 3 min read