More wine is drunk per person in the Vatican than in any other country in the world, according to the latest statistics released by the Wine Institute.
According to the latest statistics released by the Wine Institute, the report says residents of the Vatican consume 74 litres of wine on average – roughly equivalent to 105 bottles over the course of a year.
That is around double the amount drunk by the average person in France or Italy as a whole, and triple the quantity consumed in the UK.
There is no denying that the population of the Vatican represents an unusual - and rather uniform - demographic.
As well as the occupational hazard of being required to take ceremonial Communion wine, the National Catholic Reporter said Vatican residents are more likely to be old, male, highly educated and eat in larger groups – all factors that can contribute to greater wine consumption.
These aspects of the Vatican’s national character are more likely to put it at the top than simply its size alone – though other so-called microstates also featured prominently in the Wine Institute’s list.
The fact that it only has a population of around 800 people does make it easy for per-capita figures to be distorted by outlying groups, however – and there is reportedly a single supermarket in the Vatican supplying everyone with wine almost completely tax-free.


