Formation Diageo was formed in 1997 from the merger of
Guinness plc and the hospitality and distribution conglomerate
Grand Metropolitan plc. The company was created by executives Anthony Greener and
Philip Yea at Guinness, along with George Bull and John McGrath of Grand Metropolitan. Shares in Diageo began trading on the London Stock Exchange on 17 December 1997. The name Diageo was created by branding consultancy
Wolff Olins in 1997. It derives from the
Latin word
diēs, meaning "day", and the
Greek root geo-, meaning "earth".
Early acquisitions and sale of non-core assets As a legacy of the merger, Diageo owned a number of brands, businesses, and assets which were not in the core alcoholic drinks category. The company gradually disposed of these assets to focus on beverages as its core business. This included the sale of the
Pillsbury Company to
General Mills in July 2000, and the sale of the
Burger King fast food restaurant chain to a consortium led by US firm Texas Pacific for US$1.5 billion in December 2002. Diageo, acting in joint venture with the French drinks group
Pernod Ricard, bought the Canadian business
Seagram in May 2001; to secure regulatory approval it had to sell
Malibu rum to
Allied Domecq for £560m ($800m) in February 2002. The company further acquired Turkish liquor company Mey Icki for US$2.1 billion in February 2011, and followed this with Brazilian
cachaça manufacturer
Ypióca for £300 million in May 2012, and a majority stake in the Indian company
United Spirits for £1.28 billion in November 2012. It bought the Chinese
baijiu manufacturer Sichuan Shuijingfang Company in China in July 2013. The predecessor company Grand Metropolitan had been a major owner of hotels, owning what is now
Intercontinental Hotels prior to divestment before merging into Diageo, but the company still owned the
Gleneagles Hotel in
Perthshire, which had hosted events including the
Ryder Cup and
G8 summit. In July 2015 Diageo reached an agreement to sell the hotel to the Ennismore Group, already owners of
The Hoxton hotels. In July 2009, Diageo announced that it would be closing the
Johnnie Walker blending and bottling plant at
Kilmarnock in Scotland as part of a restructuring to the business, with work moved to Diageo's other two sites in
Shieldhall and
Leven. It would make 700 workers unemployed and attracted criticism from the press, local people, and politicians. A campaign against the decision was launched by the local
SNP MSP
Willie Coffey and
Labour MP
Des Browne. A petition was drawn up against the plans, which also involved the closure of the historic
Port Dundas grain distillery in Glasgow. The Johnnie Walker plant in Kilmarnock closed its doors in March 2012 and the buildings were subsequently demolished a year later. In August 2011, Diageo agreed to pay more than US$16 million to settle U.S. civil regulatory charges that it made improper payments to foreign officials. Regulators accused the British company of violating the U.S.
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act through its subsidiaries to obtain lucrative sales and tax benefits for its Johnnie Walker and Windsor Scotch whiskies and other brands.
Since 2015 In March 2015, Diageo released an advertising campaign showing a young woman crying after a night out, as an older woman, likely her mother, looks at her from the doorway, and the caption, "Who's following in your footsteps? Out of control drinking has consequences". The advert may have implied that the girl had been assaulted on the way home, as a result of her drinking that night. The director of Rape Crisis Network Ireland said Diageo "blames victims of sexual violence for the crimes that have been committed against them. This is a harmful, regressive and hurtful message which targets the vulnerable." In October 2015, the company made major sales in both the beer and wine categories, selling the
Red Stripe beer brand, along with interests in other breweries, and the rights to Guinness in some territories to
Heineken, as well as the sale of most of its wine business to
Treasury Wine Estates. The separate 2019 sale of the remaining wine brands including Navarro Correas and
Chalone Vineyard saw Diageo exit the category. In November 2016, Diageo announced its intention of selling at auction
Sir Edwin Landseer's iconic 1851 painting
The Monarch of the Glen – which the company owned, but which has been on loan to the
National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh since 1999 – as it has "no direct link to our business or brands", being used on the label of rival brand
Glenfiddich, owned by
William Grant & Sons. Following a fundraising campaign, the painting was sold to the
National Galleries of Scotland for around half its assayed value of £8 million. In November 2018, Diageo sold Seagram's whiskey brand, along with
Myers's Rum,
Popov vodka,
Booth's Gin,
Goldschläger,
Yukon Jack,
Sambuca, and 11 other brands to the
Sazerac Company for US$550 million, but kept the
Seagram's Seven Crown brand. In January 2020, Diageo agreed to pay US$5 million to settle charges brought by the US
Securities and Exchange Commission that alleged the company had pressured distributors to buy products in excess of demand in order to hit performance goals. In March 2024, the company reopened
Port Ellen distillery after it had been closed for 40 years and, in September 2024, it acquired Ritual Zero Proof, a non-alcoholic spirits brand. It formed the Diageo Luxury Group in November 2024, sold
Cacique rum to
La Martiniquaise in January 2025, and transferred majority ownership of
Cîroc in North America to Main Street Advisors in June 2025. In September 2025,
Doug Ford, the
Premier of Ontario, Canada, staged a protest against Diageo's decision to close the
Crown Royal whisky bottling plant in
Amherstburg and move operations to the United States. The company announced plans to close the plant by February 2026, with 180 jobs lost. At a press conference, Ford emptied a bottle of Crown Royal onto the ground, called the company's decision, "dumb as a bag of hammers," and vowed to retaliate—the provincial purchase of Diageo products tops C$740 million annually. He urged Ontarians to support locally produced whisky instead, accusing Diageo of disrespecting workers and failing to consult the union. Diageo defended the move as a necessary shift in its North American supply chain, while stating that Crown Royal would continue to be produced in Canada, with product for the Canadian market also continuing to be bottled in Canada. ==Operations==