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Campari
The Original Italian Bitter · Est. 1860
VS
Which one wins?
Aperol
The Spritz King · Est. 1919

Quick Verdict: Campari wins 3–2 with a tie, dominating on cocktail versatility and flavor depth. Aperol takes drinkability and price. For building a serious home bar, Campari is the move — but you'll want both eventually.

CAMPARI 0 0 APEROL Round 1 of 6

Flavor Profile

The most important factor — what does each actually taste like, and which delivers more complexity?

Campari

Bitter orange peel, rhubarb, cherry bark, and herbs layered over a backbone of quinine bitterness. At 25% ABV, it's assertive and complex — a spirit that demands attention. The finish is long, dry, and gently medicinal. You taste every ingredient.

Bitterness: 8/10 · Complexity: 9/10

Aperol

Gentle orange, rhubarb, and herbs with a soft, approachable bitterness. At just 11% ABV, it's lighter in every direction — sweeter upfront, shorter finish, less herbal depth. Think orange marmalade with a whisper of bitterness. Pleasant but simple.

Bitterness: 4/10 · Complexity: 5/10
Winner: Campari — more depth, more character, more to discover

Cocktail Versatility

How many classic cocktails can each bottle anchor? This is where a home bar investment pays off.

Campari

The backbone of the Negroni — arguably the most important cocktail in the aperitivo canon. Also essential for the Boulevardier, Americano, Jungle Bird, Campari Spritz, and Negroni Sbagliato. That's 6+ cocktails from one bottle.

Classic cocktails: 6+ core recipes

Aperol

Rules the Aperol Spritz — the most ordered aperitivo drink on earth. Decent in a Paper Plane (equal parts Aperol, bourbon, Amaro Nonino, lemon). Limited beyond those two. It's a one-trick pony that happens to have an incredible trick.

Classic cocktails: 2–3 core recipes
Winner: Campari — the Negroni alone is worth the bottle, plus 5 more drinks

Ease of Drinking

Which one is more approachable for guests, newcomers, and casual afternoon sipping?

Campari

Not beginner-friendly by design. The bitterness is front-and-center and can shock first-timers. It rewards repeated exposure — most people who "hate" Campari learn to love it after 3–4 encounters. A sipper's spirit. Not everyone at your party will want one.

Guest approval: 50–60%

Aperol

This is Aperol's superpower. The Aperol Spritz is universally approachable — bubbly, orange, slightly sweet, barely bitter. At 11% ABV, it's practically a session drink. You can serve it to anyone at any time. It's the gateway to Italian aperitivo.

Guest approval: 90%+
Winner: Aperol — the most crowd-friendly bitter on the planet

Price & Value

What does each bottle cost, and what's the cost-per-drink for the signature cocktail?

Campari

A 750ml bottle runs $28–$35 depending on market. A proper Negroni uses 1 oz Campari per drink — that's roughly 25 drinks per bottle, or about $1.20 per cocktail for the Campari portion. Outstanding value for the quality.

~$1.20 per drink · 25 drinks/bottle

Aperol

A 750ml bottle costs $22–$28 — noticeably cheaper. An Aperol Spritz uses 2–3 oz per drink, so you get roughly 10–12 drinks per bottle. That works out to about $2.10 per cocktail. Still cheap, but Campari stretches further per ounce.

~$2.10 per drink · 10–12 drinks/bottle
Winner: Aperol — lower shelf price, and nobody minds the pour rate

Aperitivo Authenticity

Which bottle gets you closer to a real Italian aperitivo hour — the ritual, the culture, the tradition?

Campari

Born in Turin, 1860. Gaspare Campari invented it at his café near the Milan cathedral. It's the original Italian bitter aperitivo — the Negroni has been the canonical pre-dinner drink in Italy for over a century. When Italians say "aperitivo," Campari is the ghost in the glass.

Est. 1860 · Turin, Italy

Aperol

Created in Padua, 1919 by the Barbieri brothers. It gained real traction in the 1950s when the Aperol Spritz recipe was codified. While hugely popular in Italy's Veneto region, it's a 20th-century invention. The global Spritz craze of the 2010s made it a phenomenon — but it's the newcomer.

Est. 1919 · Padua, Italy
Tie — both are authentically Italian, just from different eras

Home Bar Essentiality

If you're building a home bar and can only buy one bitter aperitivo, which bottle earns the shelf space?

Campari

Campari unlocks an entire category of cocktails you can't make without it. It's a foundational bottle — right alongside gin, sweet vermouth, and bourbon. It appears on every serious home bar list. Without it, you simply cannot make a Negroni. That's a dealbreaker.

Home bar tier: Essential

Aperol

Aperol is a luxury bottle — wonderful to have, easy to skip. The Paper Plane is great, but you can live without it. The Spritz is delicious, but you can make one with Campari or even Cynar. Aperol makes your bar better; Campari makes your bar complete.

Home bar tier: Nice to have
Winner: Campari — the foundational bottle you build around

THE VERDICT

CAMPARI
Final Score: Campari 4 — Aperol 2 — Tie 1

Campari wins this head-to-head decisively. It's the deeper spirit, the more versatile cocktail ingredient, and the more essential home bar bottle. The Negroni alone justifies its place on your shelf — it's one of the three most important cocktails in the world, and you can't make it without Campari.

But here's the truth: this isn't really an either/or decision. The aperitivo ritual works best when you have both. Campari for the stirred, serious drinks. Aperol for the sunny, crowd-pleasing Spritz. Together, they cover every aperitivo occasion — from a solo Negroni at 6pm to a tray of Spritzes for eight guests.

Start with Campari if you're building a real home bar. Add Aperol the first time you host a summer party. Your aperitivo hour will thank you.

If your priority is easy, approachable drinks that every guest will love — Aperol Spritz is still the move. No shame in leading with the crowd-pleaser.

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