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2024 SESSION
24101762DBe it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That § 4.1-200 of the Code of Virginia is amended and reenacted as follows:
§ 4.1-200. Exemptions from licensure.
The licensure requirements of this chapter shall not apply to:
1. A person in charge of an institution regularly conducted as
a hospital or sanatorium for the care of persons in ill health, or as a home
devoted exclusively to the care of aged people, who administers or causes to be
administered alcoholic beverages to any bona fide patient or inmate of the
institution who is in need of the same, either by way of external application
or otherwise for emergency medicinal purposes. Such person may charge for the
alcoholic beverages so administered, and carry such stock as may be
necessary for this purpose. No charge shall be made of any patient for the
alcoholic beverages so administered to him where the same have been supplied to
the institution by the Board free of charge.
2. The manufacture, sale, and delivery or shipment by persons authorized under existing laws to engage in such business of any medicine containing sufficient medication to prevent it from being used as a beverage.
3. The manufacture, sale, and delivery or shipment by persons authorized under existing laws to engage in such business of any medicinal preparations manufactured in accordance with formulas prescribed by the United States pharmacopoeia; national formulary, patent, and proprietary preparations; and other bona fide medicinal and technical preparations; which contain no more alcohol than is necessary to extract the medicinal properties of the drugs contained in such preparations, and no more alcohol than is necessary to hold the medicinal agents in solution and to preserve the same, and which are manufactured and sold to be used exclusively as medicine and not as beverages.
4. The manufacture, sale, and delivery or shipment of toilet, medicinal, and antiseptic preparations and solutions not intended for internal human use nor to be sold as beverages.
5. The manufacture and sale of food products known as flavoring extracts which are manufactured and sold for cooking and culinary purposes only and not sold as beverages.
6. Any person who manufactures at his residence or at a gourmet brewing shop for domestic consumption at his residence, but not to be sold, dispensed, or given away, except as hereinafter provided, wine or beer or both, in an amount not to exceed the limits permitted by federal law.
Any person who manufactures wine or beer in accordance with
this subdivision may remove from his residence an amount not to exceed fifty 50
liters of such wine or fifteen 15 gallons of such beer on any
one occasion for (i) personal or family use, provided such use does not violate
the provisions of this subtitle or Board regulations; (ii) giving to any person
to whom wine or beer may be lawfully sold an amount not to exceed (a) one liter
of wine per person per year or (b) seventy-two 72 ounces of beer per person
per year, provided such gift is for noncommercial purposes; or (iii) giving to
any person to whom beer may lawfully be sold a sample of such wine or beer, not
to exceed (a) one ounce of wine by volume or (b) two ounces of beer by volume
for on-premises consumption at events organized for judging or exhibiting such
wine or beer, including events held on the premises of a retail licensee.
Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to authorize the sale of such wine
or beer.
The provision of this subdivision shall not apply to any person who resides on property on which a winery, farm winery, or brewery is located.
7. Any person who keeps and possesses lawfully acquired alcoholic beverages in his residence for his personal use or that of his family. However, such alcoholic beverages may be served or given to guests in such residence by such person, his family, or servants when (i) such guests are 21 years of age or older or are accompanied by a parent, guardian, or spouse who is 21 years of age or older, (ii) the consumption or possession of such alcoholic beverages by family members or such guests occurs only in such residence where the alcoholic beverages are allowed to be served or given pursuant to this subdivision, and (iii) such service or gift is in no way a shift or device to evade the provisions of this subtitle. The provisions of this subdivision shall not apply when a person serves or provides alcoholic beverages to a guest occupying the residence as the lessee of a short-term rental, as that term is defined in § 15.2-983, regardless of whether the person who permanently resides in the residence is present during the short-term rental.
8. Any person who manufactures and sells cider to distillery licensees, or any person who manufactures wine from grapes grown by such person and sells it to winery licensees.
9. The sale of wine and beer in or through canteens or post exchanges on United States reservations when permitted by the proper authority of the United States.
10. The keeping and consumption of any lawfully acquired alcoholic beverages at a private meeting or private party limited in attendance to members and guests of a particular group, association, or organization at a banquet or similar affair, or at a special event, if a banquet license has been granted. However, no banquet license shall be required for private meetings or private parties limited in attendance to the members of a common interest community as defined in § 54.1-2345 and their guests, provided (i) the alcoholic beverages shall not be sold or charged for in any way, (ii) the premises where the alcoholic beverages are consumed is limited to the common area regularly occupied and utilized for such private meetings or private parties, and (iii) such meetings or parties are not open to the public.
11. Any person who, after being granted a permit by the Board pursuant to subdivision A 5 of § 4.1-212, manufactures at his residence for domestic consumption spirits in an amount not to exceed (i) 100 gallons per year if there are two or more persons 21 years of age or older residing in the residence or (ii) 50 gallons per year if there is only one person 21 years of age or older residing in the residence. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to authorize the sale of such spirits.