The beloved brew that built Milwaukee is going on hiatus — and fans are already mourning its absence
Schlitz Calls Last Round After 177 Years
Last call has officially been announced for one of America’s most storied brews. Pabst Brewing Co. has confirmed it is halting production of Schlitz, the lager that spent nearly two centuries quenching the thirst of blue-collar drinkers from coast to coast. The news hit beer enthusiasts hard — and for good reason. This isn’t just the end of a beverage. It’s the closing of an American chapter.
Pabst’s head of brand strategy cited mounting costs in storage and shipping as the driving force behind the decision to place Schlitz Premium on hiatus. The brand made clear the move isn’t necessarily permanent, noting that customer feedback remains central to any future decisions about reviving beloved labels. Still, for many longtime loyalists, the announcement stings.
And Schlitz isn’t alone. Other retro labels under the Pabst umbrella — including Blatz and Old Milwaukee — are also expected to become harder to find on shelves.
A German Immigrant’s Dream Turned American Icon
The story of Schlitz reads like classic American mythology. In 1849, a German immigrant took the reins of a modest Milwaukee brewery after marrying the widow of its original founder, August Krug. He renamed it after himself — and the Schlitz legacy was born.
What truly catapulted the brand into national consciousness, though, was a disaster. When the Great Chicago Fire swept through the city in 1871, Schlitz reportedly began shipping barrels of beer to the devastated community. Word spread fast. The goodwill — and the good taste — turned a regional brewery into a household name seemingly overnight.
By the 1950s, Schlitz had climbed to the top of the American beer industry, holding the title of the country’s biggest brewery. Its bold advertising declared that running out of Schlitz was, quite simply, running out of beer. For a generation of drinkers, that wasn’t hyperbole — it was gospel.
The Schlitz Stumble That Changed Everything
But ambition has a way of unraveling itself. Budweiser overtook Schlitz in the mid-1950s, and the brand never quite recovered its footing. Then came what industry insiders would later call the “Schlitz Mistake” — a 1976 decision to reformulate the recipe in an effort to cut costs and boost profits. The move backfired spectacularly, alienating a fiercely loyal customer base who could taste the difference.
One year later, the brand found itself in yet another self-inflicted crisis with an ill-conceived ad campaign widely remembered for its aggressive, off-putting tone — a far cry from the warm, working-class identity Schlitz had spent decades building. The campaign did more damage than good, and the brand’s reputation took another hit it couldn’t fully shake.
Pop Culture Wounds and a Slow Fade
The cultural blows kept coming. The rise of light beers throughout the late ’70s and ’80s shifted American tastes dramatically, and Schlitz struggled to stay relevant in an evolving marketplace. A 1991 Saturday Night Live sketch that spoofed the era’s macho beer advertising — though actually aimed at competitors — became inadvertently associated with Schlitz, reinforcing a perception that the brand was a relic of a bygone era.
Schlitz was sold to Stroh Brewery Co. in 1982, which promptly moved production out of Milwaukee. It changed hands again in 1999 when Pabst acquired the brand, eventually brewing it at an Anheuser-Busch facility in Texas. Milwaukee — the very city immortalized in its slogan — had long stopped being its home.
One Final Batch, Brewed With Dignity
In a fitting farewell, one last batch of Schlitz will be brewed at Wisconsin Brewing Co. outside Madison — using the original 1948 recipe, from the era when Schlitz reigned supreme and Budweiser was still playing catch-up. The brewmaster behind the tribute expressed a desire for the brand to close out with the dignity and respect it deserves.
It’s a bittersweet sendoff for a beer that once defined an entire city’s identity. Whether Schlitz ever returns to shelves remains to be seen. But what’s undeniable is that it leaves behind a legacy that no recipe change, bad ad campaign, or corporate reshuffling could ever fully erase.
Some things just taste better the first time around.
Source: NBC News

