Untappd’s All-Time Top-Rated Märzens [UPDATED 2025]

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9.13.23
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Welcome to a our series where we pick one of the over 250 styles (including cider, mead, and non-alcoholic) on Untappd, finding which rated the highest over the entire twelve-year history of the world’s largest beverage social networking app in it’s “Top Rated” section.

For others in the series:

Untappd’s All-Time Top-Rated Quadruple IPAs

Untappd’s All-Time Top-Rated Hazy IPAs

Untappd’s All-Time Top Rated Fruited Sours

Yes, it is the best time of the year. To us, this is indisputable. When fall rolls into town, blowing in its red, orange, and yellow leaves and chilly sweater weather, we get goosebumps. And nothing beats chilling around the fire with a malty German amber lager like a Märzen, once the official beer of the official Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany (although not anymore, but more on that below).

Traditionally, Oktoberfest started in 1810 to celebrate the wedding of Bavarian Crown Prince Louis (later King Louis I of Bavaria) to Princess Therese Von Sachsen-Hildburghausen. Amid the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815), the raucous party, replete with free beer and food provided by the royal family, aimed to unite Germans during a tumultuous time.

Today, the world’s biggest beer festival welcomes around six million visitors to Munich yearly (only Cholera and the COVID-19 pandemic have canceled this historic event). The 190th celebration of Oktoberfest starts on Saturday, September 20, 2025. Normally, this is where we tell you that we can’t attend Oktoberfest this year, but that would be a lie!

For the first time ever, Hop Culture Social Media Manager, Magic Muncie, and Content Director, Grace Lee-Weitz, will be coming to you live from the tents of Oktoberfest. Expect more content from our time at the event in October, but for now, let’s prost by sharing the all-time top-rated Märzens on Untappd.

Remind Me, What Is a Märzen?

hofbräu oktoberfestbier

Photography courtesy of Hofbräu

Historically, the beers served at Oktoberfest can only come from the large breweries inside Munich’s city limits, including Augustiner-Bräu München (Augustiner), Hacker-Pschorr, Hofbräu, Löwenbräu, Paulaner, and Spaten-Franziskaner-Bräu (Spaten).

But over time, the official beer style of Oktoberfest has changed.

For instance, during the first sixty or so years, the darker Bavarian dunkel dominated. But by 1872, Spaten introduced the more amber-hued Märzen, which became the official beer of the fest.

Over the decades, brewers continued to innovate, using paler malts. In the early 1970s, Paulaner introduced a golden-colored beer called Festbier. After that, this style slowly gained popularity.

Today, Festbier is the official style of all beers at Oktoberfest. Although still slightly malty, these lighter-bodied Festbiers are super drinkable and perfect for the two-week-long celebration.

But if you asked us our favorite Oktoberfest style, we’d say Märzens. These German amber lagers, typically anywhere from chestnut to russet in color, hit the palate as smooth, toasty, bready, and slightly spiced with a bit of a Noble hop bite.

Märzens clock in around 5-6% ABV with a dry finish.

In America, Märzens are the most common style of what we’ve come to call Oktoberfest or Oktoberfest-style beers, so check out what folks on Untappd have rated as the All-Time Top-Rated Märzens.

Untappd’s All-Time Top-Rated Märzens

Editor’s Note: These are not Hop Culture’s personal ratings. This list is based on Untappd’s ratings for the All-Time Top-Rated Märzens. The list shows the top beers based on Untappd’s weighted average formula, which effectively rates all beers against each other. A beer must have 150 ratings or more to qualify for this list. For more information on our rating system, please view the Untappd ratings explainer.

We’ve also removed beers from this list that are listed as no longer in production.

Barrel-Aged P3 Oktoberfest – Phase Three Brewing

Lake Zurich, IL

phase three brewing p3 oktoberfest and barrel-aged p3 oktoberfest märzen

Photography courtesy of @phasethreebrew

An imperial version of Phase Three’s P3 Oktoberfest, Barrel-Aged P3 Oktoberfest naps in Rabbit Hole bourbon casks for an entire year, hitting a high-octane 15% ABV. Märzens are known for being relatively middling in alcohol content (6-6.5% ABV), so it makes sense that a barrel-aged version at over double the strength knocked heads to get to the number one spot, literally.

You get all the maltiness and roastiness you love from a Märzen with a bit of barrel and char character from the casks. You can’t drink many of these, but that’s not the point when you drink a Märzen this stunning.

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Oktoberfest Ur-Märzen – Goldfinger Brewing Company

Downers Grove, IL

goldfinger brewing company oktoberfest ur-märzen

Photography courtesy of @goldfingerbeer

To make Oktoberfest Ur-Märzen, Goldfinger stays as faithful to traditional Märzen brewing as possible. Which means that, yes, they brew this beer in March, and yes, they tie up one of their lagering tanks to cold condition for six months until September. At which point, Goldfinger’s German lager is nice and ready for Oktoberfest. But this also means that Goldfinger only brews a certain amount, and once it’s gone, it’s gone! Get this one while you can.

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Märzen-Style Ale – Spoetzl Brewery

Shiner, TX

spoetzl brewery märzen-style ale

Photography courtesy of Michael Pulvino | Untappd

Another big-ass version of this seasonal German lager, Märzen-Style Ale from Spoetzel Brewery, sleeps in whisky barrels for a beer that’s layered with malt, toast, and smoke. As Spoetzl writes in the beer’s Untappd description, “It is only for the most serious fans of Oktoberfest.”

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Oktoberfest – Bierstadt Lagerhaus

Denver, CO

bierstadt lagerhaus oktoberfest

Photography courtesy of Bierstadt Lagerhaus

A beer that garnered a ninety-six from Craft Beer & Brewing, Oktoberfest from Bierstadt Lagerhaus has a “restrained aroma of light, sweet caramel, and a light zesty quality that emerges as it warms,” writes the panel.

In 2022, we visited Bierstadt on the final night of the Great American Beer Festival. Most of their kegs had kicked by then, but they still had a little Oktoberfest saved up. And good thing. Expertly malty with just a bit of Noble hop bite, Bierstadt’s Oktoberfest is the perfect reincarnation of the traditional German style. We wouldn’t expect anything less.

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Brisk – Tree House Brewing Company

Charlton, MA

tree house brewing company brisk märzen

Photography courtesy of Tree House Brewing Company

Tree House makes Brisk with German pilsner, Munich, Cara Munich, and Vienna malt, ferments with a Märzen yeast, and conditions in oak. The resulting German-style Oktoberfest has a “softened noble hop character, accentuated malts, and the ever-so-gentle kiss of American oak,” according to Tree House. Crispy, crusty, and creamy, Brisk is only one of Tree House’s two top Märzens.

Which brings us to…

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Whisper – Tree House Brewing Company

Charlton, MA

tree house brewing company whisper oktoberfest marzen

Photography courtesy of Tree House Brewing Company

Yes, one of the best IPA-producing breweries in the country makes a couple of damn fine Märzens.

Brewed with German Pilsner, Munich, Cara Munich, and Vienna malts, plus a traditional Märzen yeast, Whisper is Tree House’s culmination of years toying with the idea of a German-inspired lager to celebrate Oktoberfest.

Smooth and rich from the plethora of malts, Whisper also includes just a…well…whisper of Noble hop character.

“We find Whisper to be an ideal comparison to crisp weather celebrations and companionship,” writes the brewery in the beer’s Untappd description. “With a dense, billowing head and a remarkably creamy mouthfeel, this is a beer we are proud of and trust that you will enjoy as much as we do—Pröst!”

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Whole Cone Fest Märzen – Halfway Crooks Beer

Atlanta, GA

Whole Cone Fest Märzen focuses a bit more on the hoppy side of a Märzen, which differentiates this beer slightly from others on this list. Using whole-cone hops sourced directly from the Seitzfarm in the Hallertau Bavaria region of Germany, this Märzen still pours beautifully amber and drinks slightly toasty. But it’s that carefully curated selection of whole-cone hops that sets this one apart.

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Historical Society: Märzenbier – Root + Branch Brewing

Copiague, NY

root and branch historical society märzenbier

Photography courtesy of Andreas Winter | Untappd

The first beer in Root + Branch’s Historical Society series, a bundle of beers focused on traditional old-world ale and lager styles, Historical Society: Märzenbier is a seasonal German-style amber lager brewed with Hallertau hops and naturally carbonated.

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Tines – Fox Farm Brewery

Salem, CT

Fox Farm’s seasonal Märzen, Tines, is a beer the brewery looks forward to all year long. The 6% ABV German lager gives you everything you want in a Märzen: malty depths but with a brisk hop bite to bring you back to the surface. It’s almost like the hops strike through this Märzen like a…tine.

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Märzen – Human Robot

Philadelphia, PA

human robot märzen

Photography courtesy of Jax H | Untappd

Human Robot double decocts its Märzen to bring out the malty complexity of its grist bill of Vienna and Munich malts and a sprinkling of Farbmalz. We know Human Robot is a virtuoso when it comes to lagers; we expect nothing less with this seasonal stunner.

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