All Saints Cigars will increase prices next month, but the changes will only affect three vitolas in each of the company’s lines.

In an email, Micky Pegg, co-owner of All Saints, told halfwheel that the Robusto, Toro and Huge vitolas in each of the company’s four lines—Colorado, Dedicación, Habano and St. Francis—will increase between 0.87-3.33 percent.

For consumers, the largest change will be the St. Francis Huge, which will increase from $12 to $12.40, while the smallest change will be the Dedicación Huge, which will increase from $11.50 to $11.60. The Churchill, Coach, Mitre and Vesper Vitolas will remain the same price for all four lines.

Most cigar companies will only adjust pricing once per year. Typically, those changes are enacted at the start of the new year, though some companies announced price increases in Q3 of last year. Below is a list of companies that have announced whether they will have a price increase in and around the start of 2024.

CompanyPrice Increase?
ADV & McKay Cigar Co.Yes
AGANORSA LeafYes
AJ FernandezYes
All Saints CigarsYes
Altadis U.S.A.Yes
Altezas Reales 1871Yes
ArangoNo
Artesano del TobaccoNo
ATL Cigar Co.No
Bellatto Premium CigarsYes
Black Label Trading Co.Yes
Black Star Line CigarsNo
BovedaYes
Caldwell Cigar Co.Yes
Casa CaraballoNo
Casa CuevasYes
ColibriNo
Crowned HeadsNo
Dapper Cigar Co.Yes
Davidoff of GenevaYes
Drew EstateYes
E.P. CarrilloYes
El SeptimoNo
Espinosa Premium CigarsNo
Esteban CarrerasYes
FosforoYes
Freud Cigar Co.No
Habanos S.A.Yes
HVCYes
Iconic LeafNo
Jake Wyatt Cigar Co.No
Kafie 1901No
KBFNo
KristoffNo
La AuroraYes
Lampert CigarsNo
Lost&FoundYes
Lotus/VertigoNo
My FatherNo
Ohana NuiNo
OlivaYes
PatinaYes
PerdomoYes
PlasenciaYes
Potter CigarsNo
PowstanieYes
Principle CigarsNo
Rocky PatelYes
RoMa Craft TobacYes
Santa ClaraNo
SinistroYes
SommNo
Southern DrawYes
Stolen ThroneNo
SutliffNo
Tabanero Cigar Co.No
TatuajeNo
Vector-KGMNo
Villiger Cigars North AmericaYes
Warfighter Cigar Co.No
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Brooks Whittington

I have worn many hats in my life up to this point: I started out as a photojournalist for the Dallas Morning News and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, then transitioned to photographing weddings—both internationally and in the U.S.—for more than a decade. After realizing that there was a need for a cigar website containing better photographs and more in-depth information about each release, I founded my first cigar blog, SmokingStogie, in 2008. SmokingStogie quickly became one of the more influential cigar blogs on the internet, known for reviewing preproduction, prerelease, rare, extremely hard-to-find and expensive cigars, and it was one of the predecessors to halfwheel, which I co-founded.