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Best Wine in Europe

Best Wine in Europe

Where to drink Europe’s best wine in 2026. Real prices, tastings worth booking, and how not to overpay. Skip tourist traps. Drink smarter.

In short
Europe’s best wine in 2026 is a trade‑off between cult classics and smart value. Top picks: Rioja Reserva (€15 a bottle in Logroño), Mosel Spätlese (€20 at the producer’s door), and Etna Rosso (€18 in Catania). Skip Bordeaux 2020s unless you have €300 to burn. This page gives you the regions, the exact producers worth your time, and the scams to avoid right now.
Curated by Joan SanzUpdated:

Plonk is everywhere. The good stuff takes planning. I have stomped vines from the Douro to the Nahe, waited in rain outside French châteaux and argued with Sicilian contadini about nerello mascalese. Here is the state of European wine in summer 2026.

2026’s Honest Map of Value

Three regions pay back your euro and your hour. First: the Mosel in Germany. The 2024 vintage produced steely rieslings with electric acidity. At Weingut Willi Schaefer in Graach you pay €22 for a Spätlese that beats many €80 Burgundies. Book a tasting for June or September. August is a mob scene. Second: Etna’s north slope. Benanti’s white Pietramarina costs €28 on the terrace. Third: Jerez. Sherry is still half the price of decent white wine. A 2010 Amontillado from Lustau costs €15 at the bodega. Skip the saccharine cream styles.

Where not to go in 2026: The Côte d’Or. Seriously. A village-level Bourgogne Rouge from a decent 2023 starts at €40 in a Beaune shop. You pay for the name. Drink Aloxe‑Corton only if someone else picks up the tab.

RegionBottle price (EUR) at sourceTasting cost (EUR)Average July temp (°C)Crowd level (1, 5)
Mosel (Germany)18, 3010, 15223
Etna (Sicily)20, 3515, 25284
Jerez (Spain)12, 258, 12301

How Not To Overpay

Do not buy at the tourist office. Do not trust hotel concierges. Walk to the cantina social or the co‑operative. In Ribera del Duero I paid €6 for a private tasting of six wines at Bodegas Emilio Moro. The nearby hotel wanted €35. Ask for the “degustación básica”. That phrase saves you. Book everything by email two weeks ahead. Walk‑ins at Rioja’s top bodegas now require a €20 deposit.

One hard rule: never pay for a tasting flight that includes a sweet wine you did not ask for. That is how they get you. Say “seco only” in Spain, “trocken” in Germany.

What About Orange Wines?

They are everywhere in 2026. Most are bad. The good ones come from Friuli and Slovenia’s Brda region. Try Radikon in Oslavia. A bottle of Ribolla Gialla costs €26 at the cellar. Expect a 45‑minute drive on dirt roads. Worth every stone chip.

We are still writing for this one. Check back soon, or browse the destinations.

Frequently asked questions

Is Bordeaux worth visiting in 2026?
Only if you want to pay €50+ for a generic Cru Bourgeois. The 2023 vintage is drinkable young but overpriced. Go to the Libournais for less famous satellites like Fronsac. You find good bottles for €12.
Are wine tours on Groupon a scam?
Most are. In Tuscany, the €35 bus tour drops you at a gift shop masquerading as a winery. Book directly with a producer. For Chianti Classico, Fèlsina’s basic tour costs €25 and includes three serious wines.
What is the best month for wine travel in Europe?
May or September. July and August are crowded and hot. Vendemmia (harvest) starts mid‑September in Italy. You see work happening. Book tastings for 10 am before the heat. Most wineries close between 13:00 and 15:00.
Do I need to tip at tastings?
No. In Spain and Italy a tip is not expected. In Germany a small 1, 2 euro coin in the jar is fine. If you had a private guide, €5, €10 shows respect.