Greek wine producers: independent growers from Crete to the Aegean

Greece's wine producers are spread across dozens of distinct regions, most of them family estates farming indigenous varieties — Assyrtiko, Xinomavro, Agiorgitiko — that have shaped Greek wine for centuries. Browse Greek wineries and buy directly from the growers.

From volcanic island soils to high-altitude mainland vineyards, Greek winemakers work with grapes found nowhere else.

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Greece

Greek wines

Most of the producers on this page are family-run, farming their own fruit rather than buying in grapes. That matters in Greece more than in many countries, because so many of the varieties here are site-specific: a Moschofilero from Mantinia in the Peloponnese tastes of altitude and cool nights; the same grape grown elsewhere would be a different wine. On Free Grape Society, these growers ship directly from their own cellars, with no importer or warehouse in between, so the wine reaches you as it left the estate.

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Greek wine cases

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and those reviews appear on the individual wine pages and on each expert's profile. Several of the experts here have reviewed wines from the Greek producers listed below. Their notes sit alongside the producer's own descriptions, so you can read both before you order — no single voice, and no curation of which wines get listed.

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Wine experts

Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop. If you are unsure where to start with Greek wine — whether that is a white from the Aegean Islands, a red from Macedonia, or something from Crete — the wine-advice service connects you with an independent expert who can point you toward a grower whose style suits what you are looking for.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Greek wine case?

Choose the case from a producer whose region or grape variety interests you, add it to your order, and check out. Each case is six bottles from one producer, shipped directly from their cellar. Delivery takes an average of eight to nine days, within a four-to-fourteen-day range depending on where you are. You can pay by card or through Klarna.

What happens if a bottle arrives broken or doesn't taste right?

Send a photo to Free Grape Society customer support within 7 days of delivery. We will arrange a replacement or a refund. Because producers ship directly, quality issues are handled with the producer's direct involvement. Shared responsibility is built into how FGS works.

Can I order a Greek wine case alongside wines from other countries?

Yes. A case ships from its producer's own cellar, so if you add wines or cases from different producers in your order, they may arrive in separate deliveries. Each shipment comes directly from its producer, with no central warehouse combining them. Free Grape Society handles the shipping coordination from the producer's end.

How long does delivery take?

Average delivery is 8 to 9 days from order to door. The full range is 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location and your delivery address. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar, not from a central warehouse.

How do I find the right Greek wine case for my taste?

Start with the region or grape variety that interests you. A producer in Naoussa working with Xinomavro will compose a very different case from one on Santorini growing Assyrtiko on volcanic soil. Reading the producer's own description of their six-bottle selection is often the clearest guide. You can also ask a wine expert through the advice service if you want a more personal recommendation.

How does a Greek wine case differ from just picking six individual bottles?

A case is the producer's own selection — the grower has decided which six bottles best represent their range or tell the clearest story about their estate. That considered sequence is something you do not get when picking six bottles at random. It is also a practical introduction to one producer: after the case, you have a clear sense of their style and which of their wines to return to.

Which Greek wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed Greek wines and can point you toward a producer or style that suits what you are looking for. Use the wine-advice service to put your question to an expert directly — they respond based on what they have personally tasted, not on a general list.

Why are Greek wine cases always 6 bottles from one producer?

Because a case built around one producer is honest in a way a mixed-cellar case cannot be. Six bottles from one Greek grower tell you something coherent: about the estate, the grape, the region, the vintage decisions. A mix of bottles from several producers might look varied, but it does not help you understand any one of them. The producer composes the case as their own recommendation — that is the point of it.

Can I buy a Greek wine case if I usually buy from a specialist wine shop?

Yes, and the main difference is where the wine comes from. A specialist shop sources through importers and distributors, which means several hands between the cellar and yours. On Free Grape Society, the producer ships the case directly, so the wine has not sat in an intermediate warehouse. For Greek wines in particular — where volcanic and high-altitude conditions produce wines that reward careful handling — that direct journey matters.