Steiermark wines — direct from the estate

Wines from Steiermark's independent estates. Sauvignon Blanc and Welschriesling at the centre. Direct from the cellar.

Styrian producers, focused on white varieties and mineral precision.

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Steiermark

Steiermark wines

Steiermark is divided into three sub-regions: Südsteiermark, Weststeiermark, and Vulkanland Steiermark. Südsteiermark sits along the Slovenian border and produces the highest concentration of quality white wine in Austria outside Wachau. The steep slopes, with gradients often exceeding 60 percent, force low yields and concentrated fruit. The producers listed here work those slopes themselves.

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Steiermark producers

Sauvignon Blanc from Südsteiermark is regularly compared to Sancerre, but the geological base is different. The soils here are predominantly Opok, a local Styrian term for a mix of marl and silt that drains well and retains just enough moisture through dry summers. A mixbox from any of the producers below is composed by the producer as their own recommendation, always six bottles from one estate.

Steiermark sample boxes

Welschriesling is the most widely planted variety in Steiermark and one of the least understood outside Austria. It has no genetic relation to Riesling. At its best, from older vines on Opok soils, it produces a dry, high-acid white with real aging potential. Several producers on Free Grape Society have worked the same family vineyards for three or more generations. Producers, experts, and wine lovers participate on the same platform, on equal terms. No one sits between them.

Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted. Their reviews appear on the wine page and on the expert's own profile. Several of the experts listed here have reviewed Steiermark wines featured on this page. Their track records and tasting histories are visible to anyone reading the reviews.

Frequently asked questions

How do I order Steiermark wines on Free Grape Society?

Browse the wines listed above and add bottles to your cart. Each listing shows the producer, sub-region, grape variety, and vintage. Checkout is a single transaction. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar in Steiermark to your delivery address. No account is required to browse.

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 wines from multiple Steiermark producers in one order?

Yes. You can add wines from several producers to a single cart and pay once at checkout. Each producer ships independently, so you may receive separate deliveries. Tracking information is provided for each shipment once it leaves the cellar.

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 does Free Grape Society choose which Steiermark wines to list?

Every wine on the platform is tasted by our Head of Product before it goes live. Only wines that pass that quality review are listed. Independent wine experts also rate and review individual wines on the platform. No producer pays a placement fee to appear here.

What grape varieties are Steiermark producers known for?

Sauvignon Blanc is the most internationally recognised variety from Steiermark, particularly from Südsteiermark. Welschriesling is widely planted and produces the region's most accessible whites. Muskateller, Morillon (the local name for Chardonnay), and Schilcher, a pale red made from Blauer Wildbacher, are also regionally significant.

Which wine expert can recommend a Steiermark wine for me?

Several experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed Austrian white wines, including Steiermark producers. Browse the expert profiles in the section above. You can view each expert's review history before reaching out. Experts who specialise in Central European whites are a strong starting point for Steiermark recommendations.

Why don't you sell Steiermark wines from the supermarket brands?

Steiermark's best-known producers work in small volumes from steep hillside vineyards. That production model does not suit wholesale distribution. The estates on Free Grape Society ship directly from their cellar, which means the bottle changes hands once, not three times. Different model, different wines.

Are Steiermark wines available outside Austria through conventional retail?

A handful of larger Steiermark estates reach export markets through importers. Most small producers do not, because the importer model requires volumes and margin structures that conflict with hillside farming in Südsteiermark or Vulkanland. Direct-to-consumer platforms like Free Grape Society are one of the few ways to access them outside Austria.

Grapes and appellations of Steiermark

Steiermark — Styria in English — is divided into three distinct wine zones: Südsteiermark, Weststeiermark, and Vulkanland Steiermark. Each carries its own DAC designation, a system Austria introduced to tie wine identity more tightly to origin. Südsteiermark is the most internationally recognized of the three, known for Sauvignon Blanc with a mineral precision that differs noticeably from the Loire or Bordeaux versions of the same grape. Weststeiermark is almost entirely built on Blauer Wildbacher, a red variety grown almost nowhere else in the world, used primarily to make Schilcher — a bone-dry, high-acid rosé with a long regional tradition. Vulkanland Steiermark, formerly called Südoststeiermark, sits on volcanic soils that push Pinot Gris and Traminer toward a richer, more textured style than the same grapes produce in Alsace. Across all three zones, the terrain is steep. Slopes regularly exceed 30 degrees, which means mechanization is limited and hand harvesting remains the norm. That geography keeps volume low and concentration high. White wines from Austria account for the majority of Steiermark output, with Sauvignon Blanc, Grüner Veltliner, and Welschriesling the dominant varieties.

Climate and terroir in Steiermark

Steiermark sits in the southeastern corner of Austria, bordering Slovenia to the south and east. The climate is Pannonian-influenced inland but moderated by Alpine air from the north and west, creating diurnal temperature swings that regularly exceed 15°C in the growing season. Those swings are what keeps Steiermark whites precise: grapes ripen fully in summer heat but retain acidity through cool nights. Annual rainfall is among the highest of any Austrian wine region, concentrated mostly in summer. The steep, well-drained hillside vineyards shed excess water efficiently, reducing disease pressure without requiring intensive intervention. Soils vary considerably between zones: Südsteiermark sits largely on opok — a compressed mixture of marl and sandstone — while Vulkanland Steiermark is defined by basalt and volcanic tuff. Those soil differences translate directly into wine texture. Producers in Vulkanland working volcanic parcels typically see more body and phenolic weight than their counterparts on the marl-dominant slopes of Südsteiermark. These are not theoretical distinctions — they are measurable differences in pH, mineral uptake, and water retention that show up in the glass.

How Steiermark producers work with Free Grape Society

Steiermark is a region where most serious producers are small. Vineyard holdings are often under five hectares, and many estates have been in the same family for three or more generations. These are not producers with distribution infrastructure — they grow, make, and sell, and the logistics chain between cellar and consumer has historically involved multiple intermediaries who each take a margin. Free Grape Society removes that structure. The producer sets their own price on the platform. No buyer with quarterly targets decides what gets listed or at what margin. No chain defends shelf space. Producers send samples to our Head of Product, who tastes every wine before it goes live on the platform. Independent wine experts Rate & Review individual wines directly on the platform, and those reviews are visible on the wine page and on each expert's profile. Bottles ship from the producer's cellar — not from a regional warehouse or a third-party logistics hub. For a region like Steiermark, where the identity of the wine is inseparable from the specific slope, soil, and family behind it, that directness matters. You are not buying a category. You are buying a specific producer's decision about how to work their land and what to put in the bottle.