Aragon wines — from the estates redefining Spanish red

Aragon wines from independent estates in northeastern Spain. Old-vine Garnacha and Cariñena, direct from the cellar.

Independent producers from Cariñena, Campo de Borja, and Calatayud.

Color

Dropdown arrow

Type

Dropdown arrow

Country

Dropdown arrow

Region (1)

Dropdown arrow

Grape

Dropdown arrow

Pairing

Dropdown arrow

Sort by

Sort arrow
Aragon

Aragon wines

Aragon is divided into four main wine denominations: Cariñena, Campo de Borja, Calatayud, and Somontano. The first three are built around Garnacha, grown on high-altitude plots where vine age commonly exceeds 50 years. Somontano sits at the foot of the Pyrenees and permits a broader range of international varieties alongside native ones. The producers below ship their wines directly from their cellars in northeastern Spain.

Previous1 of 1Next

Aragon producers

Garnacha grown above 700 metres in Calatayud produces wines with measurably higher acidity than the same variety grown on the plains of La Mancha. The elevation slows ripening by several weeks, preserving freshness that warmer growing areas cannot replicate. The estates in this section are the people behind those vines. No importer, no wholesaler. The price you see is the price the producer agreed to.

View all wineries from Aragon

Aragon sample boxes

A mixbox on Free Grape Society always contains 6 bottles from one producer, composed by that producer as their own recommendation. Not assembled from multiple estates by a buyer. The producer decides what goes in the box. Several of the Aragon producers listed above also offer sample boxes, which is the most direct way to work through a single estate's range before committing to individual bottles.

View all mixboxes from Aragon

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 below have reviewed Aragon wines listed on this platform. Their track records and review histories are visible, so you can judge how their palate aligns with yours before following a recommendation.

View all wine experts

Frequently asked questions

How do I order an Aragón wine case from Free Grape Society?

Browse the cases on this page and add one to your cart. Each case contains six bottles from a single Aragón producer, composed by the grower. You pay securely with Klarna or card, and the case ships directly from the producer's cellar to your door. Delivery typically takes between four and fourteen days, with an average of around eight to nine days.

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.

What is included in an Aragón wine case?

Every case is six bottles from one estate, chosen by the producer as their own recommendation across the wines they make. The contents vary by grower — some show a single variety across different sites or vintages, others move through the styles their cellar produces. The product page for each case lists exactly which bottles are included before you order.

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 Aragón wine case for me?

Start with the producer's page to understand their vineyards and approach. Aragón spans several distinct appellations — Cariñena, Calatayud, Campo de Borja and Somontano among them — each with its own grape emphasis and altitude profile. If you want guidance, you can ask an independent wine expert through Free Grape Society before you order.

Can I find cases focused on a specific Aragón appellation or grape?

The cases here come from producers across Aragón's appellations, so the grapes and styles vary. Old-vine Garnacha is the region's most recognisable thread, but you will also find Tempranillo, Macabeo and varieties planted in Somontano's cooler northern zone. Reading each producer's profile tells you where their vineyards sit and which grapes they centre on.

Which Aragón wine expert can recommend something for me?

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society cover Spanish wines including producers from Aragón. You can browse expert profiles to find someone whose palate and background fit what you are looking for, then ask them a question directly. Their reviews on individual wines are also a useful starting point before you commit to a case.

Why are Aragón mixboxes always 6 bottles from one producer?

A case composed by one grower says something coherent about how that producer thinks and what their vineyards produce. Mixing wines across producers would lose that thread. Six bottles is enough to show range — different varieties, different parcels, sometimes different vintages — while keeping the selection focused on a single cellar's character and the grower's own recommendation.

Can I buy Aragón wine cases from a shop or supermarket?

Producer-composed wine cases from independent Aragón estates are not something you typically find in retail. Supermarkets and wine shops carry commercial brands; the small family estates and old-vine specialists on Free Grape Society sell directly, which means their full range and their own composed selections reach you without passing through an importer or warehouse.

Appellations and grapes of Aragón

Aragón sits in northeastern Spain, stretching from the Pyrenees in the north to the semi-arid plains bordering Castile in the south. The region contains four DO appellations: Cariñena, Campo de Borja, Calatayud, and Somontano. Each operates under different altitude and soil conditions, which produces meaningfully different wines even from the same grape.

Garnacha is the dominant variety across most of Aragón, particularly in Cariñena and Campo de Borja, where old-vine plantings — some exceeding 80 years — remain common. Old-vine Garnacha from Aragón typically shows a denser structure and lower yields than younger plantings in other Spanish regions. Calatayud, situated at elevations between 600 and 900 metres above sea level, allows Garnacha to retain more acidity than at lower altitudes elsewhere in Spain.

Tempranillo appears across all four DOs, though Somontano is the most variety-diverse appellation in the region, with significant plantings of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Syrah alongside native grapes. Somontano is also the youngest of the four DOs by a significant margin, receiving its denomination in 1984, while Cariñena — the grape the French call Carignan — gives its name to a variety cultivated in the area since at least the 12th century. The grape Carignan takes its internationally known name directly from the town of Cariñena.

Climate and terroir across the four DOs

Aragón covers roughly 47,700 square kilometres and sits between two climatic systems: Atlantic influence from the northwest and Mediterranean influence from the southeast. The Ebro river valley runs through the region and moderates temperatures in Campo de Borja and Cariñena, but the cierzo — a cold, dry northwest wind — is the defining force in those appellations. It reduces disease pressure and desiccates the grape skins, which concentrates the fruit without requiring intervention in the cellar.

Calatayud is the highest-altitude DO in the region. Its schist and limestone soils, combined with cold nights during the growing season, produce wines with structural acidity that contrasts sharply with the fuller-bodied styles from lower-lying Cariñena. Producers working in Calatayud often point to diurnal temperature swings of 15 to 20 degrees Celsius in August as a key factor in preserving aromatics.

Somontano's position at the foot of the Pyrenees gives it a cooler, wetter climate than the three southern DOs. Rainfall there averages around 500mm annually, compared to under 350mm in Cariñena. That difference is sufficient to sustain international varieties that would struggle further south without irrigation.

How Aragón producers work with Free Grape Society

These are not the wines your supermarket carries. They are the wines your supermarket cannot carry — produced in quantities too small for national distribution chains, by estates that set their own price and ship directly from the cellar.

Producers, experts, restaurants, and wine lovers are on the same platform, on the same terms. The producer sets the price. The expert rates and reviews wines they have personally tasted. You see the producer's name, the appellation, and the reviews before you order.

Every wine is tasted before listing. Producers send samples to our Head of Product, who tastes each wine before it goes live. Independent wine experts then Rate and Review individual wines on the platform — their reviews are visible on the wine page and on the expert's own profile. No wine is listed on the basis of marketing material or brand recognition alone.

Aragón's four DOs remain significantly underrepresented in export markets relative to Rioja and Catalonia, which means the price-to-quality relationship is often more favourable. Old-vine Garnacha from Calatayud or Campo de Borja, at the prices producers here can offer without a three-step distribution chain, represents a category worth knowing.