Moscato: aromatic, sweet and sparkling from Italy and beyond

Moscato wine is one of the most widely grown white grapes in the world, known for its floral perfume, natural sweetness and low alcohol. Browse bottles from independent producers who grow it across Italy, France and further afield.

From the gentle fizz of Asti to still and passito styles, one grape with many expressions.

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Moscato

Moscato wines

Moscato is one of the oldest cultivated grape families in the world, with records going back to ancient Greece and Rome. In its most familiar form — Moscato Bianco, the grape behind Asti Spumante — it produces wines that are low in alcohol, high in natural sugar and filled with peach, apricot and orange blossom character. The same variety also makes still, sparkling and passito styles depending on where and how it is grown. Each bottle here ships directly from the producer's own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

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Moscato wine cases

A wine case here is a producer's own selection of six bottles — the recommendation they would make if you asked them directly. For a grape like Moscato, that can mean tasting one estate's range across still, semi-sparkling and fully sparkling styles, or following a single thread of sweetness from dry to dessert. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop.

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Wineries

The producers below grow Moscato across very different landscapes — from the sandy soils of Asti in Piedmont to volcanic hillsides in Sicily and the steep terraces of Alsace. Reading a producer's own notes is often the best way to understand what shapes a wine, and the wine-advice service is there if you would rather ask before you order.

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Wine experts

Moscato wines attract strong opinions, and a second view before buying can save you from the wrong bottle. Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society review wines they have personally tasted, and their notes are visible on each wine page and on the expert's own profile. Several of the experts below have reviewed Moscato wines featured on this page.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order Moscato wines on Free Grape Society?

Browse the wines above and add bottles to your basket. Each wine ships directly from the producer's own cellar. Delivery takes between 4 and 14 days depending on where the producer is based, and free shipping is included.

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 Moscato from more than one producer in the same order?

Yes. You can add wines from different producers to the same basket. Each producer ships their wines separately, so you may receive more than one delivery. Shipping is free from each producer.

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 choose between still, sparkling and passito Moscato?

Still Moscato tends to be richer and more concentrated, while Moscato d'Asti is gently sparkling with very low alcohol. Passito styles are dried-grape dessert wines — much sweeter and more intense. The wine page for each bottle explains the style, and independent expert reviews are there if you want a second opinion.

How are Moscato producers chosen on Free Grape Society?

Free Grape Society works with independent producers who grow and bottle their own wines. Wines are tasted before listing. You will not find supermarket-supply négociant wines here — every producer on the platform makes wine at their own estate.

Which Moscato wine expert can recommend something for me?

The independent wine experts on Free Grape Society review Moscato wines they have personally tasted. Browse the experts listed on this page, read their reviews and follow anyone whose palate matches yours. You can also use the wine-advice service to ask a question before you order.

Why don't you sell supermarket-brand Moscato wines?

Free Grape Society works with independent producers who grow and bottle their own wines. Large-volume supermarket labels are typically made by négociants who buy grapes or bulk wine from many sources. The wines here come from a single estate — you can read who made them, where, and how.

Is Moscato widely available in European wine shops?

Moscato d'Asti and basic Moscato are common in retail, but estate-bottled wines from smaller producers are rarely stocked by supermarkets or large wine merchants. On Free Grape Society, independent growers ship directly to you, so you can access wines that never reach a shop shelf.

Where Moscato comes from and how region shapes it

Moscato is one of the oldest grape families in the world, with origins traced to the eastern Mediterranean and records of cultivation going back thousands of years. Today it grows across a wide arc of Europe, from Piedmont in northern Italy to Sicily in the south, across into Spain, Portugal, Greece, and beyond. The variety most associated with the name is Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains, the small-berried form that produces the most aromatic wines, but the family is large: Moscato Giallo, Moscato Rosa, Moscatel, and Muscat of Alexandria all belong to it, each behaving differently depending on where it is grown and how it is made. In Piedmont, the grape ripens in the hills around Asti and Canelli, producing wines that are low in alcohol, gently sparkling, and intensely floral. In Sicily, the same family yields the rich, amber-coloured Passito di Pantelleria, made from sun-dried grapes on a volcanic island. Climate and winemaking intent shape the outcome more than almost any other variety — which is why two bottles both labelled Moscato can taste so entirely different. Producers growing it in Piedmont, Sicily, and Veneto each work with their own expression of the grape.

How Moscato tastes, and what to drink it with

The hallmark of Moscato across its many forms is fragrance: orange blossom, peach, apricot, and a floral lift that comes from the grape's naturally high concentration of aromatic compounds. The wines are typically lower in alcohol than most — often between 5 and 8 percent for the sparkling styles — and carry varying levels of sweetness, from lightly off-dry to fully sweet. Texture ranges from gently fizzy (frizzante) to still to fully sparkling (spumante), with the still and sweet versions tending toward greater concentration and weight. Because of this sweetness and fragrance, Moscato pairs well with food that has its own sweetness or a delicate richness: fresh fruit tarts, almond-based pastries, and soft cheeses work naturally alongside it. It also holds up to spiced food better than most white wines — the residual sugar softens heat without masking flavour. For a contrast-based pairing, try it alongside something salty: the combination of sweet, aromatic wine and aged hard cheese or cured meat is a long-standing tradition in the regions where the grape is grown. Producers across Italy, Spain, and Portugal each bring their own take on how the grape is best expressed at the table.

Buying Moscato direct from independent producers

Most Moscato found in supermarkets and large retail chains comes from industrial co-operatives that process enormous volumes of fruit, blending across regions and vintages to hit a consistent, low-cost profile. The wines are technically made from Moscato, but the grape's character — its site-specific fragrance and the personality of the producer behind it — is largely absent. The producers on Free Grape Society work differently. They grow the grape themselves, make decisions about harvest timing and winemaking that reflect their own land, and bottle under their own name. That means the wine you receive was shaped by a specific person in a specific place, not optimised for volume. Each order ships directly from the producer's own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between — so the wine travels a shorter path and you know exactly where it came from. Wines tasted before listing means the range reflects real quality rather than availability alone. If you are exploring the broader Muscat family, the Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains and Muscat pages cover closely related expressions, and Italian white wines offer further context on the grape's home territory. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop — and Moscato, with its long history and wide range of styles, is one of the more rewarding varieties to explore through it.