The independent producers of the Moselle, from Luxembourg's slate slopes

Moselle wineries range from multi-generational domaines to younger growers taking over family parcels along the river's limestone and slate banks. Browse independent producers working one of Europe's most storied wine corridors.

Small family estates farming the river's steep terraces, where Riesling and Elbling have been grown for centuries.

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Moselle

Moselle wineries

The Moselle's vineyards run along one of Europe's oldest wine rivers, shared between Luxembourg, Germany, and a sliver of France. The steepest terraces face south over the water, capturing enough sun to ripen grapes at this latitude, and the slate and limestone beneath hold warmth into the evening. Many of the estates here are small, often a single family farming a handful of parcels by hand. On Free Grape Society, producers sell and ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

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Moselle wines

Several Moselle producers also offer a wine case: six bottles from their own cellar, put together as a single recommendation rather than blended across estates. It is a way to taste one grower's range in a single order, chosen by the person who made the wines. Browse [Moselle wine cases](/mixboxes) or explore cases from nearby regions such as [Alsace](/mixboxes/france/alsace) and [Luxembourg](/mixboxes/luxembourg).

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Moselle wine cases

The wines from these estates reflect the river and the rock beneath it. Riesling dominates the steeper slate slopes, producing wines with a mineral edge and lively acidity that can age for years; Elbling, one of Europe's oldest cultivated grapes, survives on the Moselle's limestone banks and makes lean, high-acid whites that pair well with local fish dishes. Browse [Moselle wines](/wines/luxembourg/moselle) or explore bottles from the broader [Luxembourg](/wines/luxembourg) and [Germany](/wines/germany) listings.

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Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and their notes appear on the wine page and on each expert's own profile. Several of the experts active on the platform have reviewed wines from Moselle producers. Their assessments are their own and are not a condition of listing.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Moselle wine case?

Browse the cases on this page and select the one from the producer you want. Each case is six bottles from that single estate. Add it to your basket, choose your payment method at checkout — Klarna or card — and the producer ships it directly from their cellar to your door. Delivery typically takes between four and fourteen 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 a Moselle wine case?

Every case is six bottles from one producer, composed by that grower as their own recommendation across the wines they make. The contents are specific to each producer and are listed on the case page. Because the grower puts the case together themselves, it reflects how they read their own range rather than a generic mixed selection.

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 Moselle wine case for me?

Read the producer's own description of the case, which tells you which wines are included and why the grower chose them. If you want guidance before ordering, fill in the form to ask a wine expert — they can point you toward a style or a specific estate based on what you enjoy. You can also browse the full list of [Moselle wineries](/all-wineries/luxembourg/moselle) to get a feel for the producers first.

Can I order more than one Moselle wine case at once?

Yes. You can add cases from more than one producer to your basket in a single order. Each case ships directly from its own producer, so if you order from two different estates the deliveries may arrive separately. Shipping is free on every case, with no minimum order required.

Which Moselle wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have tasted and reviewed wines from Moselle producers. Find them on the expert pages linked from the wines they have reviewed, or use the ask-an-expert form on any wine page to put a specific question to an expert who knows the region. The service is free.

Why are Moselle wine cases always six bottles from one producer?

Because a case composed by one grower says something coherent about that estate. Six bottles from the same cellar trace how a producer thinks across their range — different sites, different grapes, or different vintages — in a way that a mixed case from several producers cannot. The producer composes it as their own recommendation, so it reads as a personal introduction to their work rather than a sampler.

Can I buy a Moselle wine case if I am not in Luxembourg?

Free Grape Society ships to multiple European countries. The Moselle producers on the platform sell and ship directly from their own cellars, handling logistics from the producer's end. Check the delivery information at checkout for your specific country. Because there is no importer or warehouse in between, the wine goes from cellar to door.

The producers of the Moselle

The Moselle is one of Europe's most northerly wine regions, and the producers working here have adapted to that fact over centuries. The river's tight loops create steep south-facing slopes where the vines catch as much sun as possible, and the slate soils absorb heat during the day and release it at night, extending the growing season into autumn. Most estates here are small family holdings, often farming terraced vineyards that cannot be worked by machine. That combination of difficult terrain and long-established family ownership means the growers tend to know their parcels intimately, and the wines reflect it. Luxembourg's Moselle runs along the country's eastern border with Germany, sharing the river but developing its own distinct character, with Rivaner and Auxerrois alongside Riesling as the grapes most commonly planted. You can browse wineries in Luxembourg or go directly to Moselle producers to see who is listed.

How we choose our producers

We work directly with the growers behind the wines, which means getting to know how they farm and what they charge before a single bottle is listed. Producers send samples, and those samples are tasted before a wine is listed, so the decision rests on what is in the glass rather than on a label or a reputation. We look for pricing that reflects the work in the vineyard and the cellar without the mark-ups that importers and warehouses add, and we keep the relationship direct so the grower sets their own terms. Once a wine is listed, independent wine experts rate and review individual bottles, building a public track record that buyers can read on the wine page. On Free Grape Society, producers sell and ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between, so the grower remains the point of contact for what they make. We do not try to carry the full output of a region: we list wines tasted before listing, from producers we have a direct working relationship with.

Winemaking traditions in the Moselle

Riesling has been the Moselle's signature grape for well over a century, valued here precisely because the cool climate slows ripening and builds acidity alongside whatever sugar the long season develops. The result is a spectrum that runs from bone-dry to late-harvest styles, with the grape's tension between acidity and fruit defining the region's identity more than any single style does. On the Luxembourg stretch of the river, Crémant de Luxembourg has grown steadily in importance alongside still whites, with the region producing sparkling wines under its own appellation using traditional method. Pinot Gris and Pinot Blanc add breadth to the range, and a small amount of red is made from Pinot Noir, though the cool conditions mean white and sparkling wines dominate. If you want to explore what the Moselle's neighbours produce, wines from Germany and wines from France are both listed, alongside Riesling wines drawn from producers across the countries where the grape is grown. For producers working in other nearby regions, wineries in Germany and wineries in France are both on the site. Those interested in the Moselle's sparkling output can also look at Crémant de Luxembourg wines specifically.