Independent wine producers, region by region, across Europe

The producers here range from family estates with generations behind them to young growers bottling natural wine, spread across France, Italy, Austria, Spain and more. Browse them below, by country.

From long-established Bordeaux châteaux to small natural-wine growers in the Loire and beyond.

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Croatia

Wineries

Europe's wine producers split along the lines of their regions. Bordeaux runs on the château system, where a single estate bottles everything grown on its land. Bourgogne parcels the same hillside between dozens of small growers. Down the Rhône, family domaines have worked the same terraces for generations. What every producer here shares is that they sell and ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer, agent, or warehouse in between, and each one sets their own prices.

Wines

The wines listed on Free Grape Society are tasted before they go live. Independent wine experts then rate and review individual wines they have personally tried, and those reviews sit on the wine page and on each expert's own profile. If you are unsure where to start among the producers, an independent wine expert can help point you toward the right grower for what you are looking for.

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MixBoxes

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted. Their reviews are visible on each wine page and on their own profile, so you can follow the experts whose palate matches yours. Experts provide recommendations and build a transparent track record of what they have tried. They do not curate the producer catalogue or decide which wines are listed.

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Wine experts

Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts, and wine lovers, not a shop. Producers apply to join and ship from their own cellars. You can browse by country to find the growers behind a region you already love, or use the filters to narrow by style and discover somewhere new.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a wine case on Free Grape Society?

Choose a case from the listing, add it to your cart and check out with Klarna or card. The producer packs and ships the six bottles directly from their cellar. Delivery typically takes between four and fourteen days depending on where the producer is based. Shipping is free.

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 wine case?

Every wine case contains exactly six bottles, all from the same producer. The producer composes the selection themselves: it might run across colours and styles, or focus on a single grape at different expressions. You receive what the grower chose to put together, with no substitutions and no blending across producers.

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 a wine case that suits me?

Use the filters above the listing to narrow by country, colour or region. Selecting Italy narrows the range to Italian producers; selecting red narrows further to red-led cases. You can also browse by region: Tuscany, Piedmont, Rioja and others each have their own section. If you are unsure where to start, an independent wine expert can point you in the right direction.

What styles of wine case are available?

The cases span still and sparkling wines, red, white, rosé and orange. Some producers focus on a single style; others mix across their range. A Champagne grower's case will be built around sparkling wines; a Languedoc producer might include a structured red, a white and a rosé from the same estate. The producer decides the composition.

Which wine expert can recommend a wine case for me?

Browse the independent wine experts on Free Grape Society and find one whose reviews and focus match what you are looking for. Each expert has a profile showing the wines they have personally tasted and rated. Fill in the contact form on their profile and put your question to them directly: they can recommend a producer and a case based on your preferences.

Why are wine cases always six bottles from one producer?

Six bottles from one producer is a deliberate structure. It is enough to show range within a single estate without requiring a full case of twelve. The producer composes it as their own recommendation, so what you receive reflects how the grower thinks about their own wines. Mixing across producers would remove that perspective entirely.

Can I buy a wine case if I already buy wine at a shop or supermarket?

Yes. The producers on Free Grape Society are mostly independent growers who do not distribute through large retail chains. A wine case here is likely to come from a producer whose wines you would not find on a supermarket shelf, composed by the grower themselves rather than selected by a buyer. It is a different kind of purchase from what retail offers.

How we choose our producers

Producers come to Free Grape Society and apply to join; we do not buy a catalogue and resell it. A producer sends samples, and the wines are tasted before they are listed, so what you see has been through our own glass first. We weigh three things: that the wine is honest and well made, that the price is fair to both the grower and you, and that the producer is happy to sell and ship directly from their own cellar. Once a producer is in, independent wine experts can rate and review individual wines, and those reviews sit on the wine pages and on each expert's profile. The experts review what they have personally tasted; they do not pick the catalogue or decide what gets listed. Producers set their own prices and handle shipping from their own cellars directly to you, with no importer, agent, or warehouse in between. You can explore the producers coming out of Italy, France, and Spain, among others.

The wine countries our producers come from

The producers on Free Grape Society span a wide band of European wine countries, each shaped by its own soils, climates, and traditions. In France, you will find growers in regions that run from the Atlantic-facing vineyards of Bordeaux to the sun-baked garrigue of Languedoc-Roussillon, where Carignan and Grenache dominate old-vine plantings. In Italy, producers in Piedmont work with Nebbiolo, one of the most site-sensitive grapes in Europe, while those in the Veneto range from lean Soave to the dried-grape richness of Amarone. Portugal contributes growers who bottle from native varieties rarely seen elsewhere. Germany brings precise, cool-climate Riesling from steep riverside slopes, and Czech Republic adds Moravian producers working quietly outside the mainstream. What these countries share is that their growers sell directly here, each on equal terms.

What buying directly from a producer means

When you buy through Free Grape Society, the wine ships from the producer's own cellar, not from a central warehouse. That means the bottle you receive comes under the same roof where it was made and stored, handled by the people who made it. It also means the price reflects what the producer chooses to charge, not a chain of margins stacked by importers and distributors. For grapes that are tightly regional, such as Grüner Veltliner from Austria's Niederösterreich or Mencía from northwestern Spain, buying direct is often the only practical route to the actual estate wine rather than a blended export cuvée. Independent wine experts on the platform rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and those reviews are visible on each wine page and on the expert's own profile, giving you a transparent read on what to expect before you order.