Burgenland wine cases: six bottles from one Austrian estate

A Burgenland wine case is six bottles from one estate, put together by the producer as their own recommendation across the grapes and sites they farm. Browse cases from independent growers in one of Austria's most distinctive wine regions.

Blaufränkisch, Welschriesling and the warm shores of Lake Neusiedl — composed by the grower.

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Burgenland

Burgenland wine cases

A Burgenland wine case stays with one estate: six bottles the grower has put together as a single recommendation, whether that means walking through several grapes, a range of vintages, or the same variety from different parcels around the lake. The region's warm, humid microclimate around Lake Neusiedl shapes everything from the weight of its reds to the conditions that produce botrytis-affected sweet wines — and a case is a short, direct way to taste how one cellar reads that landscape.

Burgenland wines

Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop. The cases listed here come from growers who ship directly from their own cellars, with no importer or warehouse in between, so the producer's own selection arrives as they intended it. Burgenland's individual bottles span Blaufränkisch, Zweigelt and Welschriesling across the region's distinct subzones — from the flat lakeshore to the hillside sites of Eisenberg further south.

View all wines from Burgenland

Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted. Their reviews appear on the individual wine page and on each expert's own profile, so you can read a track record before taking a recommendation. Several of the experts listed here have reviewed wines from Burgenland producers featured on this page.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I buy directly from a Burgenland producer on Free Grape Society?

Browse the Burgenland wineries listed on this page and visit any producer's profile to see their wines. Add bottles to your order and check out via Klarna or card. The producer ships directly from their own cellar, so your order travels without an importer or warehouse handling it on the way.

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.

Do Burgenland producers ship outside Austria?

Yes. Producers on Free Grape Society ship across Europe. Delivery typically takes between 4 and 14 days, with an average of around 8 to 9 days. Shipping is free, and the order comes directly from the estate.

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 Burgenland producer for the wines I am looking for?

If you know which grape or style interests you — Blaufränkisch from the south, a lakeside sweet wine, a lighter red from Saint-Laurent — you can filter by grape or style. Reading a producer's profile gives you a sense of how they farm and what they prioritise, which is usually the fastest way to find a grower whose approach matches what you are after.

How does Free Grape Society decide which Burgenland producers to list?

Producers send samples, and those samples are tasted before any wine is listed. The relationship is direct — Free Grape Society works with the grower, not through an agent — and pricing should reflect what the wine is worth without the mark-ups that distribution layers add. Once listed, independent wine experts review individual wines and build a public track record on the site.

Which Burgenland wine expert can recommend something for me?

Fill in the form on any wine or expert page and an independent wine expert will get back to you with a personal recommendation. Experts on Free Grape Society have tasted the wines themselves and can suggest a producer or bottle based on what you enjoy and what you are looking for.

Why don't you carry every wine from every Burgenland producer you work with?

Wines are tasted before listing, and only bottles that meet the standard are added to the site. Some producers have a large range; not every wine in that range will be listed at a given time. The selection reflects what has been tasted and approved rather than a complete catalogue of a producer's output.

How does buying from a Burgenland producer on Free Grape Society differ from buying in a wine shop?

In most retail channels, a Burgenland wine passes through an importer and a distributor before it reaches a shelf, and each step adds cost. On Free Grape Society the producer ships directly to you, so the price reflects the estate's own terms. You also have access to independent expert reviews and can ask an expert a question before you buy.

What's in a Burgenland wine case

A Burgenland wine case on Free Grape Society is always six bottles from one producer — composed by the grower as their own recommendation, never assembled from multiple estates. That single-producer logic matters here because Burgenland's producers tend to work across more than one style: a grower farming the shores of the Neusiedlersee might include a Blaufränkisch, a late-harvest white, and a dry rosé in the same six bottles, giving you a short tour of how one cellar reads its own land. The result is more personal than a regional sampler and more revealing than buying six of the same wine. Producers in Burgenland sit alongside those from other Austrian regions — see Austrian wine cases for the broader picture — or explore cases from further afield in Italy and France.

How Burgenland producers compose their six bottles

Burgenland is divided into four distinct sub-regions, and the character of a grower's case often reflects where their vineyards sit. Producers around the warm, shallow Neusiedlersee tend toward riper reds and the botrytis-affected sweet wines — Ruster Ausbruch among them — that the lake's autumn mists make possible. Further south, the Mittelburgenland is Blaufränkisch country: a grape that produces firm, peppery reds with a structure suited to ageing. The Südburgenland, the smallest sub-region, works with Eisenberg, a small ridge of iron-rich soil that gives its Blaufränkisch a particular mineral edge. When a producer composes six bottles, that geography usually shapes the selection — a way of showing what their specific corner of the region can do. You can follow the grape across the country at Blaufränkisch wines, or look at Burgenland's individual bottles at Burgenland wines.

Getting to know Burgenland through one grower

Buying a wine case from a Burgenland producer is a practical way to understand a region that does not reduce neatly to a single style. The same estate might farm Grüner Veltliner alongside Blaufränkisch, make both a dry red and a naturally sweet Beerenauslese in the same year, and bottle under more than one appellation. A case built by that grower tells you which wines they are most confident in and how they think the range holds together — information that is harder to read from a single bottle. For growers in the broader Austrian context, the Burgenland wineries page lists the producers working the region. If you want to compare with another central European wine region, Moravian wine cases offer a different perspective from further north.