Moravia wine cases: six bottles from one Czech producer

A Moravia wine case is six bottles from one independent producer, chosen by the grower as their own recommendation. Browse cases from Czech estates working the Morava and Dyje river basins.

Each case is composed by the grower — a single estate's range across Moravia's river valleys and limestone slopes.

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Morava

Moravia wine cases

A Moravia wine case stays with one producer across all six bottles — a grower working the Morava or Dyje river valley composes their own selection, which means the case reads as a single point of view rather than a sampler. Moravia produces the great majority of Czech wine, with most vineyards sitting in the south of the country near the Austrian and Slovak borders, where the continental climate shifts sharply between warm summers and cold winters.

Moravia wines

Moravia's individual bottles range from Welschriesling and Grüner Veltliner in the whites to Blaufränkisch and Cabernet Moravia among the reds — varieties that reflect the region's Central European position, shared with its neighbours to the south. The wines listed here come from independent growers farming their own vineyards across the region's four sub-regions: Znojmo, Velké Pavlovice, Slovácká and Mikulov. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop.

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Moravia wineries

The producers behind these cases are independent estates, many of them family-run, farming vineyards on the loess, sand and limestone soils that characterise southern Moravia. Several work with grapes specific to Central Europe — varieties less common further west — alongside internationally recognised styles. 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.

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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 below have reviewed wines from Moravian producers featured on this page. Expert reviews are built from personal tasting experience and are visible as a running record — not a curation of which wines are listed.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Moravia wine case?

Browse the cases on this page, select the one that interests you, and add it to your cart. Each case is six bottles from a single Moravian producer. Payment is handled securely via Klarna or card, and the case ships directly from the producer's cellar to your door. Delivery typically takes between 4 and 14 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 Moravia wine case?

Each case contains exactly six bottles, all from one producer. The grower composes the selection themselves — it might span several grape varieties, different vineyard parcels, or a mix of styles from their range. The case is the producer's own recommendation, not a mix drawn from multiple estates.

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 Moravia wine case for me?

Read the producer description and the wines included in each case. Because every case comes from a single estate, looking at the grower's location within Moravia — whether they work the cooler Znojmo sub-region or the warmer Velké Pavlovice area — and the grape varieties they use will tell you a lot about the style you can expect.

How do Moravian producers choose what goes into their six bottles?

The producer composes the case themselves, so the selection reflects their own strengths and what they want to show. A grower farming multiple parcels might use all six bottles to trace how the same grape tastes across different sites, while a smaller estate might offer a cross-section of everything they make. The case is a personal recommendation from the cellar.

Which Moravia wine expert can recommend something for me?

The independent wine experts listed on this page have personal experience tasting wines from Moravia and the Czech Republic. Browse their profiles to see their tasting notes and track records. You can also submit a question to a wine expert through the form on the platform and receive a personal recommendation.

Why are Moravia mixboxes always 6 bottles from one producer?

Because a case composed by a single grower says something coherent about how that producer works. Blending bottles from different producers would give you variety but lose the point of view. Six bottles from one Moravian estate lets you understand a cellar — its grape choices, its vineyard sites, its style — in a way that a mixed selection cannot.

Can I buy Moravian wine cases in a Czech wine shop or online retailer?

Most wine retail and online shops stock wines from larger producers or importers. The independent Moravian estates on Free Grape Society typically sell directly from their own cellars without going through the import and distribution chain, which means their wines are rarely found in standard retail. Ordering here puts you in direct contact with the producer.

What's in a Moravia wine case

A Moravia wine case from Free Grape Society is six bottles from one producer, composed by the grower as a single recommendation. Because Moravia's growers tend to work across several grape varieties — ranging from the native Palava and Welschriesling to international varieties that have found a strong home in the region's continental soils — a six-bottle selection often reads like a short map of one estate's range. Some producers use the case to show how the same grape performs across different vineyard sites; others move through colour and style, walking from white to orange to red. Either way, the case is shaped by the grower's own judgement rather than assembled from a warehouse shelf. If you want to understand how a specific Moravian estate thinks about its wines, a case is a more direct route than picking bottles individually. Browse the Moravia wine cases alongside cases from other Czech producers at Czech Republic mixboxes.

How Moravian producers compose their six bottles

Moravia sits in the south-east of the Czech Republic, where a warm continental climate and varied soils — limestone, loess, and clay depending on the sub-region — give growers genuine material to work with across different varieties. The region divides into several wine-growing areas, with the Velké Pavlovice and Mikulov sub-regions producing some of the most characterful whites, and the Slovácká area known for fuller reds. When a Moravian producer puts together six bottles, that geography tends to show: a grower from the Pálava hills might lean toward aromatic whites, while an estate further north might anchor its case around Welschriesling or Müller-Thurgau alongside a red or two. The producer decides what goes in and in what order, so the six bottles carry a point of view. Wines are tasted before listing, which means each estate's range has been assessed before it reaches the page. For individual bottles from the region's growers, see Moravia wines or explore producers directly at Czech Republic wineries.

Getting to know Moravia through one grower

For wine regions outside the well-known French and Italian appellations, a single-producer case often teaches more than a mixed selection would. Moravia is a case in point: it has a distinct wine culture shaped by small family estates, native grape varieties alongside naturalised ones, and a strong tradition of white winemaking that has developed independently of western European fashion. Taking home six bottles from one Moravian grower gives you a concentrated view of how that producer reads their own terroir and makes decisions in the cellar. Free Grape Society connects buyers directly with the producers, so the case arrives shipped from the estate itself, with no importer or warehouse adding distance between grower and glass. Moravia produces wines that reward attention — a case is a low-commitment way to give them that. You can also explore cases from neighbouring regions such as Austrian Niederösterreich or German Pfalz wines if you want to compare styles across Central Europe's continental wine belt.