Veneto producers, six bottles at a time

A Veneto wine case is six bottles from one estate, composed by the producer as their own recommendation across the grapes and appellations they work. Browse cases from independent growers across the region.

From Soave and Valpolicella to Prosecco country, each case stays with one grower and their own range.

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Veneto

Veneto wine cases

A Veneto wine case is six bottles from one estate, put together by the grower as a single recommendation rather than mixed across producers. The region spans a lot of ground — from the volcanic soils around Soave in the west to the Piave plain and the Glera vineyards of Prosecco country in the northeast — and a case is a short, guided way to taste how one cellar reads its own corner of it. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

Veneto wines

Beyond the cases, Veneto's individual bottles run across several distinct styles: dry whites built on Garganega in Soave, structured reds from Corvina and Corvinone in Valpolicella and Amarone, and sparkling Prosecco made from Glera on the hillsides of Conegliano and Valdobbiadene. The wines listed here come from growers working their own vineyards across these appellations.

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Veneto wineries

Veneto's producers range from small family estates farming volcanic hillside parcels to growers working the alluvial plains further east. Many have worked the same appellations for generations, and the region's diversity — in soil, altitude, and grape variety — means producers tend to specialise within a specific zone rather than ranging across the whole. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the growers here have chosen their own terms for selling directly.

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Wine experts

Independent wine experts rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and several have reviewed bottles from Veneto producers featured on this platform. Their ratings and written notes are visible on individual wine pages and on each expert's own profile, building a public record of their tasting activity over time.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Veneto wine case?

Browse the cases listed on this page, each composed by a single Veneto producer. Add the one you want to your cart and complete your order using Klarna or card. The producer ships the six bottles directly from their cellar to your door, with free shipping 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.

What is included in a Veneto wine case?

Every case contains exactly six bottles, all from one producer. The grower composes the selection themselves — it might run across several appellations they farm, a spread of vintages, or different expressions of the same grape. The case description tells you which wines are included before you order.

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 Veneto wine case for me?

Read the producer's own description of the six bottles — it tells you the grapes, the appellations, and what the grower was trying to show. If you want a recommendation before ordering, you can ask a wine expert on Free Grape Society directly, at no cost.

Can I get a Veneto case focused on a specific appellation or grape?

Cases are composed by the producer, so the focus reflects the grower's own strengths and holdings. A producer based in Valpolicella will naturally centre their case on Corvina and Corvinone; one farming Garganega hillsides in Soave will take a different direction. Browse the available cases and their descriptions to find the fit.

Which Veneto wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have tasted and reviewed Veneto wines. Visit the wine experts section on this page to see who is active in this region, read their reviews, and send your question directly — the advice is free.

Why are Veneto wine cases always 6 bottles from one producer?

Because a case composed by one producer says something a mixed selection cannot. When a grower in Valpolicella or Soave picks their own six bottles, the line-up reflects how they think about their vineyards and their range. Mixing bottles across producers would dissolve that perspective. Six bottles from one cellar is a complete, considered recommendation — not a sampler.

Can I buy a Veneto wine case if I usually shop at a wine merchant or supermarket?

Yes. Free Grape Society is open to anyone. The difference from a wine merchant or supermarket is that your order goes directly to the producer — no distributor or retailer handles the wine between the cellar and your door. The producer sets their own price, and you receive the case as they packed it.

What's in a Veneto wine case

A Veneto wine case from Free Grape Society is six bottles from one producer, composed by that grower as a single recommendation across their own range. The Veneto is one of Italy's most varied wine regions, stretching from Lake Garda in the west to the Friuli border in the east, and a producer working here might farm Garganega in the Soave hills, Corvina and Rondinella for Valpolicella and Amarone, or Glera for Prosecco in the Treviso hills. A case lets one grower show you how they read that breadth. Because each case stays with a single estate, you are not getting a sampler of the region assembled by a buyer: you are taking home what one Veneto producer considers their best six bottles at this moment, shipped directly from their cellar. For wine cases from neighbouring Italian regions, see Tuscany, Piedmont, and Friuli Venezia Giulia.

How Veneto producers compose their six bottles

The Veneto's geography gives producers genuinely different material to choose from. An estate in Valpolicella Classico might use a case to move across the appellation hierarchy: a straight Valpolicella, a Ripasso refermented on Amarone skins for added weight, and an Amarone itself, dried for months before pressing to concentrate the fruit. A Soave producer might instead show the same Garganega grape on different soils, or pair a still white with a passito version made from semi-dried grapes. Glera-based producers in the Prosecco DOC and DOCG zones tend to contrast a brut with an extra-dry, or include a still wine to show what the land does outside the tank method. Because the producer composes the case themselves, the six bottles have an internal logic that a mixed selection cannot replicate: they are reading their own range for you, not filling a commercial brief.

Getting to know the Veneto through one grower

Buying a case from a single Veneto estate is a faster way to understand a producer's philosophy than picking individual bottles one at a time. The Veneto has more DOC and DOCG appellations than any other Italian region, and the quality and style within each varies considerably by producer, so knowing the grower behind the wine matters more than knowing the appellation alone. A case gives you six reference points from one cellar, which is enough to form a clear picture of how that producer works: how they manage extraction in their reds, how much oak they use, whether their whites are built for freshness or for a year in bottle. Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review individual wines, and those reviews appear on the wine pages for bottles you find through a case, so you can cross-reference what the producer says about the wine with what a taster who has tried it says. Explore Veneto wines or browse all Italian wine cases to compare across regions.