Andalusia wine cases: six bottles from one southern Spanish estate

An Andalusia wine case is six bottles from a single estate, composed by the grower as their own recommendation across the styles and grapes they work with. Browse cases from independent producers across Spain's southernmost wine region.

From Sherry's sun-baked albariza soils to the mountain vineyards of the Serranía de Ronda, each case captures one producer's own reading of the region.

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Andalusia

Andalusia wine cases

An Andalusia wine case stays with one producer: six bottles chosen by the grower as a single recommendation, never blended across estates. That makes each case a short guided read of one cellar — whether it runs through different expressions of Palomino Fino, a range of oxidatively aged styles, or the mountain reds that Andalusia's higher-altitude sites produce. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

Andalusia wines

Andalusia's individual bottles range from the biologically aged finos and manzanillas of the Sherry triangle to Moscatel from Málaga and structured reds from the granite-edged vineyards above Ronda. The wines listed here come from independent growers working their own plots across the region's distinct zones, each shaped by distance from the Atlantic, altitude, and soil.

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Andalusia wineries

Andalusia's producers span some of the most contrasting conditions in European wine: coastal bodegas in Jerez and Sanlúcar working the chalky albariza soils that define Sherry, and small estates in the Serranía de Ronda farming at over 700 metres where Atlantic winds keep temperatures low. Many are family-run operations that have worked the same land across generations.

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Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and several have covered wines from Andalusia's producers. Their reviews appear on the individual wine page and on the expert's own profile, building a transparent record that any buyer can read before ordering.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order an Andalusia wine case?

Find a case from the producer you want, add it to your basket, and pay securely by card or Klarna. The producer ships the six bottles directly from their cellar in Andalusia. Delivery typically takes 8 to 9 days from dispatch, with a range of 4 to 14 days depending on the estate's location and your address.

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 an Andalusia wine case?

Each case contains exactly six bottles, all from one producer. The producer composes the selection themselves as their own recommendation — it might span different styles they make, different plots they farm, or a range of vintages. The contents are listed on the case page 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 Andalusia wine case for me?

Read the producer's own description of the six bottles — this tells you the styles, grapes, and reasoning behind the selection. If you want a case centred on oxidatively aged wines from the Sherry zone, look for producers working in Jerez or Sanlúcar. For Andalusia's mountain reds and whites, look for estates based in the Serranía de Ronda or the Axarquía.

Can I ask a wine expert before choosing a case?

Yes. Free Grape Society has independent wine experts who can help you decide between producers or styles. Fill in the form on the wine expert page and a specialist will come back to you with a recommendation based on what you are looking for and what Andalusia producers currently have available.

Which Andalusia wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent experts on Free Grape Society have tasted and reviewed wines from Andalusia's producers. Visit the wine expert page, read their profiles and review activity, and use the contact form to put your question directly to the expert whose background fits what you are looking for.

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

Because a case composed by one producer says something coherent about how that grower works. Six bottles from a single Andalusia estate might trace different expressions of Palomino Fino, a move from younger fresh styles to aged ones, or a spread across the producer's different sites. Mixing across producers would lose that thread. The producer composes the case as their own recommendation, and it arrives as a single shipment from their cellar.

Can I buy Andalusia wine cases from a local wine shop instead?

Independent producers selling through Free Grape Society ship directly from their own cellars, which means the wines are not routed through importers or large distribution warehouses before they reach you. Many of the estates here are small enough that their wines are not widely stocked in retail at all — ordering direct is often the only reliable way to get them.

What goes into an Andalusia wine case

An Andalusia wine case on Free Grape Society is always six bottles from one producer, composed by the grower as their own recommendation. That single-producer logic matters here because Andalusia is not one wine region but several distinct ones sitting side by side. A case from a Ronda estate will read very differently from one put together by a producer in the Sierra de Málaga or along the Atlantic-facing coast near Cádiz. When a grower selects their own six bottles, they are telling you how they see their own range, which grapes they believe in, and which styles represent their cellar at its best. Browsing by region within Andalusia is a practical way to narrow down: Spain mixboxes and Andalusia mixboxes are the natural starting points, and comparing with Aragón or Valencia gives a sense of how the south of Spain diverges from its neighbours to the north.

The grapes behind Andalusia's producers

Andalusia's vineyards stretch across a range of climates and soils that suit different grapes in ways that are not always obvious from the outside. Palomino Fino is the grape of Jerez and the coastal lowlands, well adapted to the chalky albariza soils that reflect heat and retain moisture. Further inland, at altitude in the Serranía de Ronda, Tempranillo and Syrah perform differently than they do elsewhere in Spain, because the elevation brings cooler nights and a longer growing season. Pedro Ximénez appears across the region, though the style it produces in the raisin-dried tradition of Montilla-Moriles is almost nothing like its use as a blending grape elsewhere. Growers composing a wine case often use the six bottles to move across these internal contrasts. You can follow the grape across Spain through pages like Garnacha, Monastrell and Tempranillo, or browse the broader Spanish wine range to see how the south compares with the rest of the country.

Andalusia within the wider picture of Spanish wine cases

Spain's wine regions each have their own character, and the cases on Free Grape Society reflect that directly because each one is shaped by its producer rather than assembled to a generic brief. Andalusia's cases tend to reflect the region's contrasts: the maritime influence near the coast, the heat and altitude further inland, and the diversity of grapes that thrive across such varied terrain. If you are building a sense of Spanish wine through cases rather than individual bottles, it is worth looking at what producers in Castile and León, Galicia and Murcia have composed alongside Andalusia, since the differences in what a grower chooses for their six bottles say a great deal about where their wines come from. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the cases you find here come directly from the cellars that made them.