Six bottles from one Galician producer, straight from the cellar

A Galicia wine case is six bottles from one estate, composed by the grower as their own recommendation across the grapes and plots they farm. Browse cases from independent producers in Rías Baixas, Ribeira Sacra and beyond.

Albariño, Godello and Mencía grown where the Atlantic meets the granite slopes of northwest Spain.

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Galicia

Galicia wine cases

A Galicia wine case stays with one producer, so the six bottles trace how a single grower reads their own vineyards — whether that is a run of Albariño expressions from different parcels in Rías Baixas or a mix of white and red across Godello and Mencía. Galicia's Atlantic climate and granite soils give the wines a freshness and tension that carries through whatever the producer chooses to include. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

Galician wines

Beyond the cases, Galicia's individual bottles split along its sub-regions: Albariño dominates the coastal Rías Baixas, where salt air and granite keep the wines bright and aromatic; inland, Ribeira Sacra runs steep slate terraces above river gorges where Mencía produces light, mineral reds. Browse [Galician wines](/wines/spain/galicia) by the bottle alongside the cases.

View all wines from Galicia

Wine experts

Independent wine experts rate and review wines they have personally tasted, and their notes appear on the wine page and on the expert's own profile. Several of the experts below have reviewed wines from Galician producers featured on Free Grape Society. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop.

View all wine experts

Frequently asked questions

How do I order a Galicia wine case?

Browse the cases on this page and add one to your cart. Each case contains six bottles from a single Galician producer. Once your order is placed, the producer packs and ships it directly from their cellar. Delivery typically takes between 4 and 14 days, and 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 Galicia wine case?

Each case contains exactly six bottles selected by the producer themselves — their own recommendation across the wines they make. The producer decides the line-up, so the case might span different grapes, different parcels, or a mix of vintages, depending on what they want to show.

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 choose the right Galicia wine case for me?

Read the producer's own description of the case alongside the wines it includes. If you prefer whites, look for cases built around Albariño or Godello from the coastal sub-regions. For reds, cases featuring Mencía from Ribeira Sacra tend toward lighter, more mineral styles. Expert reviews on individual wines can also help narrow the choice.

Can I find a case from a specific Galician sub-region, such as Rías Baixas or Ribeira Sacra?

The cases on this page come from producers across Galicia's sub-regions. Check each producer's profile to see where their vineyards sit. You can also browse individual bottles by sub-region on the [Galician wines](/wines/spain/galicia) page if you want to explore a specific area before committing to a case.

Which Galicia wine expert can recommend something for me?

The independent wine experts listed on this page have rated and reviewed wines from Galician producers. Browse their profiles to read their notes, or use the ask-an-expert form to put a specific question to one of them directly.

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

Because the case is the producer's own recommendation, not a sampler blended across estates. Six bottles from one grower gives you a coherent view of how that producer works — which grapes they favour, how their different plots taste, and what they think represents them best. Mixing producers would dissolve that point of view.

Can I buy Galician wine cases if I'm used to buying from a local wine shop?

Yes. The main difference is that the case ships directly from the producer's cellar in Galicia rather than passing through a distributor or retailer. That means the grower sets the price and packs the order themselves, and you receive what they made without an intermediary adding a margin along the way.

What goes into a Galicia wine case

A Galicia wine case on Free Grape Society is six bottles from one producer, composed by that grower as their own recommendation rather than assembled from across the region. In a place as varied as Galicia, where the Atlantic coast, the inland river valleys of the Miño and the Sil, and the high granite plateaux each shape a different kind of wine, a single producer's case is a short, guided way into how one cellar reads its own corner of the region. The Rías Baixas sub-region is best known for Albariño grown close to the sea, where the saline air and high annual rainfall produce aromatic whites with a persistent mineral edge. Move inland to the Ribeira Sacra and the landscape shifts entirely: steep slate terraces drop toward the Sil gorge, and Mencía dominates on reds, producing wines with a darker fruit character and noticeably more grip. A case from a Rías Baixas grower and one from a Ribeira Sacra producer tell quite different stories, even though both are Galician. Browsing by region is one place to start; you can also explore Galicia wines or look at Galicia producers to understand who is behind the cases before you order.

Galicia's grapes and why they matter

Galicia's grape identity is built around varieties that suit a cool, wet Atlantic climate rather than the arid heat that defines much of inland Spain. Albariño is the most widely planted white, prized for its natural acidity, stone-fruit and citrus aromas, and the way it holds its freshness even in warmer vintages. It accounts for nearly all production in Rías Baixas, where the pergola-trained vines are lifted off the ground to keep air moving through the canopy and reduce disease pressure in the damp conditions. Godello is the region's second significant white grape, grown mainly in Valdeorras and Monterrei, and tends toward a fuller body and a nuttier, more textured character than Albariño. For reds, Mencía is the defining grape of Ribeira Sacra and Valdeorras, producing wines that sit somewhere between the freshness of northern Spain and the structure of a medium-weight red from elsewhere in Europe. If you want to explore Galicia's white character more broadly, Godello wines and Albariño wines are listed by grape across the platform, and Spanish white wines gives a wider view of what is available from independent growers across the country. For a comparison with Mencía from other regions, Mencía wines brings together producers working the grape across Spain.

Getting to know Galicia through one grower's six bottles

Because each wine case here comes from a single estate, the six bottles you receive reflect how one producer thinks about their own range rather than a sampler assembled by a third party. In Galicia that means the case is shaped by sub-regional identity as much as by the winemaker's choices. An estate in Rías Baixas might use all six bottles to show how Albariño changes across a single vintage under different levels of skin contact or élevage, while a producer in Ribeira Sacra with terraced vineyards at different altitudes might use the case to walk you through how elevation affects the weight and freshness of their Mencía. That specificity is what makes a regional wine case a different object from a mixed selection: you are receiving one grower's argument about their own wines, shipped directly from their cellar. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop, and the cases reflect that structure. For a broader view of how cases are put together across Spain, Spanish mixboxes lists producers from other regions, and Portuguese wine cases offers a comparison with producers from the neighbouring Atlantic coast.