Garnacha from Spain — old vines, direct from the estate

Spanish Garnacha from independent estates. Every wine tasted before listing. No wholesale chains.

Independent producers across Aragon, Rioja, and beyond.

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Spain
Garnacha

Spanish Garnacha

Garnacha is not one wine in Spain. In Aragon, high-altitude vineyards in the Sierra de Gúdar push the variety toward leaner structure and sharper acidity than the riper, fuller styles common at lower elevations. In Rioja, Garnacha has historically been blended with Tempranillo, but a growing number of single-varietal bottlings show what the grape does on its own in clay-limestone soils. In Priorat, Garnacha shares schist slopes with Cariñena and produces wines with some of the highest extract levels in Spain. The producers on FGS working with Spanish Garnacha tend to be single-estate operations with old-vine holdings, some exceeding 60 years.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I order Spanish Garnacha wines on Free Grape Society?

Browse the wines above and add bottles to your cart. Each listing shows the producer, region, and vintage. You pay once at checkout. Wines ship from the producer's cellar directly to your address. No account is required to browse.

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.

Can I order multiple Garnacha wines from different Spanish producers in one order?

Yes. You can add wines from several producers to a single cart and check out in one transaction. Each producer ships their wines separately, so you may receive more than one delivery from a single 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 Spanish Garnacha for what I'm looking for?

Filter by region first. Aragon and Priorat produce structurally different Garnachas even though both are classified as Spanish red wine. Aragon tends toward more mineral, high-altitude styles. Priorat tends toward concentration and extract. The vintage notes and independent expert reviews on each listing give further detail.

Do the Spanish Garnacha wines on FGS come from old vines?

Many do, but old vine is not a legally defined term in Spain, so the definition varies by producer. Where a producer documents vine age — some holdings exceed 80 years — that information appears on the wine listing. Check the producer notes directly.

Which wine expert can recommend a Spanish Garnacha wine for me?

Several experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed Spanish wines, including Garnacha-focused bottlings. Browse the expert profiles on the platform to find one whose speciality covers Spain or Iberian varieties. You can message any expert directly for a personal recommendation.

Why don't you carry Garnacha from every Spanish producer?

Every wine on Free Grape Society is tasted before listing. Producers who apply but whose wines do not pass the quality review are not listed, regardless of region or variety. The selection reflects what has been tasted and approved, not a complete map of Spanish Garnacha production.

Can I find Spanish Garnacha on Free Grape Society that isn't sold at Systembolaget?

Most wines on Free Grape Society are not available at Systembolaget. Spanish estates that ship directly tend to produce in smaller volumes than retail distribution requires. That structural limit is exactly why they use a direct platform instead of chasing import contracts.

Garnacha in Spain: soil, altitude, and old vines

Garnacha is Spain's most widely planted red grape, but that number obscures how differently it behaves across the country's wine regions. In Aragon, particularly in the subzones of Campo de Borja and Cariñena, Garnacha grows at elevations between 400 and 800 metres above sea level. The altitude slows ripening by several weeks compared to lower-lying vineyards, preserving acidity that the grape can otherwise lose quickly in heat. The result is a wine with more structural tension than the variety's reputation might suggest.

In Rioja, Garnacha has historically played a blending role behind Tempranillo, but a growing number of producers are bottling it as a single-varietal wine from old bush-vine parcels in the Alta and Alavesa subzones. These vines, some exceeding 80 years, yield small quantities with concentrated fruit and a lower-alcohol profile than younger plantings on more fertile soils. Old-vine Garnacha from Rioja sits structurally apart from the same grape grown in Priorat, where fractured llicorella slate forces roots several metres deep and produces wines with higher tannin grip and mineral density.

Catalonia, and Priorat specifically, is where Spanish Garnacha acquired its international profile. The combination of near-zero organic matter in the llicorella soil, yields sometimes below one kilogram per vine, and elevations up to 700 metres produces wines with extraction levels rarely seen elsewhere from this grape. Neighbouring Montsant, with more clay and limestone, gives a softer version of similar structure at considerably lower price points. Producers working in both appellations often make a clear stylistic distinction between the two in their range.

How Spanish Garnacha compares to Grenache grown elsewhere

Garnacha and Grenache are the same grape. The name changes at the border. In the southern Rhône Valley, Grenache Noir anchors blends in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Gigondas, typically combined with Syrah and Mourvèdre to add spice and structure that Grenache alone does not provide. In Spain, Garnacha is increasingly bottled unblended, particularly in Aragón and Rioja, which gives a clearer read on what the grape does on its own.

The stylistic gap between French and Spanish expressions of the grape is partly varietal and partly a question of vine age and winemaking convention. Spanish producers working with old bush vines tend to ferment in open concrete or clay vessels and avoid new oak, a practice that keeps the wine's fruit profile intact and avoids the vanilla overlay that can mask Garnacha's natural character. Producers in Languedoc-Roussillon are increasingly working in a similar direction, but the Spanish tradition of old unirrigated vines in semi-arid terrain gives the raw material a different starting point.

It is also worth noting that Monastrell, grown in Murcia and Castilla-La Mancha, is sometimes compared to Garnacha in terms of heat tolerance and full-bodied profile, but the two grapes are unrelated. Monastrell is genetically distinct and produces wines with deeper colour and firmer tannin. Garnacha, by contrast, is a thin-skinned grape that relies on concentration through low yields rather than tannin extraction for its structure.

How producers on Free Grape Society work with Spanish Garnacha

The Spanish wine producers listed on Free Grape Society working with Garnacha are predominantly small, single-estate operations. Several work in certified organic or biodynamic viticulture, particularly in Priorat and Aragon, where the poor soils and dry climate reduce the pressure of disease and make chemical intervention less common than in wetter regions.

Pricing for Spanish Garnacha on the platform is set by the producer, not by a distributor calculating margin across multiple markets. A bottle from a 40-year-old bush-vine parcel in Campo de Borja costs what the producer decided it costs. No importer markup, no wholesaler margin. The price you see is the price the producer agreed to.

For readers also interested in how the grape expresses in France, the Grenache page covers the French regional context. For a broader view of red wines from Spain, including Tempranillo, Mencía, and Monastrell, the country's red wine page maps the full range. The Garnacha grape page covers production volumes and regional distribution in more detail, and the Aragón region page focuses specifically on the high-altitude subzones where the grape's acid retention is most pronounced.