Languedoc-Roussillon wines — from the estates that know the garrigue

Wines from Languedoc-Roussillon estates. Direct from the cellar, not a warehouse. Every wine tasted before listing.

Independent producers across France's largest wine region.

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Languedoc-Roussillon

Languedoc-Roussillon wines

Languedoc-Roussillon stretches from the Rhône delta to the Spanish border and accounts for roughly one third of all French wine production by volume. Within that geography, the appellations differ sharply. Pic Saint-Loup sits at 400 metres elevation. Fitou, the oldest AOC in the Languedoc, was defined in 1948. Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvèdre dominate the reds. The producers on Free Grape Society represent independent estates across the region, not the industrial cooperatives that account for most of the volume.

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Languedoc-Roussillon producers

The estates listed below range from single-family domaines working under ten hectares to mid-sized cellars with established export records. Several of them produce wines not available through conventional French retail distribution. A bottle from Languedoc-Roussillon normally changes hands three times before it reaches you. Here it changes hands once. The price you see is the price the producer agreed to.

Languedoc-Roussillon sample boxes

A mixbox on Free Grape Society always contains exactly 6 bottles, all from one producer, composed by the producer as their own recommendation. Not a buyer's selection assembled from multiple estates. The producer decides what goes in the box. Several Languedoc-Roussillon producers have composed boxes that reflect the breadth of their appellation: a Grenache-based red alongside a white from Picpoul or a Roussillon Grenache Blanc.

Wine experts

Independent wine experts on Free Grape Society rate and review wines they have personally tasted. Their reviews are visible on the wine page and on the expert's own profile. Several of the experts listed below have reviewed Languedoc-Roussillon wines featured on this page. Their notes cover producer background, grape composition, and how a given wine sits within its appellation context.

Frequently asked questions

How do I order directly from a Languedoc-Roussillon producer on Free Grape Society?

Browse the producer listings below and click through to any winery page. From there you can view their full range and add bottles to your cart. Wines ship from the producer's cellar. No importer or wholesale step between the estate 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.

Can I buy from multiple Languedoc-Roussillon producers in one order?

Yes. You can add wines from different producers to the same cart and complete one checkout. Each producer ships their wines separately, so you may receive two or more deliveries from a single order. Each shipment is tracked individually.

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 does Free Grape Society decide which Languedoc-Roussillon producers to list?

Producers send samples to our Head of Product, who tastes every wine before it goes live. Only wines that pass the quality review are listed. No producer pays a listing fee. Independent wine experts also rate and review individual wines once they are on the platform.

Are the producers from specific appellations within Languedoc-Roussillon?

The listings cover multiple appellations: Pic Saint-Loup, Faugères, Saint-Chinian, Corbières, Fitou, Minervois, and wines under the broader Languedoc AOP. Roussillon producers, including those from Maury and Collioure, are also represented. Each producer page shows the appellation and the applicable rules.

Which wine expert can recommend a Languedoc-Roussillon wine for me?

Several experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed wines from this region. Browse the expert profiles below to find one whose speciality and reviewing history matches what you are looking for. You can contact any expert directly through their profile page.

Why don't you carry every wine from every Languedoc-Roussillon producer you work with?

Each wine is tasted individually before it goes live. If a producer makes eight wines but only five pass the quality review, five are listed. The catalogue reflects what has been tasted and approved, not the full production of every partner estate.

Are Languedoc-Roussillon wines available at retail chains in my country?

Some appellations like Picpoul de Pinet and basic Languedoc AOP appear in retail. The producers on Free Grape Society are mostly smaller independent estates producing volumes too low for standard retail distribution. That is part of why they ship direct rather than through an importer.

Appellations and grape varieties of Languedoc-Roussillon

Languedoc-Roussillon is the largest wine-producing region in France by volume, stretching from the Rhône delta to the Spanish border across roughly 300 kilometres. Within that span, the appellation structure is dense and fragmented. Grenache, Syrah, and Carignan dominate the red and rosé blends across most AOCs, while Cinsault is increasingly prominent in lighter-bodied and low-intervention styles. In the Roussillon sub-region bordering Catalonia, Grenache Noir is the backbone of fortified Vins Doux Naturels — wines that undergo partial fermentation stopped with neutral spirit, preserving residual sugar while retaining between 15% and 18% alcohol. The appellation of Picpoul de Pinet covers white wines made exclusively from Picpoul Blanc, grown on soils directly adjacent to the Thau lagoon; the marine influence and the grape's naturally high acidity are the reasons the style tastes the way it does. Minervois and Corbières are the two largest AOCs in the Languedoc portion, together covering more vineyard area than the entire Côte d'Or. Terroir within both is highly variable — Minervois La Livinière, a superior cru within Minervois, sits at between 200 and 400 metres altitude on clay-limestone soils that produce structurally different wines from the valley-floor parcels a few kilometres away.

Winemaking practices and the independent producer landscape

Languedoc-Roussillon has the highest concentration of independent domaines and cooperative members of any French wine region, but the balance has shifted noticeably since the 1990s. Before that decade, roughly 80% of production passed through cooperatives. Today, a growing share is bottled and sold directly by independent estates — partly because appellation rules were reformed to make smaller-scale bottling viable, and partly because export demand for estate-bottled wine outpaced cooperative bulk. Many of the producers working in the region today are not from traditional winemaking families. A significant number arrived from other industries or other regions, bought neglected parcels in the garrigue hills, and replanted or rehabilitated old-vine Carignan and Grenache. Old Carignan vines — some over 80 years — are particularly valued here because yields drop to levels where concentration and complexity increase without requiring irrigation. The region is also one of the most active in France for certified organic viticulture: as of the early 2020s, Languedoc-Roussillon accounted for approximately 20% of all organically certified vineyard area in France, even though it represents a smaller share of total French AOC production. These are not the wines your supermarket carries. They are the wines your supermarket cannot carry, because the volumes are too small and the producers have no interest in the terms retail chains demand.

How producers from Languedoc-Roussillon work on Free Grape Society

Producers from Languedoc-Roussillon list their wines directly on the platform. Every wine is tasted by our Head of Product before going live. Independent wine experts Rate & Review individual wines — their assessments are visible on the wine page and on the expert's own profile, so you can read the reasoning, not just a score. A bottle of wine normally changes hands three times before it reaches you. Here it changes hands once. Producers set their own prices. No importer adds a margin. No wholesaler takes a cut. If you want to see which estates are currently active on the platform, the Languedoc-Roussillon wineries page lists them with their profiles. If you want to try several producers before committing to full bottles, the Languedoc-Roussillon mixboxes are composed by the producers themselves as their own recommendation of what to taste first. Average delivery from producer cellar to your address runs 8 to 9 days, with a range of 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location within the region.