Yields in 2024 came in at 9.5 hl/ha — less than half a normal year. Small allocations. Community notes on CellarTracker can help you figure out which producers are worth chasing. What’s on your list?
42% of Piedmont Nebbiolo tracked on CellarTracker is held for over 10 years. Barolo requires a minimum of 5 years before release. Riserva requires 8. Our community goes further. 1,755,884 bottles tracked. The collectors who buy Nebbiolo aren’t in a hurry. What vintage are you holding?
Harvest in Burgundy. Yields in 2025 came in at 21 hl/ha — more than double 2024, still not abundant.
Early word: structured, elegant, and atypical. A warm year with cool-vintage finesse. Our community is watching this one closely.
What are you expecting from 2025?
Over 5 years of community ratings across 100+ regions, Burgundy scores 91.1. Piedmont scores 90.8.
Both built on a single grape variety.
Both requiring patience. The price difference is significant — the quality gap is not.
If Burgundy is already in your cellar, Piedmont deserves a look.
What’s your experience with Nebbiolo?
Inside a winery in Côte-Rôtie, Northern Rhône. Côte-Rôtie is one of the only appellations in the world where Viognier — a white grape — must be co-fermented with Syrah, not blended after. The result is something structurally different from any other Syrah on earth. 55% of Côte-Rôtie Syrah tracked on CellarTracker is held for over 10 years. Its neighbour Hermitage sits at 72%. The collectors who know the Northern Rhône don’t rush it. What are you holding from this appellation?
2025 Bordeaux En Primeur opens in six weeks.
The earliest harvest since 1989. Temperatures ran 2.9°C above average from June to August. Some estates came in below 30 hl/ha — smaller volumes than 2024, already one of Bordeaux’s smallest recent crops. Early word from producers: balanced, fresh, silky tannins.
The Union des Grands Crus de Bordeaux president is already drawing comparisons to 1975, 1985, 2005, and 2015. 53% of Bordeaux tracked on CellarTracker is held for over 10 years.
The community knows how to be selective. What are you watching for from 2025?
Ever wonder what happens before a bottle reaches your glass? This is a bottling line in the heart of the Northern Rhône in Ampuis — Côtes du Rhône being prepared for release.
Whether it’s your first bottle from the Rhône or your hundredth, there’s always something new to discover. That’s what makes the journey worth tracking.
Tried a CĂ´tes du RhĂ´ne lately? Log it and let the community know what you think
72% of Hermitage tracked on CellarTracker sits for over a decade. The community isn’t rushing.
We looked at millions of bottles tracked by CT collectors. Some wines almost never get opened young.
Hermitage Syrah: 72.1% opened after 10+ years
Bolgheri Superiore: 69.1%
CĂ´te-RĂ´tie: 55%
Barolo: 52%
This is how our community behaves. If you’ve been holding onto something, you’re not alone.
Not sure when to open yours? CellarTracker shows drinking windows based on what collectors like you are actually doing. Not guesses. Real data.
Track your cellar. Know when to open it.
2025 Burgundy? Looking promising.
Vintages ending in 5 have a favorable reputation in Burgundy. 2005. 2015. Early word on 2025: structured, elegant, and atypical. A warm year with cool-vintage finesse.
Yields came in at 21 hl/ha. More than double 2024’s 9.5 hl/ha. Still not abundant, but stronger.
Jean-Marc Moron, retiring after 35 years at Hospices de Nuits-Saint-Georges, describes it as “combining the characteristics of a warm year with the hallmarks of a cool vintage.”
Our community is watching this one closely. Join the conversation.
It’s not you, Napa. It’s me. I’m ready for what’s next.
We looked at 5 years of community ratings across 100+ regions and found some unexpected matches. Same quality. Less hype. Santa Cruz Mountains scores nearly identical to Napa. Columbia Valley rivals Bordeaux. Nahe edges out Mosel. And Jura? It might be the most interesting white wine region you’ve never explored. What region are you ready to discover?
2024 Burgundy yields came in at 9.5 hl/ha. For context, 2025 is more than double that.
This is one of the rarest Burgundy vintages in recent memory. If you’re hoping to buy when it releases, expect small allocations and competition for top producers.
Not sure where to start? Community notes on CellarTracker can help you figure out which producers are worth chasing.
What 2024 Burgundy is on your list?
Some couples share a Netflix account. Some share a wine list.
CellarTracker lets you keep a running list of every bottle you open together. Anniversaries. Trips. The random Tuesday that turned into your favorite memory.
Go back anytime and see exactly what you drank and when.
Your bottles. Your story.
Have you tried the list feature in the app yet? How are you using it?