in the characteristic round bottles (
Bocksbeutel) The wine regions in Germany usually referred to are the 13 defined regions for quality wine. The German wine industry has organised itself around these regions and their division into districts. However, there are also a number of regions for the insignificant table wine (
Tafelwein) and country wine (
Landwein) categories. Those regions with a few exceptions overlap with the quality wine regions. To make a clear distinction between the quality levels, the regions and subregions for different quality levels have different names on purpose, even when they are allowed to be produced in the same geographical area.
German wine regions There are 13 defined regions ("Anbaugebiete") in Germany: •
Ahr – a small region along the river
Ahr, a tributary of Rhine, that despite its northernly location primarily produces red wine from Spätburgunder. •
Baden – Germany's southernmost, warmest and sunniest winegrowing region, in Germany's southwestern corner, across river Rhine from
Alsace, and the only German wine region situated in
European Union wine growing zone B rather than A, which results in higher minimum required maturity of grapes and less
chaptalisation allowed. Most of the land is cultivated with Pinot family. That include Pinot Noir (Spätburgunder), Pinot Gris (Grauburgunder) and Pinot Blanc (Weissburgunder). •
Franconia or
Franken – around portions of
Main river, and the only wine region situated in
Bavaria. Noted for growing many varieties on chalky soil and for producing powerful dry Silvaner wines. In Germany, only Franconia and certain small parts of the Baden region are allowed to use the distinctive flattened
Bocksbeutel bottle shape. •
Hessische Bergstraße (Hessian Mountain Road) – a small region in the state
Hesse dominated by Riesling. •
Mittelrhein – along the middle portions of river Rhine, primarily between the regions Rheingau and Mosel, and dominated by Riesling. •
Mosel – along the river
Moselle (
Mosel) and its tributaries, the rivers
Saar and
Ruwer, and was previously known as
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer. The Mosel region is dominated by Riesling grapes and
slate soils, and the best wines are grown in dramatic-looking steep vineyards directly overlooking the rivers. This region produces wine that is light in body due to lower alcohol levels, crisp, of high acidity and with pronounced mineral character. The only region to stick to Riesling wine with noticeable residual sweetness as the "standard" style, although dry wines are also produced. •
Nahe – around the river
Nahe where volcanic origins give very varied soils. Mixed grape varieties but the best-known producers primarily grow Riesling, and some of them have achieved world reputation in recent years. •
Palatinate or
Pfalz – the second largest producing region in Germany, with production of very varied styles of wine (especially in the southern half), where red wine has been on the increase. The northern half of the region is home to many well-known Riesling producers with a long history, which specialize in powerful Riesling wines in a dry style. Until 1995, it was known in German as
Rheinpfalz. •
Rheingau – a small region at a bend in the Rhine that provide excellent conditions for winegrowing. The oldest documented references to Riesling come from the Rheingau region and it is the region where many German winemaking practices have originated, such as the use of
Prädikat designations. Dominated by Riesling with some Spätburgunder. The Rheingau Riesling style is in-between Mosel and the Palatinate and other southern regions, and at its finest combines the best aspects of both. •
Rheinhessen or Rhenish Hesse – the largest production area in Germany. Once known as Liebfraumilch land, but a quality revolution has taken place since the 1990s. Mixed wine styles and both red and white wines. The best Riesling wines are similar to Palatinate Riesling – dry and powerful. Despite its name, it lies in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate, not in Hesse. •
Saale-Unstrut – one of two regions in former
East Germany along the rivers
Saale and
Unstrut, and Germany's northernmost winegrowing region. •
Saxony or
Sachsen – one of two regions in former East Germany, in the southeastern corner of the country, along the river
Elbe in the state of
Saxony. •
Württemberg – a traditional red wine region, where grape varieties Trollinger (the region's signature variety), Schwarzriesling and Lemberger outnumber the varieties that dominate elsewhere. One of two wine regions in the state of Baden-Württemberg. These 13 regions (
Anbaugebiete) are broken down into 39 districts (
Bereiche) which are further broken down into collective vineyard sites (
Großlagen) of which there are 167. The individual vineyard sites (
Einzellagen) number 2,658.
Sorted by size Data from 2023. These regions have the following relationship to each other, and to the quality wine regions: ==Grape varieties==