Côtes du Rhône Villages With a total of approximately 8,721 hectares under cultivation (as of 2024) for Côtes du Rhône Villages, the average yield is approximately 34 hectoliters per
hectare. Producers are required to adhere to stricter wine growing and wine making rules than those prescribed for Côtes du Rhône. In the red wines the Grenache grape must be present at not less than 50%, with 20% Syrah and/or Mourvèdre. A maximum of 20% of other authorized varieties is permitted. The rosés must contain a minimum of 50% Grenache with 20% of Syrah and/or Mourvèdre and a maximum of 20% of other authorised varieties to comprise not more than 20% of white varieties. Used are Grenache, Clairette, Marsanne, Rousanne, Bouboulenc and Viognier. The current (as of 1 January 2025) full specification for the cultivation of the vines, the growing area boundaries, and the blending of the varieties is governed by the
Syndicate des Vignerons des Côtes du Rhône (Syndicate of the winegrowers of the Côtes du Rhône) in Avignon.
Côtes du Rhône Villages with named village appellations Under stricter requirements than for the Côtes du Rhône Villages, 22 of the communes of the Côtes du Rhône Villages appellation are authorized to add their respective village name on the label. With around 5,500 hectares under cultivation, the average yield is 33 to 37 hectoliters per hectare. The minimum required alcoholic strength is fixed at 12.5% for the reds and 12% for the whites and rosés.
Gadagne near
Avignon, is a full bodied left bank wine and is the most southerly of the named villages and centred around the
Vaucluse villages and towns of
Caumont-sur-Durance, Châteauneuf-de-Gadagne, Morières-lès-Avignon, Saint-Saturnin-lès-Avignon, and
Vedène. The named village appellation covers red wine made mainly from Grenache noir, Mourvèdre, and Syrah, and was promoted in 2012. 108 planted hectares produced 3,809 hectolitres in 2023.
Laudun is one of the larger named villages, and also encompasses the communes of
Saint-Victor-la-Coste and Tresques. Like Chusclan and other west bank wines, it has a history centered around ancient vineyards established around 300-200 BC, and in 1375 wines from here were sent to the pope in Avignon. Later, in 1561, the wine was exported to Rome and when Louis XIII visited he tasted the white wine of Laudun. The famous and much sought after white wine accounts for around 30% of Laudun wines, but an average of only 6% is produced as a named village. Covering only 350 ha. in 2004, the vinyard expanded significantly over the following decade. By 2023 the cultivated area had increased to 591 hectares and produced 22,390 hectolitres.
Nyons is a red wine only and is generally made from two-thirds Grenache and one-third Syrah. It is the newest (as of 2024) of all the named villages, and was granted its AOC in 2020.
Plan de Dieu was accorded the Villages AOC for the reds in 2005 and elevated to a named village in 2011. The vast, flat vineyard on an alluvial plain that stretches across the villages of Camaret-sur-Aigues, Jonquières, Travaillan and Violès in the Vaucluse department, has the highest production of the named villages from its planted area of 1,170 ha., yielding 41,871 hectolitres in 2023. This is a very full bodied wine typical of the eastern Vaucluse wines of the appellation.
Puyméras was promoted to a named village in 2011. In 2023 the 89 ha. planted on terraces rising at altitudes from 220 to 600m produced 3,182 ha. around the villages of Mérindol-les-Oliviers and Mollans-sur-Ouvèze in the department of Drôme, and Faucon, Saint-Romain-en-Viennois et Puyméras in the Vaucluse.
Roaix is located between the crus of
Rasteau and
Cairanne on the eastern flank of the Ventabren mountain in the east of the Vaucluse department. Predominately red wine with similar characteristics as its grand neighbours that will keep for up to ten years, with white and rosé produced in small volumes.
Rochegude village was allegedly established during the reign of emperor Domitian (51-96) and Jefferson is said to have presented wines from here to Washington himself! On its relatively flat or slightly sloping ground at a height of around 100 metres, the relatively small vineyard goes from rocky slopes to sand, clay, and flint lower down. The diversity enables the growers to assemble a variety of styles of the red wine and also some white and rosé, and in 2023 the 132 hectares produced 4,181 hectolitres.
Rousset-les-Vignes in the Drôme department is one of the northernmost of the 22 named villages. The steep vineyard of sandstone and pebbles is located at 400 m. altitude making it a village with a somewhat cooler climate than villages at lower altitudes. The village was added to the named villages list in 1969. In 2023 the cultivated 347 hectares yielded 11,493 hectolitres of which the majority is produced by the cooperative. When, in 1867, the vineyards of France were devastated by
phylloxera, it was a Sabletain, Francois Leydier, who invented the grafting machine which helped enormously in saving the wine industry in this region and throughout France.
Saint-Andéol is one of the smallest named villages and was promoted in 2017. A west bank Rhône wine, it is the only named village AOC in the department of
Ardèche and is produced in and around the villages of Saint-Marcel, Saint-Just, Saint-Martin d’Ardèche and
Bourg-Saint-Andéol. The appellation is only for red wines which must be made from Grenache, and together with Syrah and Mourvèdre the three varieties must constitute 66% of the wine. In 2023 72 planted ha. yielded 2,550 hl.
Sainte-Cécile with the Vaucluse villages of Sainte-Cécile-les- Vignes, Sérignan-du-Comtat and Tulette, and Suze-la-Rousse, and Travaillan in the Gard, produces wines from the northern area soil which consists of silty clay with pebbles, and the southern part of the vineyard which is made up of limestone pebbles and sandy clay. A total of 364 planted hectares produced 12,583 hectolitres in 2023. The AOC for named villages was granted in 2016.
Saint-Gervais in the Gard department is a small west bank vineyard of only 79 ha. which produced 2,698 hectolitres in 2023 The local cooperative handles most of the wine produced by the village. As early as 1789 the marquis de Guasc made his own wine in the region and became a role model for independent producers.
Saint-Maurice is nested on the border of Nyons between the cru of
Vinsobres AOC in the east and the named village of
Visan in the west and shares their characteristics. The vineyard in Saint-Maurice-sur-Eygues was classed as Côtes du Rhône in 1953 and was raised to named village status in 1967. The 108 ha. of sandy, chalky soil yielded 3,854 hl. of red, rosé, and white wine in 2023.
Saint-Pantaléon-les-Vignes just 3 km south of Rousset-les-Vignes, the tiny Saint-Pantaléon-les-Vignes vineyard shares both its terroir and history. The 26 planted hectares produced a total 2665 hectolitres of red, white, and rosé in 2023. Saint-Pantaléon was elevated to the named village status in 1969. Every year a ceremony is held in the village, when the oldest and the youngest wine producer, along with the village's administration, decide when to begin harvesting.
Séguret is one of the largest named villages and one of the oldest. The appelation makes all three colours at 90% red, 6% white, and 4% rosé of which it is the largest producer in the named villages. The mountain vineyard is located on the eastern side of the river Oèveze and completely surrounds the commune at around a height of 150 metres right up into the chalky foot slopes of the vertical peaks of the
Dentelles de Montmirail and on pebbled terraces at an altitude of 250 to 350 metres. Its wine is mentioned by
Pliny the Elder in his encyclopedic
Naturalis Historia (Natural History). The 468 hectares under cultivation produced 15,009 hectolitres in 2023.
Signargues - a named village appellation without a geographical village, Signargues wine is produced in the Gard department in an area covered by the villages of
Domazan and
Estézargues, and the towns of
Rochefort-du-Gard and
Saze.
Suze-la-Rousse located in the department of Drôme is a robust and full bodied red wine with the typical character of the eastern Rhône valley wines. Producing only red wine, the 239 hectares yielded 6,783 hectolitres in 2023. Suze-la-Rousse received its named village appellation in 2016.
Valréas is an enclave of the Vaucluse departement entirely surrounded by the department of
Drôme. The vinyard radiates in all directions from the village centre and covers 466 planted hectares which produced 14,392 hl. in 2023. The named village AOC was accorded in 1967.
Visan is one of the four villages in the Vaucluse enclave of the canton of Valréas entirely surrounded by the department of
Drôme. Vines were exploited in the 3rd century. Red, white, and rosé wines were accorded the named village appellation in 1966. Visan is a medium-sized vinyard of 580 planted hectares of fat clay soil surrounding the village which produced 18,477 hl. in 2023. ==Grape varieties==