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English vineyard landscape on the South Downs
England's Wine Authority Since 2024

The English Vineyard. Finally, On Its Own Terms.

Over 1,100 vineyards. 4,841 hectares. A Blanc de Blancs that beat Champagne at its own competition for the first time in thirty-four years. This is English wine — and it is no longer making apologies.

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2025 IWC Champion Sparkling Wine: Nyetimber's Blanc de Blancs 2016 Magnum — the first non-Champagne wine to win in the competition's 34-year history.   Read the story →

900+ Vineyards in England
4,000 Hectares under vine
12m+ Bottles produced annually
70+ Trophies won vs Champagne
Wine Regions

Where English Wine Grows

From the chalk South Downs to the Atlantic-washed valleys of Cornwall — England's wine regions each deliver a distinct terroir. The geology is serious. The wines increasingly are, too.

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Editor's Pick

The Vineyard That Changed Everything


Our Reviews

Top-Rated English Vineyards

Independent reviews based on the wines, the visitor experience, the setting, and the value. No sponsored content disguised as editorial. No exceptions.

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Essential Reading

English Sparkling vs Champagne: The Honest Assessment

The geological argument is won. The blind tasting argument is won. What remains is the cultural argument — and that, too, is progressing faster than most people realise. A Master of Wine's guide to what the comparison actually means.

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English sparkling wine and Champagne comparison
Nyetimber beats Champagne, 2025
Wine Tourism

Plan Your English Wine Journey

From a Sunday afternoon at a Surrey estate to a long weekend harvest volunteering in Sussex — how to visit English wine country on your own terms.

Common Questions

English Wine, Explained

At the top level, yes. The South Downs chalk is the same geological formation as Champagne, the same grape varieties are used, and the traditional method winemaking is identical. Wines from Nyetimber, Gusbourne, and Ridgeview regularly beat established Champagne houses in blind tastings conducted by Master of Wine panels. The honest answer is that in exceptional English vintages — 2018, 2014, 2009 — the finest English sparkling wines are indistinguishable from Grand Cru Champagne in carefully conducted blind conditions.

Harvest season — late September through October — is the most atmospheric time to visit, when the winery is in full production and many estates offer harvest volunteering experiences. That said, the growing season from June through August is beautiful for vineyard walks, and tastings are available year-round at most estates. Spring (April–May) offers the pleasure of seeing bud-break and the vineyard awakening, which winemakers often say is the most optimistic moment of the year.

For sparkling wine, the dominant varieties are Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier — the same trio used in Champagne. For still wines, Bacchus (a German crossing of Silvaner, Riesling and Müller-Thurgau) has become England's signature white variety, producing aromatic, herbaceous wines. Other notable still varieties include Ortega, Madeleine Angevine, Pinot Gris, and increasingly Chardonnay for still whites. Red wines are possible — Pinot Noir and Dornfelder are the most successful — but England's marginal climate makes consistency a challenge.

England now has over 900 vineyards across approximately 4,000 hectares. WineGB, the trade association for English and Welsh wine, reports that production has increased fourfold in the past fifteen years. The vast majority of vineyards are in the South East — Sussex, Kent, Hampshire and Surrey — but significant producers now exist in Cornwall, Devon, East Anglia, Wales, and as far north as Yorkshire.

More Wine Education

The English Wine Letter

Monthly: the best new vintages, vineyard news, cellar door openings, and harvest reports — written by people who actually know their terroir from their tourist board.