Shop the Best Brunello di Montalcino Wines — Top-Rated Bottles
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Reviewed by: Leopoldo Monterrey (Wine Entrepreneur & Curator)
Last Updated: August 2025
Looking for the best Brunello di Montalcino wines to buy online? Start here.
This is Tuscany’s most age-worthy red—a bold yet elegant Sangiovese that’s slow-aged by law and built to impress. Whether you're planning a cozy pasta night or stocking your cellar with top vintages, Brunello delivers structure, soul, and unmistakable Italian charm in every glass.
At MR D Wine, we’ve handpicked a selection of top-rated bottles, from iconic producers to rising stars. All are stored in climate-controlled conditions and ready to ship nationwide.
Inside this collection, you’ll find:
Our best-selling Brunello wines, from the legendary 2016 and 2019 vintages
Tasting and food pairing tips made simple
Serving & aging advice (including what to drink now vs. what to cellar)
Brunello vs. Rosso breakdowns to help you shop smart
Clear price tiers to match your budget, from weeknight wonders to collector picks
Brunello di Montalcino is made from 100% Sangiovese, aged for years before release, and protected by Italy’s strictest wine laws (DOCG). That’s what gives it depth, complexity, and incredible aging potential—think cherry, leather, dried herbs, and earthy spice, all unfolding over time.
Ready to find your perfect Brunello? Let’s dive in.
Looking for your next Brunello di Montalcino crush? Start with our best-sellers: crowd-loved bottles that balance elegance, depth, and food-friendliness, curated so you can go from scroll to sip in minutes. Compare vintages, check critic buzz at a glance, and pick the profile you love (silky and floral vs. powerful and structured) without second-guessing.
Prefer a quick, confidence-boosting shortlist before diving into filters? This edit highlights value standouts, blue-chip estates, and cellar-worthy releases, making it easy to choose the right Brunello wine for tonight—or for the next celebration.
Brunello Wines |
Region |
Grape |
Vintage |
Rating* |
Price |
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2019 |
DR 100 / KO 100 / VI 96 |
$95.99 (offer) |
|
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2019 |
VI 96 |
$69.99 (offer) |
|
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2019 |
— |
$59.99 (offer) |
|
Il Marroneto “Madonna delle Grazie” Brunello di Montalcino DOCG |
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2019 |
JD 100 / DR 100 / RP 99 |
$339.99 (offer) |
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2019 |
WE 98 / DR 96 / RP 95 / WS 95 / JS 94 |
$107.00 (offer) |
|
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2016 |
JS 95 / VI 94 / WE 93 / WS 93 |
$54.05 |
|
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2020 |
RP 96 |
$108.99 (offer) |
|
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2020 |
RP 96 |
$69.60 (offer) |
|
Marchesi Antinori “Pian delle Vigne” Brunello di Montalcino DOCG |
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2020 |
JS 94 / VI 93 |
$69.99 (offer) |
Montalcino, Tuscany, Italy |
Sangiovese |
2019 |
JS 95 |
$66.99 (offer) |
Ready to personalize your cart? Use Style, Vintage, and Price filters to refine this list, or mix a case across iconic hillsides of Montalcino—silky now, cellaring-worthy for later.
Before you add to cart, here’s the fast track: Brunello di Montalcino is a dry, age-worthy red from southern Tuscany, loved for energy, depth, and that slow-release elegance that makes a great dinner feel special.
It’s a powerful, elegant red wine made from 100% Sangiovese grapes grown in the Montalcino region of Tuscany. Brunello is a DOCG-protected wine, known for its depth, structure, and aging potential. It’s dry, full-bodied, and built to pair beautifully with food.
"Brunello" was the local nickname for a unique clone of Sangiovese—used exclusively in this region. Over time, the name stuck, and Brunello di Montalcino came to mean Sangiovese grown and vinified only in Montalcino, following strict quality rules.
Dry, always. Brunello di Montalcino is a bone-dry red wine with no residual sugar. It tastes of ripe cherry, plum, violet, and savory herbs, with fresh acidity and firm tannins that give it a clean, structured finish.
Brunello stands out for where it’s grown and how it’s aged. Montalcino’s warm, sunny slopes help Sangiovese reach perfect ripeness, while Italy’s DOCG rules require years of aging (at least 4 for Brunello, 5+ for Riserva) before release. The result? A wine that’s complex, balanced, and capable of aging gracefully for decades.
Expect notes of red and black cherry, plum, dried herbs, and forest floor. As it ages, Brunello develops leathery, balsamic, and tobacco tones, framed by freshness, minerality, and silky tannins. It’s a wine that evolves in the glass and in the cellar.
Classic Brunello wine is dry, medium-to-full bodied, and built on bright acidity with fine, firm tannins.
You get power framed by freshness, not heaviness, which is why it drinks beautifully at the table and evolves gracefully over time.
Here’s the shopping table you’ll actually use—Brunello di Montalcino categories at a glance (grape is 100% Sangiovese in all three):
Category |
Grape & Zone |
Minimum aging & earliest release* |
Brunello di Montalcino (Annata) |
100% Sangiovese, Montalcino |
4 years total (≥2 years in wood + ≥4 months in bottle); Jan 1, Year 5 after harvest. |
Brunello di Montalcino Riserva |
Same |
5 years total (≥2 years in wood + ≥6 months in bottle); Jan 1, Year 6. |
Rosso di Montalcino (DOC) |
100% Sangiovese, same zone |
~10–12 months total; ready from Sept 1 of the year after harvest (earlier-drinking). |
*Aging rules summarized from the official disciplinare and Consorzio guidance. See the Brunello di Montalcino DOCG production rules for the official requirements
Brunello di Montalcino is a medium- to full-bodied red wine with vibrant acidity and firm, refined tannins, a result of both the Sangiovese grape and its extended aging process. Expect structure, not heaviness.
Large oak casks (Slavonian) bring subtle spice and earthy depth, while smaller French barrels can add polish or toast—but either way, the core identity stays true: savory, age-worthy, and unmistakably Montalcino.
Start with what you’re in the mood for, then dial in the year—that’s the fastest path to a bottle of Brunello di Montalcino you’ll love tonight (or in ten years). Think of style as the feel on your palate, and vintage as the tempo: cooler, elegant years glide; warmer seasons bring a deeper, darker groove.
Montalcino is a patchwork of slopes and exposures, so two estates a mile apart can taste wildly different; use this section to match occasion, timing, and budget without overthinking Brunello di Montalcino.
Reach for DOCG when you want depth, tension, and a clear path to aging—the signature arc of Brunello di Montalcino comes from a minimum of two years in oak and release no earlier than the fifth year after harvest, which shapes structure and spice
Choose Riserva when you want a keepsake bottle; the style stays longer in the cellar (released in the sixth year after harvest), building concentration, tertiary complexity, and longevity that define collectible Brunello di Montalcino.
Brunello di Montalcino Annata is your go-to for versatility—drinkable within 5–10 years, or cellared for longer elegance.
Riserva is crafted for collectors and special occasions, released later and built to evolve for decades.
Rosso di Montalcino is your weeknight hero: affordable, earlier-drinking, and often made from the same vineyards.
🍷 Pro tip: Use the release year as your guide. Rosso hits the market fast; Brunello takes time—and rewards it.
Think of Rosso as Brunello’s weekday sibling: same territory, fresher frame, earlier release—often around one year—so you get vibrant fruit, bright acidity, and easy pairing at friendlier prices while your Brunello di Montalcino naps.
Use this mini guide to pick by timing, then refine by producer—your shortcut to the right Brunello di Montalcino without memorizing scores.
🍷 Mr. D Wine Tip: Decide your window first (tonight, 5–10 years, or long-term), then filter for style, vintage, price, and format to land the Brunello di Montalcino that fits your plan.
No need to overthink it. This is your 3-step shortcut to the perfect Brunello:
Pick the style: Annata, Riserva, or Rosso.
Decide your moment: drink-now or cellar.
Set the scene: food, glass, and temperature.
Once you follow this guide, you’ll go from browsing to pouring in under five minutes, with confidence in every sip.
Brunello is made for the main event. Think savory meats, earthy vegetables, and bold cheeses, the kind of dishes that match the wine’s structure and bring out its depth.
It's also a stellar after-dinner sipper, perfect for slow moments with good conversation.
Top matches: Bistecca alla Fiorentina, wild boar ragù, truffle risotto, braised lamb, duck confit.
Cheese lane: Aged pecorino, Parmigiano-Reggiano, salty Alpine-style cow’s milk cheese.
🍷 Mr. D Wine Tip: If it’s rich, savory, or truffle-laced, it’s Brunello’s best friend.
Brunello hits best when served just a bit below room temp: 61–65°F (16–18°C), which keeps the fruit bright and the spice lively. Italian sommeliers may stretch that to 18–20°C for full aromatic release, especially in older vintages.
Decanting helps, too—especially for young bottles with dense tannins.
Young wines: Decant for 60–120 minutes to soften and open up.
Aged bottles: Use a wide glass and decant briefly but gently.
Glassware: Big bowls let Brunello stretch and breathe.
And if you’re cellaring, remember: Cool, dark, still, and sideways. That’s how this Tuscan legend gets better with time.
Great bottles of Brunello di Montalcino aren’t pricey by accident. The DOCG rulebook caps yields and requires long aging—at least two years in wood plus bottle time, with release no earlier than January 1 of the fifth year after harvest (the sixth for Riserva).
Those guardrails protect quality, concentrate supply, and naturally lift collectibility.
Two big drivers make Brunello di Montalcino a blue-chip buy:
Use this quick ladder to match style and intent; exact shelf prices vary, but the shopping logic holds for Brunello di Montalcino.
Tier |
What you’re getting |
How to shop it |
Entry “Annata” |
Classic house style; balanced fruit, tannin, and freshness |
Filter by producer you trust; grab recent good vintages for earlier drinking |
Benchmark / Single-Estate |
Stricter fruit selection; more depth and length |
Seek estate or single-vineyard cues; compare critic notes across producers |
Riserva / Crus |
Longer aging; extra structure and complexity |
Target top sites/producers; plan to decant or cellar |
Icons |
Blue-chip names from great years |
Allocate budget to provenance; think gifts or long holds |
🍷 Mr. D Wine Tip: Brunello di Montalcino’s little sibling, Rosso di Montalcino, releases much earlier and is widely praised as a fresh, affordable gateway into the zone—ideal for weeknights and by-the-glass. (Rosso typically ages ~1 year and can release the year after harvest.)
Choose your window first, then pick the vintage. For pop-and-pour comfort, many 2018s show elegant, mid-weight profiles that are ready sooner; 2020s are often described as bright and succulent with flexible aging.
If you’re building a cellar, 2016 is a benchmark for structure and longevity, while 2019 combines balance and finesse for medium- to long-term payoff—bullseyes for Brunello di Montalcino lovers who collect.
Tucked into southern Tuscany’s Val d’Orcia (UNESCO World Heritage), Brunello di Montalcino grows in a ring of vineyards around a medieval hill town—warm days, cool nights, and a sheltering mountain make this one of Italy’s most distinctive red-wine landscapes.
The valley itself is UNESCO-listed for its cultural landscape, so exploring Brunello is as much about place as it is about what’s in your glass.
Across the zone, altitude and aspect swing style: higher, breezier sites tend to preserve lift, while sunnier exposures bring darker fruit and power—both anchored by limestone, galestro marl, and clays shaped in part by nearby Monte Amiata’s protective “rain shadow.”
That mix explains why Brunello di Montalcino can feel simultaneously deep and refreshed.
Brunello comes from one magical place: Montalcino, a hilltop village in southern Tuscany, nestled within the UNESCO-listed Val d’Orcia. This is no ordinary wine country—it’s a place where land, altitude, and sunlight come together to shape one of Italy’s most age-worthy reds.
Want to explore more from this iconic region? Browse our full Italy Wine Collection for other Tuscan gems beyond Brunello.
Here’s what makes Montalcino special:
Altitude matters: Most vineyards sit between 150–500 meters above sea level. Higher slopes (north/east) yield fresher, more aromatic Brunellos. Lower, sunnier exposures (south/west) make richer, bolder styles.
Soils shape the structure:
Galestro (crumbly marl) = spice and lift
Alberese (limestone) = tension and length
Clay = power and plush texture
Monte Amiata effect: This ancient mountain acts as a natural climate shield, moderating heat and pushing dry breezes—ideal for slow, balanced ripening.
If you’re mapping styles without getting lost, start with a few benchmarks—each brings a distinct angle on Brunello di Montalcino:
You want standout bottles and zero friction from cart to doorstep—and that’s exactly what you get when you shop Brunello di Montalcino at MR D Wine: a focused, sommelier-minded selection, clear delivery options, and real humans ready to help if you need them.
Ready to build your case? Explore, compare, and check out with confidence—and if anything comes up, head to our Customer Support page for fast help; we’ll make sure your Brunello di Montalcino arrives exactly as expected.
Brunello di Montalcino is a DOCG red wine from Tuscany made 100% from Sangiovese; by law, it ages at least two years in wood and can’t be released until January 1 of the fifth year after harvest (sixth for Riserva).
Time and place: Brunello di Montalcino must mature for years before release and comes from a tightly defined zone, so producers hold stock longer and volumes stay limited—both raise costs.
Brunello di Montalcino is always 100% Sangiovese with longer aging; Chianti Classico allows blends (min. 80% Sangiovese) and is usually released earlier, so it feels more immediate.
They can both be elegant, but Brunello di Montalcino typically has brighter acidity, firmer tannins, and more savory depth than most Pinot Noir.
Dry. Brunello di Montalcino tastes ripe because of fruit and oak cues, not sugar; expect high tannin and lively acidity.
Think cherry, plum, violet, dried herbs, and leather when young; with age, Brunello di Montalcino develops tobacco and balsamic notes, remaining structured and savory.
Rules set the earliest release (year five for Brunello, six for Riserva), but quality Brunello di Montalcino often improves for a decade or more; many notable bottles age for several decades.
Rosso is the fresh, ready-to-drink version made from 100% Sangiovese in the same Montalcino region, but aged for a much shorter time. It’s perfect for weeknights or casual meals.
Brunello di Montalcino, on the other hand, is aged longer, built for structure, and ideal for slow dinners or cellaring. Think of Rosso as the intro, and Brunello as the main act.