Buy White Burgundy Wine Online: Best Bottles & Top Deals
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White Burgundy wine is Chardonnay from Burgundy, France, a region world-famous for producing some of the most refined white wines. If you’ve ever enjoyed a glass of Chardonnay, think of White Burgundy as its most authentic and elegant expression, shaped by centuries of tradition.
Not sure where to start? That’s normal. Burgundy can feel complicated. That’s why we’ve curated a clear, easy-to-shop collection. Use our filters by style, region, producer, or price to quickly find the right bottle for your taste and budget.
Whether you’re planning a weeknight dinner, a special celebration, or building a small cellar, our White Burgundy selection makes it simple: trusted producers, in-stock wines, and fast, safe delivery to your door.
Looking for your next favorite White Burgundy wine? Start here: these are the bottles our community keeps coming back to—fresh, food-friendly, and perfect for both casual dinners and special occasions.
Use the filters by style, producer, region, and price to narrow your shortlist in seconds. Whether you want a crisp Chablis for oysters, a round Mâcon for weeknights, or a rich Puligny-Montrachet for celebrations, this list makes choosing easy.
White Burgundy Wine |
Region |
Grape |
Vintage |
Price |
Côte Chalonnaise, France |
Chardonnay |
2022 |
$42.99 |
|
Burgundy, France |
Chardonnay |
2022 |
$228.00 |
|
Côte Chalonnaise, France |
Aligoté |
2022 |
$48.99 |
|
Burgundy, France |
Aligoté |
2018 |
$130.00 |
|
Olivier Leflaive Bourgogne Blanc “Les Setilles” (Case 12x750ml) |
Burgundy, France |
Chardonnay |
2022 |
$425.70 |
Chablis, France |
Chardonnay |
2023 |
$44.99 |
|
Côte de Beaune, France |
Chardonnay |
2022 |
$111.99 |
|
Burgundy, France |
Chardonnay |
2021 |
$45.50 |
|
Burgundy, France |
Chardonnay |
2023 |
$40.95 |
|
Domaine François Gaunoux Meursault Clos de Meix Chavaux Monopole |
Côte de Beaune, France |
Chardonnay |
2022 |
$75.60 |
Côte Chalonnaise, France |
Chardonnay |
2023 |
$194.92 |
Think flavor-first: match texture, acidity, and oak to your menu, then follow the map to bottles that make dinner sing, your fast lane to white burgundy wine without the second-guessing.
Want a quick lay of the land? Compare Chablis, Côte de Beaune, Côte Chalonnaise, and Mâconnais to find your groove across Burgundy regions, each with its own signature cut, from zesty and linear to creamy and layered.
Region / AOC |
Texture & Weight |
Oak Presence |
Acidity |
Typical Pairings |
Chablis (all tiers) |
Lean, linear |
Minimal to subtle |
High |
Oysters, sashimi, chèvre |
Puligny-Montrachet |
Taut, mineral precision |
Discreet, polished |
Medium-high |
Lobster, beurre blanc |
Meursault |
Creamy, nutty richness |
More evident (balanced) |
Medium |
Roast chicken, mushrooms |
Chassagne-Montrachet |
Broad, ripe orchard fruit |
Moderate |
Medium |
Scallops, Comté |
Rully / Montagny |
Crisp, medium body |
Light-moderate |
Medium-high |
Poultry, spring veg |
Pouilly-Fuissé / SV / MV |
Round fruit + snap |
Often light-moderate |
Medium |
Pork loin, creamy pasta |
Bouzeron (Aligoté) |
Bright, linear |
Rare |
High |
Seafood, salads |
Saint-Bris (Sauvignon) |
Zesty, aromatic |
Rare |
High |
Goat cheese, greens |
Chardonnay is a shapeshifter: vessel, MLF, and lees work can take it from zesty and linear to creamy and layered. Remember, the white burgundy grape responds to cellar choices as much as it does to terroir.
Oak vs. tank: Barrels add gentle oxygen exchange, spice, and a rounder feel; stainless steel preserves citrusy snap and straight-line minerality.
Malolactic fermentation (MLF): Converts malic to lactic acid, think softer acidity and a creamier mid-palate; partial or no MLF keeps things brisk.
Lees aging & bâtonnage: Resting on the lees (and occasional stirring) builds silk, nutty nuances, and length; minimal lees contact keeps wines ultra-fresh.
All citrus lift and sea-spray energy, Chablis brings flinty minerality and sky-high refreshment. Start your deep dive in our Chablis collection or cross-shop refined Chardonnay in the Côte de Beaune collection for a richer counterpoint to white burgundy wines.
How it tastes:
Lively citrus, green apple, crushed shell
Linear, mouthwatering finish
crisp, mineral finish
When it shines:
Raw oysters, sashimi, simply grilled fish
Goat cheese, fresh herbs, vinaigrettes
Aperitif or first course pairings
Choose Meursault for hazelnut-tinged richness, Puligny for taut mineral poise, and Chassagne for broader orchard-fruit depth. Corton-Charlemagne layers power and age-worthiness, the compass points if you’re chasing the best white Burgundy wine styles.
How they differ:
Meursault: toasted hazelnut, cream, baked apple; generous texture
Puligny-Montrachet: tense, mineral, floral; laser-lined structure
Chassagne-Montrachet: ripe orchard fruit, breadth, subtle spice
Corton-Charlemagne: intensity, length, and cellar-friendly architecture
Food ideas:
Roast chicken with pan jus
Lobster, scallops, beurre blanc
Mushroom pasta, Comté
Great for everyday dinners, fresh and balanced: bright fruit, clean mineral lines, and smart value, proof that you don’t need a grand occasion to pour white burgundy wine.
What to expect:
Crisp stone fruit, white flowers
Medium body, refreshing acidity
Great by-the-glass versatility
Serve with:
Roast poultry, trout almondine
Spring vegetables, soft cheeses
Light pasta and risotto
Sun-kissed charm meets limestone snap, Pouilly-Fuissé brings layered elegance, Saint-Véran balances roundness and lift, and Mâcon-Villages keeps things crisp and welcoming for fans of French Burgundy whites.
Profile highlights:
Ripe pear, melon; floral notes
Often less new oak than Beaune icons
Crowd-pleasing and great value
Table matches:
Roast pork loin, vegetable tarts
Herbed chicken, creamy sauces
Soft-rind cheeses
Bright, citrusy, linear, Bouzeron is the insider’s pick and the only village AOC devoted to Aligoté, a refreshing detour in the family of Burgundy grapes when you want zip without weight.
Why fans love it:
Lemon zest, white flowers, saline finish
Versatile with seafood and salads
Excellent value play
Zesty and herbal by design, Saint-Bris is Burgundy’s sole Sauvignon appellation near Auxerre.
Good to know:
Lively grapefruit, herb, and iodine hints
Great with goat cheese and greens
Drink young for vibrancy
Skip the jargon and start with what you crave at the table, crisp and linear or creamy and layered, then match a bottle of white burgundy wine to the dish, the mood, and your budget in two quick steps: pick the style you love, then choose the level and producer that delivers it tonight.
Buying by “level” is your shortcut: Régionale for easy value, Village for place-driven detail, Premier Cru for deeper, longer wines, and Grand Cru for power and aging. Use this ladder to move from weekday to wow across white burgundy.
Level |
What to expect |
Typical labels |
Régionale |
Fresh, approachable, great value |
Bourgogne Blanc |
Village |
Clear sense of place, step-up detail |
Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet |
Premier Cru |
Defined sites; extra depth and length |
“Premier Cru” + named climat |
Grand Cru |
Power, layers, long aging |
Corton-Charlemagne; Chablis Grand Cru (7 climats) |
When you scan burgundy wine brands, look for consistency across vintages and tiers (Village to Grand Cru), balanced oak, and terroir-true character; shortlist producers with multiple appellations so you can compare styles side-by-side and shop what fits your taste and price.
If you’re wondering what burgundy wine tastes like, think a spectrum: Chablis brings lemon, green apple, and a flinty, saline snap; Côte de Beaune adds orchard fruit, hazelnut, and subtle cream as oak, lees, and malolactic lend texture, choose lean for seafood nights, richer for buttered sauces.
Expect more mineral drive and calibrated oak in white burgundy wine, while many California bottlings lean riper and plusher (with plenty of cool-climate exceptions), use this as a style compass, not a rulebook, and let producer choices be your final tiebreaker.
Think sauce first: zesty raw bar and citrus want lean minerality, while butter and cream call for richer texture. Keep the plate simple so the glass does the heavy lifting in burgundy white wine.
Flavor compass at a glance: Chablis brings citrus and flint; Puligny leans taut and floral; Meursault offers creamy hazelnut; Chassagne adds ripe orchard fruit, pick your lane and pour white burgundy wines that match seafood nights or comfort-food classics.
At home, start with region, pick a cooking style (grill, poach, cream), then tune the sauce; when in doubt, simplify the dish and let white burgundy wine lead the conversation.
Use this grid like a friendly sommelier, choose a region, scan your dish, and nudge the sauce so acidity and weight land in balance across French Burgundy styles.
Region / Style |
What it brings |
Best dishes |
Sauce cues |
Chablis (all tiers) |
High acidity, flinty minerality |
Oysters, sashimi, simply grilled white fish |
Citrus, herbs, vinaigrette, minimal butter |
Puligny-Montrachet |
Tense, mineral, floral |
Lobster, scallops, halibut |
Beurre blanc, delicate butter sauces |
Meursault |
Creamy weight, hazelnut |
Roast chicken, mushroom pasta |
Brown butter, cream, roasted poultry jus |
Chassagne-Montrachet |
Riper orchard fruit, breadth |
Foie gras, rich fish, poultry in sauce |
Cream/velouté, subtle spice |
Côte Chalonnaise (Rully, Montagny) |
Crisp, medium body |
Trout almondine, soft cheeses |
Light butter, almonds, spring veg |
Mâconnais (Pouilly-Fuissé, St-Véran, Mâcon-Villages) |
Sun-kissed fruit + limestone snap |
Pork loin, vegetable tarts |
Light cream, thyme, lemon zest |
Bouzeron (Aligoté) |
Bright, linear, citrusy |
Crab, shrimp, salads |
Citrus dressings, saline accents |
Saint-Bris (Sauvignon) |
Zesty citrus, herbal lift |
Goat cheese, greens, seafood |
Herb oil, tangy sauces |
Nail the window and you’ll keep lean wines nervy while letting richer wines bloom, aim for the ranges below to serve Burgundy white at its best (°F ≈ °C).
Style |
Chill to (°F) |
Chill to (°C) |
Petit Chablis / very lean |
46–50 |
8–10 |
Chablis / lively, mineral |
50–52 |
10–11 |
Mâconnais / fresh, round |
50–54 |
10–12 |
Village-level Côte de Beaune |
54–57 |
12–14 |
Premier/Grand Cru (richer/aged) |
57–61 |
14–16 |
Choose a medium-to-large Chardonnay bowl for aromatic lift, and consider a brief decant only if the wine feels closed or “match-sticky”, short air contact can wake aromas without dulling freshness in burgundy grapes.
Practical tips
Glass choice: fuller Chardonnay bowls flatter oaked styles; quality “universal” stems work across styles.
Quick decant: 5–15 minutes is plenty for youthful, reductive whites; taste as you go and mind the temperature.
If reduction shows (struck-match, muted fruit), a short swirl/decant usually clears it.
For speed and precision, submerge the bottle in an ice-water bath with a pinch of salt and agitate gently. This chills faster and more evenly than ice alone for wine from Burgundy.
Fast, safe methods
Ice-water bath (not just ice) for even contact; add a bit of salt to drop the freezing point and accelerate cooling.
Keep the bottle in the bath between pours to hold the target window.
No bucket? A damp-towel-wrapped bottle in the freezer works in a pinch, set a timer.
Planning a menu? Build from sauces up, think citrus/herb for Chablis and Bouzeron; beurre blanc or cream for Puligny, Meursault, and Chassagne, so the plate highlights, never hides, white Burgundy wine.
Choose by season, not mystique: warm years taste riper, cool years feel nervier, so plan what to open now versus what to save, and let the year guide your picks across French Burgundy.
Here’s how to “read” a label fast: for white burgundy wine, warmth and harvest timing set ripeness vs. acidity; frost or hail can slash yields (and nudge prices); and producer choices often matter as much as the weather.
2024: Later picks; notable mildew/disease pressure; quality promising where sorting was strict.
2023: Record volumes; above-average quality and early charm in many whites
2022: Generous crop; widely praised; balance and freshness in many communes.
2021: Severe spring frost (especially Chablis); low yields, careful selections key.
2020: Warm year, yet vibrant, structured whites with precise acidity.
2019: Smaller yields; concentrated fruit and intensity at top addresses.
2018: Ripe, opulent style, buy thoughtfully by house.
Use “tier” as your compass, not a cage: Village tends to peak earlier than 1er Cru, while Burgundy grand cru rewards patience, then fine-tune by vintage and by the style you enjoy (tension vs. nutty maturity).
Tier (examples) |
Typical window* |
Notes |
Chablis (Village / 1er Cru) |
Village: ~now–5+ yrs; 1er Cru: ~5–10 yrs |
Official Chablis guidance cites ~5–10 years for many Premiers Crus. |
Chablis Grand Cru |
~10–12+ yrs |
Commonly 10–15 years, sometimes more, depending on vintage. |
Côte de Beaune Village (e.g., Meursault, Puligny) |
~7–10 yrs typical |
Producer and élevage vary; many village Meursault peak ~8–10 years. |
Premier Cru (Côte de Beaune) |
~10–15 yrs |
Open earlier for youthful drive (6–8), or wait for layered depth. |
Grand Cru (e.g., Corton-Charlemagne) |
Young pleasure 4–6; mature 6–10; peak 10yrs+ |
Multiple domaines cite 10+ year potential when well stored. |
*Windows assume proper storage and reputable producers; adjust for warm/cool years.
Protect aroma, texture, and cork: keep bottles cool, dark, still, and steady, so your wine from Burgundy evolves gracefully instead of seesawing with temperature swings.
Temp: ~50–59 °F (10–15 °C) is a safe long-term band; ~55 °F (~13 °C) is classic.
Humidity: target ~60–80% RH (BIVB guidance ~70–80%) to keep corks snug.
Light & movement: darkness + zero vibration; avoid kitchens, windows, HVAC vents.
Position: cork-closed bottles on their side; screw-caps may stand upright.
If you love verve and citrus, open Village Puligny sooner; if you chase hazelnut depth, hold Meursault longer, and for top 1er/GC, trust time and best white burgundy producers (notes and back-vintage track records help you decide between youthful energy and layered maturity).
Think supply, site, and season: a small region with 84 AOCs and very little Grand Cru means scarcity meets global thirst, so prices spread widely from Bourgogne Blanc to Burgundy Grand Cru.
Here’s the fast way to read price tiers for white burgundy wine: limited acreage, a place-based hierarchy, weather-driven yields, rising land values, and strong export pull, especially from the U.S., all shape what you’ll pay. Expect tight years (frost, hail) to firm prices, and generous harvests to ease them.
Tiny region, big demand (84 AOCs; Grand Cru is a sliver).
Vintage swings (e.g., 2021 frost hit hard; 2023 was a record ~1.9 M hl).
Land keeps getting pricier (Côte-d’Or vineyard values +11% in 2023).
Strong U.S. pull (whites = ~63% of Bourgogne exports to the U.S. in H1-2024).
Release pricing has held broadly steady while the secondary market cooled, helpful if you’re comparing back-vintages, so shop current releases of Burgundy white wine smartly and pounce on well-reviewed domaines in good years.
Use this mental price ladder, then filter by terroir and the best white burgundy producers you trust:
Bourgogne Blanc (Régionale) → widest value spread, entry to terroir
Village (e.g., Meursault, Puligny, Chassagne; Chablis) → step-up detail
Premier Cru → named climats; scarcity + precision = bigger jumps
Grand Cru (e.g., Corton-Charlemagne; Chablis Grand Cru) → micro-supply, investment-grade pricing
You want the good stuff, fast, and we make it easy. Our focused catalog is built for effortless discovery, with meaningful sorting and deep filters (price, region, grape, vintage, style, score, producers) so you can move from browsing to bottle in minutes across French Burgundy.
This is shopping without friction: scan a live, curated shelf, save time with “Best selling” or “Price” sort, and narrow by producer or appellation right on the page, perfect when you’re comparing styles or building a case of Burgundy white wine that truly fits your taste.
Service is as clear as our selection: transparent processing times (typically 2–10 business days), adult-signature delivery, no P.O. boxes, and local delivery around Miami, plus international options when you’re sending or traveling with white burgundy wine.
What you’ll love:
Smart curation: a focused Burgundy catalog you can filter by grape, region, vintage, style, and score.
Faster shortlists: sort by price or “Best selling,” then compare producers side-by-side from the collection page.
Real support: phone and email on-site when you want a human touch.
Service snapshot:
Processing: typically 2–10 business days before carrier transit.
Delivery rules: adult signature required; no P.O. boxes; weather guidance disclosed.
Where we ship: local delivery in Miami and national & international shipping available.
If you’re comparing retailers, start where shopping feels personal and straightforward: a curated shelf, honest policies, and support that actually answers, so the wine from Burgundy you open tonight feels as thoughtful as the region it comes from.
Got questions about shipping, vintage availability, food pairings, or choosing the right white burgundy wines? Our team answers fast, get in touch, and we’ll help you find the perfect bottle with zero pressure.
Mostly Chardonnay from Bourgogne, with rare exceptions: Aligoté in Bouzeron and Sauvignon Blanc in Saint-Bris, that’s the quick answer to what is white burgundy wine.
No, white burgundy wines are predominantly Chardonnay; only Saint-Bris within Burgundy is Sauvignon-based.
Scarcity + hierarchy: 84 AOCs with just 33 at the top tier means limited supply and high prestige, especially for Burgundy grand cru sites.
Chablis is a northern appellation of Burgundy, making Chardonnay, so it’s wine from Burgundy, known for high acidity and a flinty, saline edge.
Pinot Noir, so if you’re building a mixed case, which red grape makes burgundy wine is your shortcut to the classic red partner.
They’re ascending appellation tiers tied to place (not producer): Régionale → Village → Premier Cru → Grand Cru, the quality ladder to navigate white burgundy wine.
Chill lean styles cooler and richer styles a touch warmer (e.g., Chablis 10–11 °C; Grand Cru 12–14 °C), then keep bottles cool, dark, and steady, easy wins for burgundy white wine.
Expect a spectrum, from Chablis’ citrus-mineral snap to Côte de Beaune’s orchard fruit, hazelnut, and subtle oak, classic signatures of white Burgundy wine.
Start with terroir-true domaines and maisons you can compare across communes, your shortlist of best white burgundy producers will be the ones that show consistent style and site expression.