Shop Champagne Bottles Online – Real Deals, Real Craft, Zero Guesswork
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Looking for the best champagne deals right now? You’re in the right place. At Mr. D Wine, we curate exceptional champagne bottles from top houses and grower producers, all stored with care and delivered nationwide. Whether you’re toasting a milestone or just upgrading a Tuesday night, we make it easy to buy champagne online with confidence.
Not sure how much a bottle of champagne costs these days? Our collection spans everyday picks under $50 to legendary prestige cuvées, clearly marked, properly aged, and ready to ship. Filter by style, price, or bottle size to find exactly what you’re after, from Blanc de Blancs and Brut Rosé to vintage gems and collector formats.
With rotating champagne offers, transparent champagne prices, and expert support on demand, there’s no need to second-guess. Whether you’re ready to order champagne online or just comparing champagne cost across tiers, this is your go-to destination.
Shop smarter. Celebrate better. Let us deliver your next great bottle of champagne.
Hunting for the best champagne deals? Mr. D Wine Merchant curates top Champagne bottles that balance Grand Cru value and prestige-label icon status, ideal for toasting tonight, gifting, or laying down. Use the filters (style, vintage, size) to zero in on the perfect champagne bottle in seconds.
Blanc de Blancs is made exclusively from white grapes (most often Chardonnay), rosé Champagne gets its color either by short maceration (saignée) or by blending in a little still red wine, and most “NV” (non-vintage) cuvées blend harvests to maintain a consistent house style after a legally required aging period before release.
Champagne (House/Cuvée) |
Style |
Vintage |
Notes |
Price |
Brut Rosé |
NV |
Grand Cru |
$59.99 |
|
Blanc de Blancs, Brut |
2014 |
Grand Cru |
$69.99 |
|
Brut |
2015 |
Vintage |
$99.92 |
|
Extra Brut |
NV |
Offer pricing |
$69.99 |
|
Brut Rosé |
NV |
Prestige cuvée, Offer pricing |
$399.50 |
|
Blanc de Blancs |
2008 |
Grand Cru |
$103.04 |
|
Blanc de Blancs, Brut |
NV |
Grand Cru |
$51.99 |
|
Brut |
2015 |
Prestige cuvée, Offer pricing |
$248.99 |
If you’re wondering how much a bottle of champagne costs right now, this best-seller lineup spans smart everyday buys to cellar-worthy icons, clearly marked when special Offer pricing applies, so you can choose with confidence and check out fast.
Notes: “NV” = Non-Vintage; Champagne rosé may be made by blending or brief maceration (saignée). Minimum cellar aging before release is typically 15 months for non-vintage and at least three years for vintage releases.
Explore core styles to match your taste and the moment, dryness levels, color, and grape makeup shape texture, aroma, and food-friendliness. For quick scanning, use style filters on our collection grid to find the right champagne bottle at a glance.
These labels refer to sweetness (“dosage”) after disgorgement. Brut typically finishes under 12 g/L, Extra Brut 0–6 g/L, and Brut Nature under 3 g/L, drier wines that read more mineral and linear. If you want a versatile house pour, start with NV Brut, then branch to leaner styles when you order champagne online for aperitif-driven nights.
Sweetness ladder (legal ranges):
Brut Nature: < 3 g/L (no added sugar)
Extra Brut: 0–6 g/L
Brut: 0–12 g/L
Easy pairings:
Oysters, sashimi, potato chips, fried chicken (salt loves acidity)
Roast chicken, creamy cheeses for rounder Bruts
Rosé in Champagne is made by blending a small portion of still red wine into white base wines, or by short maceration (“saignée”) of black grapes, two traditional, AOC-permitted paths that yield color from pale salmon to cherry. Choose saignée for extra vivacity; choose blended for consistency when you buy champagne by style.
Two authentic methods:
Blended Rosé: white base wines + ~5–20% red wine
Maceration/Saignée: brief skin contact of black grapes
Pairings that sing:
Duck, salmon, tuna, and mushroom dishes
Charcuterie, sushi, and spicy-savory bites
Blanc de Blancs relies exclusively on white grapes (most commonly Chardonnay), delivering citrus, chalk, and taut acidity; Blanc de Noirs uses only black grapes (Pinot Noir and/or Meunier) for red-fruit tones and broader mid-palate weight, great distinctions to explore when shopping for champagne online.
Expect in the glass:
Blanc de Blancs: lemon, green apple, chalk, high tension
Blanc de Noirs: raspberry, cherry, spice, fuller texture
Great with:
BdB: oysters, crudo, fresh goat cheese
BdN: roast poultry, mushrooms, richer sauces
Vintage Champagne comes from a single harvest and ages at least three years on the lees; non-vintage blends multiple years and must age at least 15 months, rules that help explain complexity differences (producers often exceed the minimums). Keep this in mind as you compare tiers and champagne prices for gifting or cellaring.
Aging rules (minimums):
Non-Vintage (NV): 15 months total (≥12 on lees)
Vintage (Millésimé): 36 months total (often far longer)
When to choose:
NV: weeknight versatility and value
Vintage/Prestige: structure, length, special occasions
Feature |
Champagne (France) |
Prosecco (Italy) |
Sparkling Wine (USA, etc.) |
Region |
Champagne AOC, France |
Veneto DOC/DOCG, Italy |
California, Oregon, Spain, and more |
Method |
Traditional (Méthode Champenoise) |
Tank (Charmat) |
Varies: traditional, tank, carbonation |
Grape Varieties |
Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Pinot Meunier |
Glera |
Often blends or local grapes |
Aging Requirement (NV) |
≥15 months (on lees) |
~30 days (no lees) |
Varies widely |
Style Profile |
Structured, fine mousse, long finish |
Fruity, fresh, soft bubbles |
Depends on producer |
Typical Price Range (USD) |
$40–$300+ |
$10–$25 |
$10–$50+ |
Label Clue |
AOC “Champagne” + NM/RM code |
“Prosecco DOC” / “DOCG” |
“Sparkling Wine” only |
Tip: If you’re after elegance and depth, Champagne delivers complexity unmatched by most sparkling wines, but Prosecco and Cava offer budget-friendly bubbly for casual moments.
Pricing in Champagne reflects time, terroir, and technique, especially the lengthy cellar aging that the AOC requires, so use our price filters to quickly compare Champagne prices across tiers before you add to cart.
At checkout, U.S. alcohol shipments require age verification; plan for an adult signature on delivery whenever you order champagne online so your package isn’t delayed.
What typically drives cost (quick scan):
Extended lees aging and producer practices (longer time = more complexity and carrying costs).
NV vs. vintage vs. prestige tiers (stricter selection and longer cellaring).
Vineyard sourcing and grower vs. house scale.
Format (magnums and special formats) and packaging.
Demand dynamics and limited allocations.
According to the Wine Institute, factors like aging, terroir, and bottle format significantly influence Champagne pricing compared to domestic sparkling wines.
If you’re hunting entry points, true AOC bottles in the U.S. often begin around this threshold; under-$50 finds are usually half-bottles, sharp promos, or rare closeouts, so always confirm “Champagne” on the label when checking champagne price.
Expect at this tier:
Fresh, non-vintage styles; lighter body and brisk acidity
Half-bottles for weeknights or gifting on a budget
Occasional seasonal deals that move quickly
This is the core NV “house pour” zone, where you’ll see Brut, Rosé, and Blanc de Blancs from both maisons and growers, ideal if you want a versatile bottle of champagne for dinner, parties, and cellaring a short while.
Expect at this tier:
Consistent NV Brut with balanced fruit, minerality, and fine mousse
Food-friendly Rosé and Chardonnay-driven Blanc de Blancs
Strong value across producers and styles
Here you’re stepping into vintage releases, special single-parcel cuvées, and longer-aged wines with more texture and length; allocate here when you care about nuance, depth, and gift-worthy presentation relative to overall champagne cost.
Expect at this tier:
Vintage bottlings with longer lees time and layered aromatics
Site-focused cuvées; more structure and finish
Attractive gift options and limited allocations
Prestige cuvées, late-disgorgements, and collectible formats live here; plan for several hundred dollars depending on vintage, format, and recent market moves. (Some prestige pricing softened year-over-year in 2024 re-exports, highlighting variability.)
Expect at this tier:
Long lees aging, grand-site sourcing, and complex autolytic depth
Gift-ready packaging, numbered releases, and special formats
Cellar potential; ideal for milestones and collectors
Why these tiers make sense (at a glance):
Tier |
What You Get |
Great For |
Under $50 |
Entry points, half-bottles, promos |
Casual toasts, weeknights |
$50–$100 |
Core NV quality and rosé/BdB variety |
Dinners, parties, go-to house pour |
$100–$200 |
Vintage/special cuvées, longer aging |
Gifts, tastings, nuanced meals |
$200+ |
Prestige, collectibles, large formats |
Milestones, cellars, connoisseurs |
Note: Champagne’s legal minimums, ≥15 months cellar time for NV and ≥36 months for vintage, are key cost drivers; many producers age longer, which adds quality and carrying costs.
Formats change how a wine opens, ages, and pours. Use size filters to pinpoint the right champagne bottle before you add it to your cart.
Compact formats chill fast, travel well, and pour the right amount for small gatherings; quarter bottles are ~20 cl and halves are 37.5 cl, both official AOC sizes you’ll see when choosing a bottle of champagne for weeknights or gifting.
When minis/halves shine:
Weeknight toasts or tasting flights
Picnic, pool, or concert-friendly pours
Personalized place settings and gift bags
The classic 750 ml balances freshness and evolution; it’s the most common release size and the benchmark for value comparisons when tracking champagne price across producers and styles.
Quick notes:
Serves ~5 standard flutes
Chills in ~20–30 minutes in an ice bath
Most vintages and NV cuvées are available
Magnums often age more gracefully thanks to the lower oxygen-to-wine ratio, delivering finer mousse, more freshness, and a wider peak window, ideal for entertaining or cellaring selections you’ll buy champagne online and hold for special dates.
Why hosts love magnums:
Show-stopping presentation for parties
Slower oxidative change → longer “sweet spot”
More consistent pours across the table
Beyond magnum, formats like Jeroboam (3 L) to Nebuchadnezzar (15 L) exist for milestone events; they’re rare, celebrate-ready, and reflect serious craftsmanship, factors that influence champagne cost at release.
Reference sizes (AOC):
Name |
Volume |
750 ml Equivalent |
Jeroboam |
3 L |
4 |
Methuselah |
6 L |
8 |
Salmanazar |
9 L |
12 |
Balthazar |
12 L |
16 |
Nebuchadnezzar |
15 L |
20 |
Match the bottle to the moment, not just the headcount: minis/halves for spontaneity, 750 ml for flexibility, magnums for freshness at scale, and large formats for milestones, then scan our filters for limited champagne deals that fit your plan.
Rules of thumb:
Minis/halves: intimate pours, sampling, quick-chill
750 ml: weeknight dinners, most pairings
Magnums: parties, gifting, longer aging
3 L+: big celebrations, display impact
Two complementary ways to shop define Champagne: heritage “Maisons” that blend across crus for consistency, and grower-producers that spotlight single villages and parcels. Use these lenses to compare champagne bottles and find your style.
Every bottle carries a producer code that signals how the wine was made. Knowing these helps you navigate houses vs. growers with confidence.
Producer codes at a glance:
Code |
What it means |
NM , Négociant-Manipulant |
House/producer that may buy grapes, must, or wine and makes Champagne under its own label. |
RM , Récoltant-Manipulant |
Grower who makes and markets Champagne from their own vineyards. |
RC , Récoltant-Coopérateur |
Grower who sells Champagne vinified at a cooperative under their own label. |
CM , Coopérative de Manipulation |
A cooperative winery that bottles Champagne from members’ grapes. |
SR , Société de Récoltants |
An association of growers bottling together (not a formal coop). |
ND , Négociant-Distributeur |
Merchant labeling and selling finished bottles. |
MA , Marque d’Acheteur |
A buyer’s/alternate brand not tied to the producer’s name. |
These producer codes (NM, RM, CM, etc.) aren’t just branding, they're legally regulated under France’s AOC system to ensure transparency and protect Champagne's authenticity. Oversight comes from the Institut National de l’Origine et de la Qualité (INAO), the national body that defines and enforces wine appellation rules in France.
Grand Maisons (often labeled NM) specialize in master blends and extended aging to deliver a signature house style year after year, ideal when you prefer seamless texture and classic profiles while shopping champagne online.
Examples available in our collection:
When a House is a great pick:
You want a consistent, “signature” flavor across releases
You’re stocking up for events and need reliable crowd-pleasers
You prefer multi-vintage depth and classic, cellar-worthy cuvées
Grower Champagne (look for RM) is vineyard-driven and often single-village, channeling chalk, exposure, and farming choices, perfect when you want terroir detail and small-lot nuance.
Examples available in our collection:
When a Grower is a great pick:
You want site-specific character and seasonal variation
You enjoy comparing villages/crus side-by-side
You value small-scale farming and transparency (codes RM/RC/SR)
When you buy champagne online at MR D Wine, you’re shopping a specialist, sommelier‑curated Champagne shelf that balances iconic houses with grower discoveries, making it easy to compare styles, formats, and value, with seasonal offers to keep choices smart. Explore the collection for current availability and competitive pricing.
What you get at a glance:
Iconic maisons + terroir‑driven growers, curated for quality and discovery,ideal for everyday toasts and cellars, with rotating champagne deals.
Quick comparison of styles and formats (from halves to magnums) so you can align taste, occasion, and champagne prices fast.
Clear product pages and filters that help you pick the right champagne bottle without the guesswork.
Simple checkout and guidance if you prefer to order champagne online with personalized help.
If you’d like help choosing the right bottle for a dinner, milestone, or cellar plan, our team is happy to advise and steer you to the best fit for your taste, budget, and timing. Contact us if you need any assitance.
Most Champagne bottles range from $50 to $100, with vintage and prestige cuvées starting around $150 and climbing from there. You’ll find excellent value in non-vintage Bruts, while top-tier bottles—think Dom Pérignon or Krug—can hit $250+ depending on the release. Want to make it easy? Just head to Mr. D Wine Champagne Collection and filter by price to match your moment.
Champagne usually starts around $50, while Prosecco and Cava often land between $10 and $25. Why the difference? Time, tradition, and terroir. Champagne’s longer aging and bottle fermentation (not tank) come with added care, and yes, added cost. If you’re after great bubbles without the full Champagne price tag, check out our Sparkling Wine collection for delicious, wallet-friendly picks.
Start by visiting our Champagne Collection at Mr. D Wine to explore curated bottles by style, producer, or price. Once you find the right Champagne, add it to your cart, select your shipping option, and complete checkout. All orders require an adult (21+) signature upon delivery.
Champagne is French, bottle-fermented, and aged longer for depth and finesse. Prosecco is Italian, tank-fermented, light, and fruity. Cava is Spanish, made like Champagne but aged less. All delicious, just pick your style and price point.
A great NV Brut like Le Mesnil Grand Cru is your go-to for everyday versatility. Want more depth or something cellar-worthy? Step up to vintage picks like Laurent-Perrier Millésimé 2015 or iconic prestige cuvées like Dom Pérignon 2015. Use our filters to shop by style, producer, or format—and find your perfect bottle fast.
Some of the best values sit in the $50–$100 range. Think Le Mesnil Blanc de Blancs Grand Cru or Laurent-Perrier Brut NV, classic styles, great quality. Check Mr. D Wine Champagne deals for limited-time pricing on bottles you'd happily open any night.
If you're after Champagne character without the price tag, try traditional-method Cava or select Proseccos. They offer great texture and freshness at a fraction of the cost. Browse Mr. D Wine Sparkling Wine Collection for smart picks under $30.
A quality non-vintage (NV) Champagne typically runs $50–$100. Expect higher prices for vintage or single-vineyard cuvées, but also more depth and aging potential. Use our filters to align your budget with the moment.
Depends on your taste. Go for grand maisons like Laurent-Perrier or Dom Pérignon for iconic consistency, or explore grower names like Pierre Gimonnet for site-driven expression. At Mr. D Wine, we recommend trying both and building your own short list.
Cristal’s price reflects rare terroir, hand-harvested grapes, years on lees, and collector-level presentation. It’s not just Champagne, it’s craftsmanship, scarcity, and legacy in a bottle. Planning something big? Explore our Cristal Champagne Collection, they’re built for milestone moments.