A guide to budget wines in Burgundy.

Budget Wines in Burgundy

Maison Louis Latour Bourgogne Chardonnay ★ 4.1

Bourgogne AOCChardonnayEUR 14-18 retail

A regional Bourgogne Blanc that is the easiest entry to white Burgundy. Unoaked, crisp green-apple and citrus Chardonnay from across the region, a reliable house benchmark under twenty euros.

Tip: The plain Bourgogne Chardonnay is the value play; trade up to the Macon-Lugny only when you want a touch more flesh from the southern fruit.

Maison Louis Latour Macon-Lugny ★ 4.2

Macon-Lugny AOCChardonnayEUR 16-20 retail

Chardonnay from the warm limestone slopes around Lugny in the southern Maconnais. Rounder and riper than basic Bourgogne Blanc, with orchard fruit and a soft finish, dependable value for the table.

Tip: A safe house white in any French wine shop; serve lightly chilled with roast chicken or a goat-cheese salad.

Cave de Lugny Macon-Villages ★ 4.0

Macon-Villages AOCChardonnayEUR 10-15 retail

The cooperative that makes roughly a third of all Macon-Villages turns out a clean, fruit-forward Chardonnay at supermarket prices. The everyday white Burgundy benchmark for under fifteen euros.

Tip: Look for the single-vineyard La Cote Blanche bottling for a small step up that still stays comfortably under twenty euros.

La Chablisienne Petit Chablis ★ 4.1

Petit Chablis AOCChardonnayEUR 14-18 retail

Petit Chablis from the plateau soils above the main Chablis slope, lively and steely with green-apple and citrus bite. The most affordable way into real Chablis tension under twenty euros.

Tip: Petit Chablis is built for youth; drink the most recent vintage with oysters or shellfish rather than cellaring it.

La Chablisienne Chablis ★ 4.2

Chablis AOCChardonnayEUR 18-24 retail

Village Chablis from the cooperative that supplies a quarter of the appellation. Flinty, dry and mineral, the textbook unoaked expression of Kimmeridgian limestone for under twenty-five euros.

Tip: This is the value entry to true village Chablis; the named cuvees La Pierrelee and La Sereine are the same wine under merchant labels in some markets.

Domaine A. et P. de Villaine Bouzeron ★ 4.4

Bouzeron AOCAligoteEUR 22-25 retail

The reference Aligote from the only village appellation reserved for the grape, farmed organically by Aubert de Villaine of Romanee-Conti. Citrus, white-flower and a saline cut, proof Aligote is no afterthought, just under twenty-five euros.

Tip: Bouzeron is the one place Aligote earns its own AOC; this is the bottle that converts sceptics. A classic match for snails or a gougeres aperitif.

Bouchard Aine et Fils Bourgogne Pinot Noir ★ 4.0

Bourgogne AOCPinot NoirEUR 15-20 retail

A regional Bourgogne Rouge that delivers the bright red-cherry and light-tannin signature of Burgundian Pinot Noir at an everyday price. The easiest introduction to the grape's silky red style.

Tip: Serve regional Bourgogne Rouge a touch cool to lift the fruit; it is built for the weeknight table, not the cellar.

Bouchard Pere et Fils Bourgogne Aligote ★ 3.9

Bourgogne Aligote AOCAligoteEUR 13-17 retail

A bracing, high-acid Aligote from one of Beaune's historic houses. Lemon, green apple and a mineral snap, the original base of a kir and a sharp aperitif white for well under twenty euros.

Tip: Aligote is the traditional base for kir with creme de cassis; on its own it shines with shellfish and fresh cheese.

La Chablisienne Cremant de Bourgogne ★ 4.0

Cremant de Bourgogne AOCChardonnay, Pinot NoirEUR 16-22 retail

Traditional-method Burgundian sparkling built on Chardonnay with Pinot Noir, made the same way as Champagne. Fine bubbles, brioche and citrus, a serious fizz for under twenty-five euros.

Tip: Cremant de Bourgogne is the value alternative to Champagne for a celebration; chill well and pour as an aperitif.

Maison Louis Latour Macon-Lugny Les Genievres ★ 4.1

Macon-Lugny AOCChardonnayEUR 18-23 retail

A single-named Macon-Lugny lieu-dit, Les Genievres, with a little more depth and breadth than the basic village wine. Ripe orchard fruit and a creamy edge, dependable value just inside twenty-five euros.

Tip: The step from basic Macon-Lugny to Les Genievres is worth it for a dinner-party white; it carries richer dishes like roast pork or creamy pasta.

Budget Wines in Burgundy, FAQ

When is the best time to visit Burgundy for wine?

Peak wine-travel season in Burgundy is spring through autumn, with harvest the standout window.

Do I need an appointment to taste at Burgundy estates?

classified-growth and grand-cru estates require booking days to weeks ahead; smaller family domaines often take walk-ins midweek.

What hours do Burgundy cellars and tasting rooms keep?

most estates open 10:00 to 17:00 by appointment, often closed Sunday and Monday.

How does tipping work at Burgundy tastings?

tipping is not expected at tastings; buying a bottle from the cellar door is the customary thank-you.

What is the one wine to try in Burgundy?

Ask the next local you meet what they would order. Burgundy rewards trust.

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