My Australian wine highlights of 2025
If you think you know Aussie wine, you really need to think again… Australia editor Julie Sheppard rounds up a year of tastings that roamed around regions, styles, vintages and grapes to show the glorious diversity of Down Under.
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After a packed trip Down Under at the end of 2024 – when I clocked up substantial air miles between Western and South Australia, plus a trip to Tasmania and visits in Victoria – 2025 was UK-based.
But thanks to Zoom tastings, fantastic generic and merchant tastings in London with producers flying in – plus a revolving door of visiting winemakers at Decanter HQ, it almost felt like I never left.
Choosing the best bits from a year of tasting is a tall order, but in this roundup I’ve focused on the wineries, wines, grapes and styles that have excited me the most. These aren’t necessarily my highest-scoring Aussie wines of 2025 – check out our Wines of the Year reveal in the January issue for more on those.
But these are the wines that I think will give you a taste of the diversity, quality and excitement that can be found in Australia at the moment.
Great Grenache
If there’s one variety that I feel really hit its stride in 2025 it has to be Grenache. The year kicked off with the first-ever Aussie Grenache Decanter panel tasting, where an impressive 63% of the wines were ranked Highly Recommended or above.
The buzz around Grenache continued in April at the Next Generation Australian Grenache tasting organised by Amelia Jukes.
With a mix of familiar names – from Yalumba to Yangarra – alongside new discoveries such as Mark Bulman (see below), it showcased how this Rhône grape is flourishing in Australia.
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Site specific
This is due in no small part to a trend I’m calling micro-regionality. In my 2025 Aussie snapshot, published to mark Australia Day on 26 January, I talked about how site-specific winemaking has now become widespread Down Under.
Increasingly single-vineyard – and even single plot – wines are highlighting very specific terroirs, showing the considerable work being done by winemakers to refine their understanding of their own land. A perfect example is the work done at Alkina by Pedro Parra (aka Dr Terroir) to isolate distinct polygons.
While the Australian wine scene has always been gloriously unfettered by European-style appellation rules, thinking in terms of grand cru or premier cru sites is now a genuinely helpful comparison when it comes to talking about top Aussie terroirs.

Australia’s grands crus
Take Blewitt Springs in north-east McLaren Vale, South Australia. In this subregion – championed by producers including the much-missed Peter Fraser of Yangarra – the arid, sandy loess over ironstone soils produce the ethereal Grenaches that are helping to put the variety on the map.
Or Wilyabrup, a premium pocket of Western Australia’s Margaret River, where ironstone soils and a maritime climate fashion long-lived Cabernet and Chardonnay. Or Victoria’s cool Mornington Peninsula, just 967ha of diverse volcanic soils surrounded on three sides by ocean, and home to world-class Pinot and Chardonnay.
Then there’s Tasmanina’s Tamar Valley, source of stunning sparkling wines. I could easily continue the list…
We’ll be exploring this more in 2026 with an article highlighting Australia’s greatest vineyards in the June issue, in celebration of the 70th vintage of Henschke’s Mount Edelstone from Eden Valley, widely considered Australia’s first single-vineyard wine.
Meanwhile you’ll spot a few single-vineyard wines in my highlights list below.
Old and new
Mixing heritage and innovation is something Australian wineries seem to do with ease. I was reminded of this repeatedly through the year as winemakers popped into Decanter HQ with their latest vintages and invariably something new they’d been working on too.
Take Sam Barry of Jim Barry Wines, with the latest 2024 Florita Riesling – and a 2015 that showed just how beautifully Clare Valley Rieslings age (see below).
We also tasted a brand new wine – Slate Hill Riesling 2023, set for release in February 2026 – the result of an ongoing collaboration with Ernst Loosen of legendary Mosel estate Dr Loosen.
Their joint venture LoosenBarry Rieslings both rip up the rule book and pay homage to traditional ways of doing things.
It’s a similar story at Hugh Hamilton Wines in McLaren Vale, as I discovered when sixth generation Mary Hamilton paid a visit in September. Founded in 1837 by Richard Hamilton, today the winery is Australia’s leading producer of Georgian grape Saperavi, a variety pioneered by her father Hugh.
Look out for The Oddball single-varietal Saperavi, but also the compelling Black Ops Saperavi-Shiraz I’ve recommended below – a blend that puts a clever twist on an Australian staple.
One-stop shop
And this is Australia’s USP: it really does deliver anything a wine lover could desire. Do you want archetypal varietal wines – a Hunter Valley Semillon or a Barossa Shiraz perhaps? Then you’ve got it.
Do you want elegant classics as good as anything from Bordeaux, Burgundy or Champagne? You’ve got that too.
Do you want twists on any of those classics? Tick. What about thrilling new wave styles made from Italian, Portuguese or Rhône grapes? Oh yes: Australia can do that too.
And what’s more, all of these wonderful wine styles are continually evolving.
The big picture
My final big tasting of the year proved this point perfectly. Always an annual highlight, Matthew Jukes showcased his 100 Best Australian Wines on a chilly November afternoon. It was a long roll call of Australia’s biggest hitters: Tyrell’s, Penfolds, Yalumba, Grosset, Seppeltsfield, Vasse Felix, Leeuwin Estate, to name a few favourites on the day.
But there was also the juicy and smashable Pizzini Lambrusco Salamino from Victoria’s King Valley; Pikes Luccio Fiano from SA’s Clare Valley; Swinney’s Farvie Mourvèdre from Frankland River in WA; Valley Vignerons Sangiovese from Payten & Jones in Yarra Valley.
The choices are plentiful – and it’s frustrating that this message isn’t getting out to a wider international audience, who still think of ‘sunshine in a bottle’ Chardonnay and big bold Shiraz as Australia’s calling cards.
As my 2025 tastings proved, that misconception is completely outdated and the picture is so much more kaleidoscopic and joyful. It’s a genuine delight to spend my time exploring Aussie wines and I can’t wait to see what 2026 brings…
Julie’s Australian highlights: 10 wines to try
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Dr Edge, PJ Dredge Blanc de Noirs, Tamar Valley, Tasmania, Australia, 2020

South Australian Peter Dredge is now based in Tasmania, where his detailed and expressive wines showcase local terroir. This Blanc de Noirs from cool-climate Tamar...
2020
TasmaniaAustralia
Dr EdgeTamar Valley
Bass Phillip, Premium Chardonnay, Gippsland, Victoria, Australia, 2022

The first vines were planted at Bass Phillip in Leongatha, the heart of Gippsland dairy country, in 1979. Burgundy luminary Jean-Marie Fourrier began consulting for...
2022
VictoriaAustralia
Bass PhillipGippsland
Jim Barry, The Florita Riesling, Clare Valley, South Australia, Australia, 2015

From the Florita Vineyard, planted in 1962, this is seminal Clare Valley Riesling: long-lived, layered and with thrilling acidity. Sam Barry describes the 2015 vintage...
2015
South AustraliaAustralia
Jim BarryClare Valley
Mount Pleasant, Single Vineyard Lovedale Cellar Aged Semillon, Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia, 2019

The Lovedale Vineyard was planted by legendary winemaker Maurice O'Shea in 1946. From what the winery describes as a 'perfect vintage' and with the added...
2019
New South WalesAustralia
Mount PleasantHunter Valley
Nocturne, Forrest Vineyard Chardonnay, Margaret River, Western Australia, Australia, 2022

Nocturne is the personal project of Julian Langworthy, winemaker at Deep Woods. He works with select parcels of Chardonnay from exceptional sites: in this case...
2022
Western AustraliaAustralia
NocturneMargaret River
Xanadu, Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon, Margaret River, Western Australia, Australia, 2022

A Best in Show winner at Decanter World Wine Awards 2025. From a great vintage, this is a considered blend of old Cabernet vineyards in...
2022
Western AustraliaAustralia
XanaduMargaret River
Bulman Wines, Gary's Vineyard Grenache, McLaren Vale, Blewitt Springs, South Australia, Australia, 2023

Mark Bulman was the first person ever to win the Jimmy Watson Memorial Trophy for a Grenache, as winemaker for Turkey Flat. So it's perhaps...
2023
South AustraliaAustralia
Bulman WinesMcLaren Vale
Torbreck, RunRig, Barossa Valley, South Australia, Australia, 2017

I don't think anyone can fail to be seduced by Torbreck's big, beautiful and oh-so-smooth RunRig Shiraz. Built for the long haul, RunRig is made...
2017
South AustraliaAustralia
TorbreckBarossa Valley
Kooyong Estate, Pinot Noir, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria, Australia, 2023

The first vines at Kooyong were planted in 1996; this is sourced from four distinct vineyard blocks: Meres, Haven, Ferrous and Nord. Fermented with a...
2023
VictoriaAustralia
Kooyong EstateMornington Peninsula
Hugh Hamilton, Black Ops, McLaren Vale, South Australia, Australia, 2022

Richard Hamilton was one of the first to plant vines in South Australia in 1837; today his family winery is run by fifth-generation Hugh Hamilton...
2022
South AustraliaAustralia
Hugh HamiltonMcLaren Vale
Dr Edge, PJ Dredge Blanc de Noirs, Tamar Valley, Tasmania, Australia, 2020

South Australian Peter Dredge is now based in Tasmania, where his detailed and expressive wines showcase local terroir. This Blanc de Noirs from cool-climate Tamar...
2020
TasmaniaAustralia
Dr EdgeTamar Valley
Bass Phillip, Premium Chardonnay, Gippsland, Victoria, Australia, 2022

The first vines were planted at Bass Phillip in Leongatha, the heart of Gippsland dairy country, in 1979. Burgundy luminary Jean-Marie Fourrier began consulting for...
2022
VictoriaAustralia
Bass PhillipGippsland
Jim Barry, The Florita Riesling, Clare Valley, South Australia, Australia, 2015

From the Florita Vineyard, planted in 1962, this is seminal Clare Valley Riesling: long-lived, layered and with thrilling acidity. Sam Barry describes the 2015 vintage...
2015
South AustraliaAustralia
Jim BarryClare Valley
Mount Pleasant, Single Vineyard Lovedale Cellar Aged Semillon, Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia, 2019

The Lovedale Vineyard was planted by legendary winemaker Maurice O'Shea in 1946. From what the winery describes as a 'perfect vintage' and with the added...
2019
New South WalesAustralia
Mount PleasantHunter Valley
Nocturne, Forrest Vineyard Chardonnay, Margaret River, Western Australia, Australia, 2022

Nocturne is the personal project of Julian Langworthy, winemaker at Deep Woods. He works with select parcels of Chardonnay from exceptional sites: in this case...
2022
Western AustraliaAustralia
NocturneMargaret River
Xanadu, Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon, Margaret River, Western Australia, Australia, 2022

A Best in Show winner at Decanter World Wine Awards 2025. From a great vintage, this is a considered blend of old Cabernet vineyards in...
2022
Western AustraliaAustralia
XanaduMargaret River
Bulman Wines, Gary's Vineyard Grenache, McLaren Vale, Blewitt Springs, South Australia, Australia, 2023

Mark Bulman was the first person ever to win the Jimmy Watson Memorial Trophy for a Grenache, as winemaker for Turkey Flat. So it's perhaps...
2023
South AustraliaAustralia
Bulman WinesMcLaren Vale
Torbreck, RunRig, Barossa Valley, South Australia, Australia, 2017

I don't think anyone can fail to be seduced by Torbreck's big, beautiful and oh-so-smooth RunRig Shiraz. Built for the long haul, RunRig is made...
2017
South AustraliaAustralia
TorbreckBarossa Valley
Kooyong Estate, Pinot Noir, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria, Australia, 2023

The first vines at Kooyong were planted in 1996; this is sourced from four distinct vineyard blocks: Meres, Haven, Ferrous and Nord. Fermented with a...
2023
VictoriaAustralia
Kooyong EstateMornington Peninsula
Hugh Hamilton, Black Ops, McLaren Vale, South Australia, Australia, 2022

Richard Hamilton was one of the first to plant vines in South Australia in 1837; today his family winery is run by fifth-generation Hugh Hamilton...
2022
South AustraliaAustralia
Hugh HamiltonMcLaren Vale

Julie Sheppard joined the Decanter team in 2018 and is Regional Editor for Australia, New Zealand and South Africa & Spirits Editor.
Before Decanter, she worked for a range of drinks and food titles, including as managing editor of both Imbibe and Square Meal, associate publisher of The Drinks Business, senior editor of the Octopus Publishing Group and Supplements editor of Harpers Wine & Spirit. As a contributor, she has over 20 years’ experience writing about food, drink and travel for a wide range of publications, including Condé Nast Traveller, Delicious, Waitrose Kitchen, Waitrose Drinks, Time Out and national newspapers including The Telegraph and The Sunday Times.
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