Bordeaux 2025 en primeur: Everything you need to know with Decanter's expert insights
Bordeaux 2025 en primeur releases are poised to begin as Decanter brings you hundreds of exclusive tasting notes and in-depth analysis on a vintage showing great promise in the barrel but facing a tricky wine market.
Top châteaux from Pauillac to Pomerol are preparing their Bordeaux 2025 en primeur release offers after the region welcomed journalists, critics and merchants from across the world for its annual barrel tastings.
This Friday (1 May), hundreds of exclusive tasting notes on Bordeaux 2025 wines will be made available to Decanter Premium subscribers, alongside in-depth analysis on the vintage and market conditions – to give readers the best possible insight.
Early signs point to a small yet thrilling Bordeaux 2025 vintage at many estates, with the best wines hitting heights that one has come to associate with years ending in ‘5’.
Pricing will inevitably be an important factor in a Bordeaux 2025 en primeur campaign that is facing persistent macroeconomic storm clouds and a wine market that is well-stocked with recent vintages.
Decanter's Bordeaux 2025 en primeur coverage
What's coming up on Friday 1 May
- Full Bordeaux 2025 vintage report with in-depth look at key appellations
- Exclusive tasting notes and scores on hundreds of Bordeaux 2025 wines
- Market insights, including expert commentary and release price analysis
- Decanter Value Index: The best first growth vintages for collectors
Setting the scene
At its best, en primeur is a great opportunity to secure ex-château stocks of brilliant wines in a variety of bottle formats – at an advantageous price.
The small size of the Bordeaux 2025 crop at many estates could enhance the sense of en primeur as a buying opportunity.
However, sales have broadly struggled in recent campaigns amid challenging market conditions. Some wines have fallen in price following en primeur release, according to several sources, including Liv-ex, a global marketplace for the trade.
Get our daily fine wine reviews, latest wine ratings, news and travel guides delivered straight to your inbox.
Despite some relative success stories for individual names, the en primeur system has come under further scrutiny.
‘There are always some wines that “work”,’ wrote market expert Miles Davis, of Vinum Fine Wines, in his April report – setting out reasons why the merchant still backs en primeur.
However, he said a key problem to date has been ‘comparable vintages available on the secondary market at prices less than the new release’.
Many châteaux have made big efforts to cut release prices in the past two years, and pricing will inevitably be something to watch closely this time around.
With the right vintage at the right price, en primeur can be an exciting time.
It's also an opportunity to explore the latest vintage to have arrived in Bordeaux estates' cellars.
Insights gleaned during en primeur offer an unrivalled window into winemaking developments across a region that is sometimes underrated for its ability to balance tradition with dynamism.
Related articles
Stars of Bordeaux 2023 in-bottle tastings: 600 wine reviews
How Bordeaux 2016 surprised winemakers to compete with all-time greats
Lafite 1870 magnums smash estimates in 'immortal' Bordeaux auction
Chris Mercer is a Bristol-based freelance editor and journalist who spent nearly four years as digital editor of Decanter.com, having previously been Decanter’s news editor across online and print.
He has written about, and reported on, the wine and food sectors for more than 10 years for both consumer and trade media.
Chris first became interested in the wine world while living in Languedoc-Roussillon after completing a journalism Masters in the UK. These days, his love of wine commonly tests his budgeting skills.
Beyond wine, Chris also has an MSc in food policy and has a particular interest in sustainability issues. He has also been a food judge at the UK’s Great Taste Awards.
