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Australian Wine & Australian Wineries

Wineries in Australia can be found by clicking on a region in the Australia wine regions map.
Over 1,900 Australian wineries are integrated into our winery directory, and many wines
are available direct from the winery or from wine merchants.

You can buy Australian wine online from many Australian wineries or from participating wine merchants.
When you see a list of wineries, note the shopping cart icon as this indicates that you can buy this wine online.
Also included on the search results page are other links about Australia wine.


Australia Wineries can be found by clicking on a region in this Australia wine regions map
South Australia | Western Australia | Queensland | New South Wales | Victoria | Tasmania | New Zealand

Australia offers a wide range of wine regions and wines. Australia’s climates range from the cold Adelaide Hills to the cool Mornington Peninsula to the warm Hunter Valley.

While Australia has about 60 wine regions, the country has 103 “defined geographic indications” for wine growing districts covering zones, regions and sub-regions. The major wine producing Australian States are Australian Capital Territory (ACT), New South Wales, Northern Territory, Queensland, which is Australia's 2nd largest state, South Australia, Tasmania, which is the compact island state, Victoria where the most wineries are in this "Garden State", and Western Australia.

Australian wine production, mutually in quantity and quality, continues to be a primary feature of Australian history. The first vineyards were established in the 1830's in areas and by names that are still known today. Australia has some well established wine styles that are uniquely its own, guided by the splendid fortified Muscat wines. Australia is also well known for its Shiraz (known as Syrah in the Rhône Valley in France) and Cabernet Sauvignon based red wines. Australian sparkling red is another popular style, and specific regions are producing incredible wines with the Semillon grape.

Australia is not only a nation controlled by the desert- rimmed red rock or a tropical land surrounding the Great Barrier Reef, it is a modern, sophisticated city in a temperate climate near the coast. Australia is a large country with topography encompassing the cool foothills of the Tasmanian highlands with high rainfall areas in Victoria and New South Wales, the temperate maritime regions of South Australia and Western Australia and the tropical rainforests of Queensland. The soil types across Australia vary from deep black volcanic loams to sandy soils above gravel and rich red clays over limestone. These soil types provide the foundation for Australian wines. Sydney, Australia’s largest city, is near latitudes’ 34th parallel, similar to Spain’s Seville, while Melbourne is cooler, on the 38th parallel, is the southern hemisphere equivalent to Sicily and San Francisco. The State capitals of Adelaide and Perth lie between these two latitudes while Hobart is Australia’s southern most capital city.

Australia has a long history of viticulture. Wine grape growing began soon after the arrival of European settlers in Australia with grapevines among the cargo of the First Fleet of 1788. In 1831, viticulturist James Busby undertook a three-month tour of Spain and France and returned with a collection of 543 vine cuttings (362 of which survived) and started the first vineyard in Sydney’s Botanic Gardens, Victoria and South Australia. Some of the oldest vines in the world are in Australia, because most of the nation’s wine regions escaped the plague of phylloxera, which wiped out many ancient plantings in Europe during the 1800s.

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