Organic White Wine
in the UK
From Burgundy to the Loire, Alsace to the Mosel. Why organic and biodynamic white wine is worth seeking out and which producers are making it well.
White wine is Britain's favourite. It is also where the organic and biodynamic range has grown most quickly, and where the quality, at every price point, has never been better.
We drink a lot of white wine and have found the shift to organic more noticeable here than with red. The wines feel cleaner, more expressive and more interesting. That is not something we can prove scientifically but it is consistent enough across enough bottles that we no longer buy conventional white wine as a default.
The pesticide case is the same as for all wine. Vineyards are among the most heavily sprayed agricultural land in the world, and conventional white wine carries residues that organic production eliminates entirely. For everyday drinking wine bought without knowing the producer, organic certification is the most reliable shortcut to a cleaner bottle.
This page covers the regions producing the most interesting organic and biodynamic white wine, what to look for when buying, and which producers are worth seeking out in Britain.
What separates good organic white
from genuinely great
The same principles that apply to organic red wine apply here. Certification is the floor. What matters beyond that is the quality of the viticulture, the age of the vines, the yields and the winemaking. A certified organic Chardonnay from a high-yielding estate with a lazy winemaker will be worse than a conventional Chardonnay from a brilliant producer who cares about every detail.
For white wine specifically, freshness and precision are the qualities that most clearly benefit from organic viticulture. Vines grown in genuinely healthy, biologically active soil produce grapes with better natural acidity, more complex flavour compounds and a clearer expression of terroir. This is most obvious in wines where transparency is the point — Chablis, Muscadet, Alsace Riesling, Mosel, Burgundy white. In these styles, the difference between organic and conventional is most apparent.
Low intervention in the winery matters as much as organic viticulture in the vineyard for white wine. Native yeast fermentation, minimal fining and filtering, no added acidity or sugar — these are the hallmarks of a producer who is letting the grape speak rather than shaping it into a formula. Look for these on producer websites and technical sheets.
Skin contact white wine — orange wine — deserves a separate mention. Made by leaving white grape juice in contact with the skins during fermentation, skin contact wines are tannin-rich, amber in colour and structurally closer to red wine than conventional white. The pesticide argument for using organic grapes in skin contact wine is stronger than for any other style, because the skins are in contact with the wine throughout fermentation and their chemical load passes directly into the finished bottle.
The best skin contact wines in the world come almost exclusively from organic or biodynamic producers. This is not a coincidence. Producers who care enough about their wine to make it this way also tend to care about their vineyards.
Biodynamic white wine is where the philosophy produces its most extraordinary results. Domaine Leflaive in Burgundy. Zind-Humbrecht in Alsace. Nikolaihof in the Wachau. These are producers making white wines of extraordinary precision and longevity from biodynamically farmed vineyards. The wines are expensive. They are also among the finest white wines produced anywhere in the world.
Where organic white wine
is made well
Burgundy produces the benchmark for organic and biodynamic white wine. The great white Burgundies — Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet, Chablis — are increasingly made by producers who have converted to organic or biodynamic viticulture. Domaine Leflaive, one of the most celebrated white wine producers in the world, has been biodynamic since 1997. The results speak for themselves.
Alsace has a particularly strong tradition of organic and biodynamic viticulture. The dry, sunny climate reduces fungal pressure and makes managing without synthetic fungicides more achievable. Zind-Humbrecht, Domaine Weinbach and Marcel Deiss are among the most celebrated producers, all farming organically or biodynamically. Riesling, Gewurztraminer and Pinot Gris from this region are some of the most age-worthy white wines made anywhere.
The Loire Valley is the heartland of natural and organic white wine in France. Muscadet, Vouvray, Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé all have strong organic producers. The Loire has been at the forefront of the natural wine movement for decades and the range of interesting organic white wine from this region available in Britain is excellent.
Germany and Austria produce some of the most exciting organic white wine in the world. Mosel Riesling from organic producers — with its extraordinary combination of low alcohol, high acidity and mineral precision — is one of the great wine styles. Austrian Grüner Veltliner and Riesling from biodynamic producers in the Wachau and Kamptal are similarly exceptional.
Italy produces a vast range of organic white wine, from the crisp Vermentino of Sardinia to the rich Verdicchio of the Marche, the mineral Etna Bianco of Sicily and the complex Soave of the Veneto. Italian organic white wine offers some of the best value in the category and the range available in Britain through specialist merchants is broad.
Spain is increasingly strong for organic white wine. Galicia in the northwest produces outstanding Albariño from organic producers, and the high altitude whites of Rueda and the Basque Country offer fresh, mineral alternatives to the more familiar French and German styles.
England is producing increasingly interesting organic white wine. The cool climate suits aromatic varieties and the chalk and limestone soils of the south east produce white wines with real precision and character. Bacchus, Ortega and Pinot Blanc from English organic producers are worth exploring as a genuinely distinctive style.
Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc is the most popular white wine style in Britain. Organic versions are widely available and represent good value. If you drink a lot of New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc, switching to organic is one of the easiest and most impactful changes you can make. The food miles are real but the organic credentials of the best Marlborough producers are genuine.
Organic white wine producers
worth seeking out
These are producers we have researched and believe to be genuinely worth seeking out. Most are available through specialist merchants in Britain, particularly Vintage Roots and Les Caves de Pyrène.