Italy·Foundational·Mediterranean coastal

Bolgheri DOC

The founding Super Tuscan appellation. Coastal Tuscany terroir suited to Cabernet-led blends. Home to Sassicaia (which has its own monopolio DOC) and Ornellaia.

Established
DOC defined 1994 (after Sassicaia’s commercial success)
Classification
DOC
Climate
Mediterranean coastal
Soil
Sandy loam, clay, gravel in varying ratios; coasta…
Principal grapes
4
Cross-references
6

About Bolgheri

Bolgheri DOC was created in 1994 — a regulatory acknowledgment of what Sassicaia’s commercial success had already proven: that this coastal portion of Tuscany could produce world-class Cabernet-led wines that didn’t fit within the traditional Italian appellation framework (which had restricted DOC-grade wine to specific historic varieties). The appellation permits Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Syrah, Sangiovese, and other varieties in flexible blending ratios. The terroir difference from inland Tuscany (Chianti, Brunello) is significant: coastal climate, sandy-loam-gravel soils, and substantially warmer growing season. Sassicaia (the original Super Tuscan) operates under its own unique designation — Bolgheri Sassicaia DOC — a single-estate appellation. Other foundational producers include Ornellaia (Frescobaldi), Le Macchiole, Grattamacco, and Tenuta Argentiera. Bolgheri styles range from Bordeaux-mimetic (Sassicaia, Ornellaia) to more idiosyncratic single-vineyard blends.

Terroir & regulation

Geography
Tyrrhenian coastal plain in the Maremma region of Tuscany
Climate
Mediterranean coastal — sea breeze moderation, warm dry summers
Soil
Sandy loam, clay, gravel in varying ratios; coastal plain alluvial deposits
Principal grapes
Cabernet SauvignonCabernet FrancMerlotSyrah
Established
DOC defined 1994 (after Sassicaia’s commercial success)

Principal producers

  • Tenuta San Guido (Sassicaia)
  • Ornellaia (Frescobaldi)
  • Le Macchiole
  • Grattamacco

Editorial notes

Practical guidance

Bolgheri wines age 15-25+ years from strong vintages. The Bolgheri Sassicaia DOC is monopolio — only Tenuta San Guido produces it. The DOC itself dates to 1994 but the wines that justified it (Sassicaia from 1968 onward) predate it by decades.

Cross-references

Related styles

Related cities