Washington Wine Guide
Washington is America’s second-largest wine state by volume, and it produces some of the most distinctive Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, and Riesling in the New World. East of the Cascades, the climate is semi-arid and continental — intense sun, cold nights, and almost no disease pressure.
Why Washington Produces Wine Unlike Any Other State
The Cascade Mountains are the key to Washington wine. West of them, Seattle gets 38 inches of rain per year. East of them, in the Columbia Basin where almost all Washington vineyards sit, annual rainfall averages 6 to 8 inches. This is near-desert. Vines must be irrigated, which gives winemakers precise control over water stress. The combination of desert conditions, intense summer sun, cold nights (which preserve natural acidity and aromatic intensity), and volcanic basalt soils produces wines with a distinctive character: ripe fruit, firm structure, and a purity that California, with its more maritime moderation, rarely achieves.
Columbia Valley: The Heartland
Columbia Valley is Washington’s largest and most important AVA, a geographic giant encompassing most of the state’s vineyards east of the Cascades and including all of its sub-AVAs. The Columbia River runs through this landscape of sage and basalt, moderating temperatures and reducing frost risk. Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Syrah dominate the reds; Riesling, Chardonnay, and Sauvignon Blanc lead the whites. Washington Riesling, in particular, is among the most underappreciated whites in America — it achieves the balance of fruit, acidity, and mineral texture that German Riesling takes decades of vine age to reach.
Walla Walla and Red Mountain: Washington’s Prestige Zones
Walla Walla Valley, in the state’s southeast corner, has established itself as Washington’s most prestigious wine destination. The town of Walla Walla, a former wheat-farming community, is now a thriving wine tourism hub with over 100 tasting rooms. The gravel and cobble soils grow Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, and Merlot of remarkable concentration and structure. Red Mountain AVA, the smallest in Washington, is a south-facing slope of calcareous silt loam — a soil type that appears nowhere else in the state — producing Cabernet Sauvignon with more density, tannin, and aging potential than anywhere else in Washington.
All Washington State Wine Regions
Frequently Asked Questions
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By the Popular Wines team. Last updated July 2026. Browse all regions or explore the World Wine Map.