Argentina Wine Guide
Argentina took a grape that Europe had largely forgotten — Malbec — and turned it into one of the world’s most recognizable wine varieties. At altitudes between 800 and 1,500 meters in the Andes foothills, Argentine Malbec achieves a depth and concentration impossible at sea level.
Why Altitude Changes Everything
The Andes create Argentina’s wine. The mountains block Pacific moisture from reaching the vineyards, creating a desert climate where vines must be irrigated with snowmelt from the peaks above. But the altitude — most Mendoza vineyards sit at 800 to 1,100 meters, with Lujan de Cuyo and Valle de Uco reaching 1,500 meters — provides intense ultraviolet radiation that thickens grape skins, driving color and tannin depth. The same altitude brings cold nights that lock in the aromatic compounds and acidity that prevent the wine from becoming flat and jammy. The result is Malbec unlike anywhere on Earth.
Malbec: From French Afterthought to World Star
Malbec originated in Cahors, southwest France, where it makes dense, brooding wine called “black wine.” In Bordeaux, it was a minor blending component. In Argentina, it found its true home. French agronomist Michel Pouget brought cuttings to Mendoza in 1853 at the behest of Governor Domingo Sarmiento. For a century, Malbec was used mostly for cheap table wine. Then in the 1990s, visionary producers like Nicolás Catena Zapata began planting at higher altitudes, reducing yields, and aging in French oak. The resulting wines stunned international critics and triggered a revolution. Today Argentine Malbec ranges from excellent $12 bottles to single-vineyard expressions costing hundreds of dollars.
Mendoza and Beyond
Mendoza produces 70 percent of Argentina’s wine and contains its most prestigious sub-regions. Lujan de Cuyo, the first Argentine appellation to be officially designated, produces structured, classical Malbec. Valle de Uco, further south and higher in elevation, has become Argentina’s most exciting zone — Gualtallary and Altamira in particular produce wines of remarkable minerality and tension. Outside Mendoza, Salta’s Cafayate Valley at 1,700 meters grows Torrontes, Argentina’s signature white grape, with floral, grapey aromas and surprising acidity. Patagonia’s Rio Negro Valley, 1,200 kilometers south of Mendoza, produces surprisingly elegant Pinot Noir and Malbec in a cold, wind-swept climate.
All Argentine Wine Regions
Frequently Asked Questions
What makes Argentine Malbec different from French Malbec?
What is Torrontes?
What is Valle de Uco?
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By the Popular Wines team. Last updated July 2026. Browse all regions or explore the World Wine Map.