Germany Wine Guide
Germany produces the world’s finest Riesling — from the razor-dry and electric to the sublimely sweet. The Mosel’s slate slopes, the Rheingau’s limestone, and the Ahr’s volcanic rock create wines of extraordinary delicacy and precision that no other country on Earth can replicate.
Why Germany Produces the World’s Greatest Riesling
Riesling in Germany achieves something no other country can match: extraordinary complexity at low alcohol. A Mosel Spätlese with 8% alcohol contains more flavor compounds, more aromatic intensity, and more structural tension than most 14% New World Rieslings. This is because the Mosel Valley is at the northern edge of where grapes can ripen — the growing season is so long and slow (grapes may hang on the vine until November) that flavor compounds accumulate without the accompanying sugar levels that drive up alcohol. Steep slate slopes facing south absorb heat during the day and release it at night, keeping vines warm enough to ripen while retaining the acidity that gives German Riesling its electric freshness.
The Prädikat System: Understanding German Wine Labels
Germany’s quality classification for Qualitätswein mit Prädikat (QmP) ranks wines by the natural sugar level of the grapes at harvest, which corresponds to ripeness and concentration. Kabinett is the lightest, made from fully ripe but not overripe grapes. Spätlese (“late harvest”) uses grapes picked after the normal harvest, riper and more concentrated. Auslese (“select harvest”) uses hand-selected bunches of overripe grapes. Beerenauslese (BA) uses individually selected overripe and botrytis-affected berries — rare, expensive, extraordinarily sweet. Trockenbeerenauslese (TBA) uses shriveled, botrytis-affected individual berries — one of the rarest and most expensive wines in the world. Eiswein uses frozen grapes harvested in below-freezing temperatures.
Beyond the Mosel: Germany’s Other Great Regions
The Rheingau is Riesling’s historic home, producing wines of power and structure from Rüdesheim and Johannisberg on the Rhine’s north bank. Rheinhessen, Germany’s largest wine region, has undergone a quality revolution driven by a new generation of producers making precise, terroir-focused Riesling and Silvaner from limestone and slate soils. The Pfalz produces Germany’s most diverse wines in its warmest climate: robust Rieslings with more body, plus excellent Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc, and Dornfelder. The Ahr Valley, one of Germany’s smallest regions, is entirely devoted to Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir) grown on volcanic basalt and slate, producing Germany’s finest red wines.
All German Wine Regions
Frequently Asked Questions
Is German Riesling sweet or dry?
What is the difference between Mosel and Rheingau Riesling?
How long does German Riesling age?
What food pairs with German wine?
By the Popular Wines team. Last updated July 2026. Browse all regions or explore the World Wine Map.