Virginia Wine Guide
Virginia was Thomas Jefferson’s dream — he believed the Blue Ridge foothills would one day rival France. Three centuries later, his prediction is being fulfilled. Virginia is producing Cabernet Franc, Viognier, and Petit Verdot of genuine international quality from over 400 wineries.
Thomas Jefferson’s Vision Realized
Thomas Jefferson made 14 attempts to grow European Vitis vinifera grapes at Monticello. He failed every time, defeated by phylloxera, black rot, and an unfamiliar climate. But he was right about the potential. Today, with modern viticulture, disease-resistant rootstock, and a better understanding of which varieties suit the Blue Ridge foothills, Virginia produces wines that would have stunned Jefferson. Specifically, Cabernet Franc — a variety he grew in his Williamsburg cellar — has emerged as Virginia’s signature red, producing wines of aromatic complexity and structural elegance in the Monticello AVA around Charlottesville.
Virginia’s Varieties and Regions
Virginia’s humid climate (more like Bordeaux than California) suits varieties with thick skins and resistance to fungal disease. Cabernet Franc excels — it ripens fully in Virginia summers while retaining the herbal, tobacco, and red fruit character that makes it distinctive. Viognier, the aromatic white of the Northern Rhone, produces some of Virginia’s most compelling whites. Petit Verdot, normally a minor blending variety in Bordeaux, develops extraordinary structure and aromatics in Virginia’s heat. The Monticello AVA around Charlottesville, the Shenandoah Valley AVA west of the Blue Ridge, and the Northern Virginia AVA near Washington D.C. are the primary regions.
All Virginia Wine Regions
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By the Popular Wines team. Last updated July 2026. Browse all regions or explore the World Wine Map.