Investment-grade bottles, exceptional provenance — for those who collect without compromise.
The same instinct that finds a 1963 Ferrari more compelling than a new car finds a 1982 Pétrus more compelling than anything on a restaurant list. Our clients collect across categories — and they apply the same precision to wine that they bring to every other serious acquisition.
In the world of investment-grade wine, provenance is everything. It is the unbroken thread that connects a bottle to its origin — the château, the vintage, the harvest. Without it, even the rarest bottle is merely a liquid in glass.
GTRarewines are guardians of that chain. Every bottle we source is traced from its point of production through every transfer of ownership to the moment it enters your collection. We document not just where a wine has been — but precisely how it has been kept, handled, and preserved.
Temperature logs. Storage records. Transfer documentation. Chain-of-custody certification. These are not optional extras. They are the foundation upon which long-term value is built — and the reason our clients hold with confidence.
Rarity is not a marketing word. In the context of investment-grade wine, it is a mathematical reality. The 1982 vintage of Pétrus produced fewer than 4,500 cases. Each year that passes, bottles are consumed, broken, or lost. The supply diminishes. It never returns.
GTRarewines exists to intercept scarcity before it becomes inaccessible. Through relationships forged across decades — with the négociants of Bordeaux, the domaines of Burgundy, and the grower-producers of Champagne — we access allocations at the point of origin, before the market can price in demand.
Our role is not simply to acquire. It is to preserve. To ensure that every bottle that enters a client's collection has been sourced with integrity, stored with precision, and documented with the care that rarity demands. We are, in every sense, custodians of something finite.
Long-standing relationships with producers, négociants, and private cellars across the world's finest wine regions — giving our clients access before bottles reach the open market.
The benchmark for investment-grade wine. Bordeaux's classified estates produce bottles that underpin the most serious collections in the world — first growths with decades of appreciation history alongside right bank icons where scarcity drives extraordinary premiums.
The benchmark First Growth. Amongst the most consistently appreciating wines in the world — allocations reserved years in advance. Cabernet Sauvignon dominant, built for multi-decade cellaring.
The most structured of the First Growths. Latour's decision to withdraw from en primeur makes allocation access through private channels essential for serious collectors.
Perfume, elegance, and extraordinary longevity. Château Margaux consistently achieves record prices at auction — its finest vintages remain among the most sought-after bottles in private collections.
Elevated to First Growth in 1973. Mouton's artist label series creates dual collectability — fine wine and fine art in a single bottle. Exceptional investment track record.
The only non-Médoc estate classified in 1855. Haut-Brion's distinctive terroir — gravel over clay in the Pessac suburbs — produces wines of tobacco, truffle, and extraordinary complexity.
The "Super Second" par excellence. Las Cases' Grand Enclos produces wine that consistently outperforms its Second Growth classification — a compelling proposition for the value-conscious collector.
The most mythologised wine in the world. No classification, no château building — just 11.4 hectares of blue clay producing Merlot of unmatched concentration. Fewer than 3,000 cases per vintage. Pre-market access is the only way in.
Fewer than 700 cases per vintage make Le Pin the most scarce serious wine in Bordeaux. The garage wine that defined a movement. Demand vastly outstrips supply at every release.
One of only two Saint-Émilion A classified estates. Cheval Blanc's unusual Cabernet Franc dominance creates a wine of extraordinary floral complexity and approachability without sacrificing age-worthiness.
The smallest of the A-list estates — just 7 hectares on limestone slopes. Ausone produces barely 2,000 cases per vintage of a wine that rivals Burgundy's grands crus for complexity and minerality.
The world's most coveted wines — and the most unforgiving to access. Burgundy's grands crus are produced in quantities measured in hundreds rather than thousands of cases. Relationships with domaines are built over decades, not opened by enquiry.
DRC is the apex of Burgundy — and of investment-grade wine. Romanée-Conti itself produces around 450 cases per vintage. La Tâche, Richebourg, and the broader DRC range offer entry points with equivalent provenance and appreciation credentials.
Lalou Bize-Leroy's biodynamic domaine produces wines of extraordinary concentration from micro-yields. Musigny, Chambertin, and Richebourg from Leroy are among the most valuable bottles produced anywhere in the world.
The definitive estate for Chambertin. Rousseau's Chambertin and Chambertin Clos de Bèze are the standards against which all Gevrey is judged — profound, age-worthy, and increasingly inaccessible without direct relationships.
Roumier's Musigny — produced from a single 0.1 hectare parcel — is among the most sought-after bottles in Burgundy. The Bonnes-Mares and Chambolle premier crus offer collectors access to the same meticulous winemaking at relatively greater scale.
Henri Jayer's legacy — particularly Cros Parantoux — represents the pinnacle of collectible Burgundy. No new production since 2001, but existing bottles continue to set auction records. A defining holding for any serious collection.
Custodians of part of the Henri Jayer legacy. Méo-Camuzet's Richebourg and Cros Parantoux continue the tradition of meticulous viticulture on parcels that once produced some of the most celebrated Burgundy of the 20th century.
The Super Tuscans redefined Italian fine wine — and created a new category of investment-grade bottles that stand alongside Bordeaux and Burgundy in the world's most serious collections.
The original Super Tuscan and the wine that changed Italian fine wine forever. Planted by Mario Incisa della Rocchetta in the 1940s, Sassicaia's 1972 commercial release redefined what Tuscan terroir could produce. It holds its own DOC — the only single-estate appellation in Italy. Finest investment vintages: 1985, 1988, 2016. Tightly allocated and rarely available below list on the open market.
The wine that defined the Super Tuscan category. Antinori's 1971 blend of Sangiovese, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Cabernet Franc broke with Chianti convention and created a new benchmark. Tignanello's finest vintages — 1985, 1997, 2016 — are among the most sought-after bottles in Italian wine investment.
Italy's answer to Pétrus. Masseto is a single-vineyard Merlot from a 7.24-hectare parcel of Bolgheri's finest clay soils — the same blue clay that gives Pomerol its greatest wines. Since its first vintage in 1986 it has been recognised as Italy's most complete and age-worthy Merlot. Production averages around 30,000 bottles per year across a portfolio of plots, but Masseto Perpetuo and the single-vineyard Masseto are strictly allocated. Best investment vintages: 1997, 2001, 2006, 2015. Deeply liquid internationally and traded actively on the secondary market.
Prestige Champagne occupies a category of its own in serious collections. The finest cuvées — produced only in exceptional years and in strictly limited quantities — age magnificently over decades and represent one of the most liquid and internationally recognised asset classes in fine wine.
Created in 1876 for Tsar Alexander II, Cristal remains the benchmark prestige Champagne against which all others are measured. Sourced exclusively from Roederer's finest estate vineyards — predominantly Pinot Noir from Aÿ and Verzy, with Chardonnay from the Côte des Blancs — each vintage is released only in the finest years. The 2002, 2008, and 2013 are considered generational releases. Cristal ages over 20–30 years into something of extraordinary depth and complexity. Allocation is strictly controlled; bottles rarely reach the open market at list price.
The world's most recognised Champagne house and arguably its most consistent prestige cuvée. Dom Pérignon is produced only in declared vintages and spends a minimum of eight years on lees before release. Its P2 (Plénitude Deuxième) and P3 expressions — released after 12 and 20 years respectively — represent some of the most complex aged Champagnes available. The 1996, 2002, 2008, and 2010 vintages are celebrated investment benchmarks. Globally traded and highly liquid, Dom Pérignon forms the backbone of many serious Champagne collections.
Spain's finest wines represent one of the most compelling value propositions in investment-grade collecting — world-class quality, genuine scarcity, and growing international recognition driving long-term appreciation.
Peter Sisseck's micro-domaine produces fewer than 500 cases per vintage from ancient Tinto Fino vines. Since its debut in 1995, Pingus has been recognised as Spain's greatest wine — a Pétrus of the Duero valley. Psi and Flor de Pingus provide collector entry points; Pingus itself is strictly allocation only.
Spain's most historic investment wine — Único is released only when deemed ready, sometimes after more than a decade of ageing. The Reserva Especial blends multiple outstanding vintages. Alión provides a more accessible route to the same exceptional terroir.
The wine that Robert Parker called "the Pétrus of Spain" — Alejandro Fernández's Pesquera established Ribera del Duero as a world-class appellation. Gran Reserva from the finest vintages ages magnificently and remains undervalued relative to its quality.
Updated directly from our cellar records · Enquire for allocation & pricing
| Wine | Appellation | Vintage | Format | Status | Guide Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burgundy | |||||
| Domaine Leroy — Musigny Grand Cru | Chambolle-Musigny | 2018 | 75cl · 3 btls | In Stock | POA |
| Domaine Leroy — Chambertin Grand Cru | Gevrey-Chambertin | 2017 | 75cl · 1 btl | In Bond | POA |
| Domaine de la Romanée-Conti — La Tâche | Vosne-Romanée | 2016 | 75cl · 1 btl | In Stock | POA |
| Domaine de la Romanée-Conti — Romanée-Conti | Vosne-Romanée | 2015 | 75cl · 1 btl | In Bond | POA |
| Georges Roumier — Musigny Grand Cru | Chambolle-Musigny | 2019 | 75cl · 2 btls | In Stock | POA |
| Georges Roumier — Bonnes-Mares Grand Cru | Chambolle-Musigny | 2018 | 75cl · 3 btls | In Bond | POA |
| Champagne | |||||
| Louis Roederer — Cristal | Reims · Prestige Cuvée | 2008 | 75cl · 6 btls | In Stock | POA |
| Louis Roederer — Cristal | Reims · Prestige Cuvée | 2008 | Magnum · 2 btls | In Bond | POA |
| Bordeaux | |||||
| Pétrus | Pomerol | 2012 | 75cl · 2 btls | In Stock | POA |
| Château Pichon Baron | Pauillac · 2ème Cru | 2016 | 75cl · OWC 12 | In Bond | POA |
The best collections hold for appreciation — with an eye always on the bottles you'll actually want to open.
GTRarewines — Founding PrincipleGTRarewines works with a small number of private clients to build and manage collections of rare and investment-grade wine — bottles that simply aren't available through conventional channels.
Through long-standing relationships with producers, négociants, and private cellars across Bordeaux, Burgundy, and beyond, we source wines with exceptional provenance before they reach auction.
Our clients typically hold for appreciation, but always with an eye on the bottles they'll actually want to open — because the best wine collections do both.
We work with a small number of clients at any one time. If you are building or expanding a serious collection — whether you come from wine, classic cars, watches, or any other collecting discipline — we welcome a confidential conversation.
Or reach James directly — [email protected]