
2026 Michelin One Grape Burgundy Wine Estates
Michelin's 2026 One Grape Burgundy selection features 33 wine estates recognized as very good producers of characterful, terroir-driven wines.
How many of these have you visited?
Discover on PearlVenues on this list

Maison Benjamin Leroux
Beaune, France
Maison Benjamin Leroux is worth prioritizing if the Beaune trip is built around serious Burgundy rather than a casual tasting crawl. Booking is difficult, so treat it as the anchor appointment and compare it with larger Beaune houses if the group needs a more conventional visitor experience.

Domaine Ponsot
Morey-Saint-Denis, France
Domaine Ponsot is worth prioritising for serious Burgundy travelers who want Morey-Saint-Denis depth and are comfortable with difficult access. The first vintage dates to 1934, Rose-Marie Ponsot is listed as winemaker, the 2025 Pearl 4 Star Prestige rating supports the effort. Casual visitors looking for food, group-friendly logistics, or an easy tasting format should cross-shop nearby domaines first.

Domaine Armand Rousseau
Gevrey-Chambertin, France
Domaine Armand Rousseau is worth pursuing for serious Burgundy travellers who want Gevrey-Chambertin context and understand that access is the point. Do not treat it as a food-pairing or casual tasting-room stop; plan meals separately and build the rest of the village itinerary around confirmed options.

Domaine Ghislaine Barthod
Chambolle-Musigny, France
A serious Chambolle-Musigny target for Burgundy drinkers who value producer reputation over easy access. Worth pursuing if the trip is built around depth and scarce domaines; less suitable for large groups, casual tasting routes, or anyone needing a predictable visitor format.

Henri Germain
Meursault, France
Henri Germain is worth targeting for serious Meursault drinkers who value restrained, low-intervention Burgundy over polished visitor facilities. The appointment-only format and $$$$ tier make it a deliberate choice, but the 2026 Michelin 1 Grape recognition and classic family-domaine style justify the effort for Chardonnay-focused Burgundy trips.

Denis Bachelet
Gevrey-Chambertin, France
Denis Bachelet is worth targeting if the goal is classical, old-vine Gevrey-Chambertin rather than a polished winery-tour circuit. The draw is production discipline, restrained Pinot Noir, a portfolio led by Gevrey-Chambertin Vieilles Vignes and Charmes-Chambertin Grand Cru Vieilles Vignes, with access the main challenge.

Domaine du Clos de Tart
Morey-Saint-Denis, France
Book Domaine du Clos de Tart only if the trip is built around serious Burgundy and you are willing to plan around scarce access. It is better suited to collectors and return visitors than casual tasting groups; if access slips, Domaine des Lambrays, Domaine Dujac, or Domaine Perrot-Minot are the smarter nearby fallbacks.

Domaine Trapet Père et Fils
Gevrey-Chambertin, France
Domaine Trapet Père et Fils is a serious Gevrey-Chambertin target for travelers who want depth rather than a casual tasting-room stop. Prioritize it if a confirmed appointment fits the itinerary; otherwise, cross-shop nearby Gevrey domaines with more flexible planning potential.

Maison Joseph Drouhin
Beaune, France
Book Maison Joseph Drouhin if the Beaune trip calls for a serious Burgundy appointment rather than a casual tasting-room stop. It is strongest for couples, client hosting, special-occasion wine travel where access and producer credibility matter more than flexibility.

Domaine Henri Boillot
Meursault, France
Domaine Henri Boillot is worth targeting if the trip is built around serious Meursault producers rather than easy drop-in tastings. Its Pearl 3 Star Prestige recognition puts it in a demanding with Domaine Arnaud Ente, Domaine Roulot, Domaine Coche-Dury, so plan with backup options rather than assuming access.

Domaine des Lambrays
Morey-Saint-Denis, France
Domaine des Lambrays is worth the effort for Burgundy drinkers who want a focused Morey-Saint-Denis domaine visit rather than a casual tasting stop. Prioritise it if estate history, producer context, a quieter appointment-led mood matter more than easy access or broad tasting-room flexibility.

Domaine Méo-Camuzet
Vosne-Romanée, France
Domaine Méo-Camuzet is worth pursuing if Vosne-Romanée itself is the reason for the trip and access to a historically important Burgundy producer matters more than visitor amenities. First-timers should treat it as a high-effort, high-context request, with backup wineries planned nearby rather than assuming a casual tasting format.

Domaine Bernard Bonin
Meursault, France
Domaine Bernard Bonin is a serious Meursault target for Burgundy-focused travelers, not a casual drop-in tasting pick. Choose it over Château de Meursault if scarcity and producer focus matter more than visitor infrastructure; choose the château or Domaine Chavy-Chouet if the priority is an easier, broader wine-tourism day.

Domaine Michel Lafarge
Volnay, France
Domaine Michel Lafarge is for Burgundy travelers who want a serious Volnay anchor, not a casual tasting-room stop. The 1953 first vintage and current Lafarge family names give it strong continuity, but planning needs to be disciplined. Cross-shop Domaine Marquis d'Angerville or Domaine Thomas Bouley if the schedule needs another Volnay-focused option.

Domaine Arnoux-Lachaux
Vosne-Romanée, France
Domaine Arnoux Lachaux is worth targeting for a serious Vosne-Romanée wine occasion, not a casual tasting stop. The value is in Burgundy pedigree and scarcity rather than easy access, so it suits collectors, anniversaries, client-hosting itineraries where confirmed appointments and backup wineries are planned in advance.

Domaine Faiveley
Nuits-Saint-Georges, France
Domaine Faiveley is worth prioritizing if the trip needs a serious Burgundy anchor rather than a casual tasting stop. Its 1825 first vintage, Erwan Faiveley connection, 2025 international vineyard recognition make it stronger for repeat visitors who want regional context in Nuits-Saint-Georges.

Domaine Hudelot-Noëllat
Chambolle-Musigny, France
A serious Chambolle-Musigny pick for collectors and special-occasion Burgundy travelers, especially if the appeal is estate pedigree over a broad tourism format. Access is the main friction, so treat it as a hard-to-secure appointment and line up nearby alternatives rather than building the whole day around one request.

Maison Louis Jadot
Beaune, France
Prioritise Maison Louis Jadot if the goal is Burgundy context in Beaune and the schedule can handle a hard-to-secure winery appointment. It is less compelling for travellers who need confirmed food pairings, published visitor hours, or easy same-day planning, so pair it with a smaller Beaune producer or a separately booked meal.

Domaine Roulot
Meursault, France
Domaine Roulot is worth prioritizing if the wine is the reason for the trip and the rest of the Meursault day can be planned separately. Do not treat it as a food-pairing or meal-driven stop; it is a serious producer visit with difficult access and stronger appeal for focused Burgundy drinkers than casual groups.

Château de la Tour
Vougeot, France
Château de la Tour is worth pursuing for Burgundy travelers who want serious Vougeot context rather than an easy public tasting. It suits wine-focused itineraries built around Clos de Vougeot and producer access, but it is a poor fit for casual drop-ins, large groups, or visitors looking for food-led hospitality.

Domaine Marquis d'Angerville
Volnay, France
A serious Volnay target for Burgundy drinkers who want a benchmark domaine rather than an easy casual tasting. Worth pursuing if the priority is bottle significance and village context, but first-timers should plan backup visits nearby because access is difficult and the experience is better treated as a focused request than a drop-in stop.

Domaine Pierre-Yves Colin-Morey
Chassagne-Montrachet, France
Plan around Domaine Pierre-Yves Colin-Morey only if the trip is driven by serious white Burgundy and producer-level comparison. It is a strong fit for collectors and special-occasion wine travelers, but a poor fallback for casual tasting plans. Cross-shop Chassagne peers if timing and access matter more than chasing a hard-to-secure producer.

Domaine Duroché
Gevrey-Chambertin, France
Domaine Duroché is worth pursuing for a serious Gevrey-Chambertin wine itinerary, especially for collectors or Burgundy-focused celebrations. Access should be treated as difficult, so small groups and early planning make the most sense. Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition in 2025 supports its place on a high-priority village shortlist.
Overview
The 2026 Michelin One Grape Burgundy list covers 33 wine estates. One Grape marks very good producers whose wines show character and style, especially in the strongest vintages. Pearl maps all 33 producer profiles for Burgundy wine research.
Michelin introduced Grapes as a wine-estate distinction, separate from dining Stars, hotel Keys, and the older wine pictogram for food and wine pairings. The assessment is producer-led: Michelin says its wine inspectors evaluate agronomy, technical mastery, identity, balance, and consistency across vintages. Burgundy was the first region published in 2026, with estates from the Cote de Nuits, Cote de Beaune, and Cote Chalonnaise represented across the full selection. For Pearl readers, this page is the focused Burgundy One Grape view: wineries and domaines that Michelin placed above its broader Selected tier but below the Two and Three Grape levels.
Use this Pearl list to browse the Burgundy wineries awarded One Michelin Grape in the first Michelin Grape Selection. The tier is built for wine lovers searching for high-quality Burgundy producers with clear estate identity, strong vineyard work, and wines that communicate place and style.
Quick Facts
- Publisher
- Michelin
- Edition
- 2026 Burgundy Grape Selection
- Tier
- One Michelin Grape
- Scope
- Burgundy wine estates
- Items
- 33 producers
- Criteria
- Agronomy, technical mastery, identity, balance, consistency
About This Edition
In Michelin's 2026 Burgundy launch, 33 estates received One Grape. The level is best understood as a producer recommendation for serious Burgundy discovery: domaines making distinctive, well-crafted wines that may be especially compelling in favorable vintages.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does One Michelin Grape mean in Burgundy?
Are Michelin Grapes awarded to wine estates?
What does Michelin evaluate for Grapes?
How many Burgundy estates received One Grape in 2026?
How many of these have you visited?
Find out on Pearl and keep score across every place in 2026 Michelin 1 Grape - Burgundy.

