Winery in Agrelo, Argentina
Bodega Séptima
500ptsAndean Altitude Viticulture

About Bodega Séptima
Bodega Séptima sits along Ruta 7 in Agrelo, one of Mendoza's most closely watched wine subzones, and carries a Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating for 2025. The estate occupies the high-altitude terroir that defines the district's concentrated, structured reds. Among Agrelo's cluster of serious producers, Séptima positions itself in the prestige tier where allocation and cellar depth matter as much as the vineyard address.
Where the Andes Define the Glass
Drive west out of Mendoza city on Ruta 7 and the landscape shifts before the city fully disappears. The road climbs toward the cordillera, the air thins perceptibly, and the rows of vines that line the highway take on a different character from those closer to the provincial capital. By the time you reach kilometre 1061, you are in Agrelo proper, a subzone that has spent the better part of two decades accumulating a reputation as one of Argentina's most compelling addresses for structured, age-worthy Malbec. Bodega Séptima sits at this coordinate, its architecture framed by the snowline of the Andes on clear mornings — and in the Cuyo, clear mornings are the rule rather than the exception.
The physical experience of arriving at a winery in this corridor is inseparable from what ends up in the bottle. Agrelo sits at roughly 1,000 metres above sea level, and the thermal amplitude between day and night temperatures here is among the widest in Mendoza's established subzones. That gap preserves aromatic compounds and builds natural acidity into fruit that, under full Andean sun, would otherwise tip toward overripeness. The alluvial soils deposited by Andean melt over millennia drain freely and force root systems downward. The result is a growing environment that rewards patience both in the vineyard and at the table.
Agrelo in Its Competitive Context
Agrelo has attracted serious producers precisely because its combination of altitude, soil profile, and water access creates conditions that are difficult to replicate elsewhere in Mendoza. Bodega Bressia, Bodega Chandon Argentina, Bodega Melipal, Finca Decero, and Pulenta Estate all operate within a few kilometres of Bodega Séptima, and together they form a cluster that has been exporting a coherent quality argument for the subzone to international markets. Within that peer set, producers have generally split between estate-focused projects with tight allocation and larger operations with broader distribution — Séptima's 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition positions it clearly in the former category, aligned with the estates that prioritise depth over volume.
That designation, awarded in 2025, places Bodega Séptima in the upper tier of EP Club's rated producers for the region. Pearl 2 Star Prestige is not a rating awarded on the basis of brand recognition alone; it reflects the kind of consistent quality signal that comes from a serious commitment to place. In Agrelo's competitive cluster, that matters because the subzone has no shortage of well-capitalised estates capable of producing technically correct wine. What separates the prestige tier from the broader field is the degree to which the terroir reads legibly in the glass , the sense that the wine could only come from this valley, at this altitude, from this particular arrangement of alluvial stones and Andean snowmelt.
The Vineyard Address as Argument
Ruta Internacional 7, the road on which Bodega Séptima sits, runs from Buenos Aires to Santiago de Chile through the Andean passes. The vineyard address is not incidental. The western extreme of Mendoza's wine corridor, where the Andes press closest and altitude exerts the most influence on the growing season, has become a genuine quality benchmark within Argentina's wine conversation. Producers from Luján de Cuyo to the south and further north into the Valle de Uco have all mapped their positioning relative to altitude and distance from the mountains. Séptima's location at km 1061 on this road places it inside the band where that argument is most persuasive.
The broader Argentine wine geography rewards comparison. Bodega El Esteco in Cafayate operates at even higher elevations in Salta, where the focus tilts toward aromatic whites and lighter reds. Bodega Norton in Luján de Cuyo and Escorihuela Gascón in Godoy Cruz anchor the more established, historically prominent end of Mendoza's appellation hierarchy. Further south, Familia Schroeder in San Patricio del Chañar makes the case for Patagonian Malbec at a different latitude altogether. Séptima's position is Agrelo-specific: it is a high-altitude Andean argument, not a generic Mendoza one, and that specificity is part of what the 2 Star Prestige rating is recognising.
Landscape, Season, and the Sense of Arrival
Visiting Bodega Séptima at different points in the viticultural calendar yields genuinely different experiences of the same property. During harvest, which in Agrelo typically runs through March and into April depending on the block and variety, the estate is in its most operationally intense phase. The cool nights that have built structure over the growing season give way to the practical urgency of picking windows, and the winery itself shifts from contemplative to kinetic. Visiting outside harvest, particularly in the southern hemisphere autumn after the fruit has come in, offers a different register: the vineyard rows turn gold and amber, the snowline on the Andes descends, and the ratio of silence to activity tips markedly toward the former.
For context on the wider Agrelo wine corridor and how to structure a visit across multiple estates, our full Agrelo restaurants and wineries guide maps the subzone's key producers and the most practical routes between them. Driving is the standard approach; the distances between estates on Ruta 7 and its connecting roads are short but not reliably walkable, and the reward for having your own transport is the freedom to set your own pace between stops.
Internationally, the Agrelo prestige tier finds its closest analogues in appellations where a single variety dominates and altitude provides the structural spine. Bodega Colomé in Molinos operates at extremes that make Agrelo look moderate, while Bodega DiamAndes in Tunuyán represents the Valle de Uco iteration of a similar high-altitude logic. Outside Argentina, the comparison with established prestige appellations , whether Napa's elevation-focused producers like Accendo Cellars in St. Helena or European estates with deep terroir arguments , is less about stylistic similarity than about the underlying ambition to make place legible in the wine.
Planning a Visit
Bodega Séptima's address on Ruta 7 at km 1061 in Agrelo is the practical starting point for any visit. The estate is accessible from Mendoza city, which sits roughly 30 kilometres to the northeast along the same road, making it a manageable destination for a half-day excursion or as part of a multi-estate day in the Agrelo corridor. Contact and booking details are not publicly listed in current records, so confirming visit arrangements directly with the estate in advance is the practical approach , Séptima's Pearl 2 Star Prestige standing means demand from organised wine tourism groups is a real factor, and arriving without prior arrangement at a property of this calibre is not advised during the southern hemisphere harvest season or peak tourism months.
For broader context on Argentine wine geography and the distillery and spirits adjacent to the Mendoza wine world, Fratelli Branca Distillery in Buenos Aires represents a different axis of Argentine drinks culture worth noting if your itinerary extends to the capital.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the vibe at Bodega Séptima?
- Séptima sits in the prestige tier of Agrelo's winery cluster, a subzone defined by high-altitude viticulture against the Andean backdrop. The setting is defined by the physical environment: snowcapped mountains, alluvial vineyard rows, and the arid Cuyo light that characterises Mendoza at altitude. Its 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating positions it among the more serious, terroir-focused estates in the corridor rather than the high-volume visitor operations.
- What wine is Bodega Séptima famous for?
- Agrelo's identity as a wine subzone is built primarily on Malbec, and estates in the corridor , including those holding prestige ratings , have built their reputations on the variety's capacity to express altitude and alluvial soil. Séptima's Pearl 2 Star Prestige award for 2025 reflects a quality commitment consistent with the subzone's high-altitude Malbec argument, though specific current releases and winemaker details are not listed in available records.
- What should I know about Bodega Séptima before I go?
- The estate sits on Ruta 7 at km 1061 in Agrelo, placing it in one of Mendoza's most concentrated clusters of serious wine producers. Its 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition means it belongs to the upper tier of the subzone's quality hierarchy. Phone and booking details are not currently listed publicly, so confirming visit logistics ahead of arrival is the practical approach.
- How far ahead should I plan for Bodega Séptima?
- Given Séptima's Pearl 2 Star Prestige standing for 2025 and its location in a high-demand wine tourism corridor, planning at least several weeks ahead during harvest season (March to April) and the southern hemisphere summer months is advisable. Booking details are not publicly listed, so contacting the estate directly to confirm availability before building an itinerary around a visit is the recommended approach.
- What makes Bodega Séptima a good choice within the Agrelo wine subzone?
- Agrelo's prestige tier is defined by estates that translate the subzone's specific conditions , altitude around 1,000 metres, alluvial soils, wide diurnal temperature variation , into wines with measurable structure and regional identity. Séptima's Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating for 2025 places it in that tier alongside a peer set that includes other recognised Agrelo producers. For visitors building a multi-estate itinerary in the corridor, a property with that level of external validation is a logical anchor point.
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Bodega Séptima on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
