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Haut-Médoc

Location: France

Legal name: Appellation Haut-Médoc Contrôlée

Region: Bordeaux

Regulatory body: INAO

Haut-Médoc is an appellation within Bordeaux, anchored in the Gironde department around the Garonne, Dordogne, and Gironde estuary, where gravel, clay, limestone, and maritime influence divide Left Bank and Right Bank styles. The designation is best understood as a legal lens on a place: it defines which wines may carry the name on the label, while the broader region remains the geographic and cultural frame. Its boundaries, soils, exposures, and local climate shape the style more directly than administrative shorthand can capture.

Permitted grapes for the designation include Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, Malbec, Carménère. Haut-Médoc is often associated with deeper gravel influence, firmer structure, and more ageworthy blends, though producer and site still matter greatly. In practice, the appellation gives drinkers a reliable cue about structure, aroma, and table use, while still leaving room for producer decisions, vintage conditions, and individual parcels.

Red wines only. The appellation covers the southern Médoc; communal AOCs such as Margaux, Pauillac, Saint-Estèphe, and Saint-Julien sit within the same peninsula context. Wines using the name must satisfy the French AOC cahier des charges for the appellation. The AOC system controls the delimited production area, permitted varieties, maturity expectations, vineyard practice, and winemaking framework; this entry summarizes the consumer-facing identity rather than reproducing every clause.

Its status is not a quality ranking in the narrow sense; it is a protected origin rule, and quality still depends on farming, site selection, harvest decisions, and cellar work. The name is commercially important because it bridges the broad Médoc identity and the narrower communal AOCs that command the greatest recognition. For EncyclopediaOfWine, the useful distinction is that this row describes the legal designation, not merely the place-name around it.

Permitted Grapes

Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, Malbec, Carménère.

Notable Rules

Red wines only. The appellation covers the southern Médoc; communal AOCs such as Margaux, Pauillac, Saint-Estèphe, and Saint-Julien sit within the same peninsula context.

Also Known As

Haut-Médoc AOC

Sources & References

  • INAO product sheet / cahier des charges

REFERENCE NOTE

This entry is written as an educational overview and may synthesize public regulatory, historical, and editorial sources. It is not an official regulatory record.