Rioja 2017
While Europe’s winemaking heartland was reeling from the April frosts of 2017, Rioja went quietly about its business. The frost events that devastated Burgundy, Champagne, and parts of Bordeaux affected the northern regions primarily because early budbreak made the vines vulnerable at exactly the wrong moment. In Rioja, the established rhythms of the Tempranillo growing season, shaped by altitude and the protective influence of the Sierra Cantabria and Sierra de la Demanda ranges, meant the critical growth stages arrived just late enough to escape the worst of the cold.
What followed was a long, warm, generous summer — the kind that Tempranillo has evolved over centuries to convert into structured, age-worthy wine. Rainfall deficits of 28 percent below average left the vines moderately stressed through the growing season, concentrating sugars and phenolics without the extreme drought conditions that challenged regions further south. The harvest, which began in early October, proceeded in ideal conditions: clear days, cool nights, and fruit in pristine condition across virtually all three sub-appellations.
The 2017 vintage is often discussed in the shadow of 2016, one of Rioja’s most celebrated years, and that comparison does it a disservice. Where 2016 produced immediately charming, generous Tempranillo, 2017’s wines have a structural backbone and tannic grip that will serve them better over the long term. The best Gran Reservas and single-vineyard Riojas from this year are only beginning to open, and the value they offer relative to their eventual quality is exceptional. The window for the best buying is now.
Three Riojas: Alta, Alavesa, and Baja
Rioja Alta
The western sub-appellation of Rioja Alta, with its Atlantic-influenced climate and clay-limestone soils around Haro and Briones, produced the vintage’s most structured and age-worthy Tempranillo. The moderate maritime influence tempered the summer heat sufficiently to preserve the natural acidity that gives great Rioja its longevity. The great bodegas of Haro — CVNE (Viña Real), La Rioja Alta, Muga — all produced exceptional wines. Rioja Alta’s Gran Reservas from 2017 will be the bottles that collectors celebrate in 20 years.
Rioja Alavesa
Rioja Alavesa, on the northern bank of the Ebro in the Basque Country, produces Tempranillo on limestone-clay soils under a more continental climate than Alta. The 2017 vintage here is characterized by elegance and precision rather than power: the wines are more linear, with brighter acidity and a mineral quality that reflects the sub-appellation’s distinct terroir. Artadi, Baigorri, and Roda are the reference producers. Rioja Alavesa 2017 is arguably the more age-worthy sub-appellation expression, though also the most accessible for early drinking.
Rioja Baja (Oriental)
The eastern sub-appellation, now officially renamed Rioja Oriental, was always the warmest and most Mediterranean-influenced of the three zones. In 2017, this meant the warmest and most fruit-forward wines in the region — generous, early-drinking Garnacha and Tempranillo blends with the dark fruit and plush texture that the sub-appellation characteristically delivers. Less structured for the long term than Alta or Alavesa, but excellent value for immediate drinking.
Buying Tiers: Where to Invest
Splurge Tier
CVNE — Imperial Gran Reserva 2017
CVNE’s Imperial Gran Reserva is one of Rioja’s greatest traditional expressions, produced from old-vine Tempranillo in Rioja Alta’s finest plots with extended aging in American and French oak. The 2017 shows the vintage’s structural excellence: concentrated black fruit, cedar and tobacco from the extended oak aging, and a tannic framework that will support decades of development. This is classic Rioja at its most authoritative.
La Rioja Alta — Gran Reserva 904 2017
The “904” is one of Rioja’s most revered Gran Reserva expressions, produced in limited quantities from selected vineyard parcels in Rioja Alta and aged for a minimum of four years before release. The 2017 expresses the vintage’s structural precision with the estate’s characteristic elegance: fine-grained tannins, dried cherry and cedar, and a finish of exceptional length. Among the finest recent expressions of this iconic label.
Mid-Range Tier
Muga — Reserva Selección Especial 2017
Muga’s Selección Especial sits between the estate’s standard Reserva and its flagship Prado Enea Gran Reserva — and in 2017 it may be the most rewarding of the three in terms of quality-to-price ratio. Produced from selected Tempranillo parcels in Rioja Alta with 30 months in large American oak casks, it shows the vintage’s concentration with a suppleness and integration that makes it accessible sooner than the Gran Reservas. Exceptional mid-range Rioja.
Artadi — Viñas de Gain 2017
Artadi is Rioja Alavesa’s most celebrated producer, and their Viñas de Gain — a multi-vineyard selection across their estate holdings — offers an excellent entry point into their philosophy of site-specific, modern Rioja. The 2017 is precise and mineral with the Alavesa characteristic of bright acidity and structural elegance. Less traditional in style than CVNE or Muga, but equally serious in quality.
Value Tier
Marqués de Murrieta — Reserva 2017
Murrieta is one of Rioja’s oldest and most reliable bodegas, and their standard Reserva offers genuine appellation character at an accessible price. The 2017 shows the vintage’s warmth in concentrated fruit and a roundness of texture that makes it approachable now, while the traditional oak aging adds complexity and structure. A reliable choice for everyday drinking from a serious vintage.
Bodegas Lan — D-12 Single Vineyard Tempranillo 2017
Lan’s single-vineyard D-12 is one of Rioja’s better-kept secrets at the value tier — a focused, site-specific Tempranillo from a specific 12-hectare plot in Rioja Alta that routinely outperforms its price. The 2017 shows excellent concentration and the terroir precision that distinguishes great single-vineyard Rioja from blended production. Exceptional value discovery.
The Vintage in Context
Vintage Comparison
Market Intelligence
Rioja 2017 occupies an interesting market position: a genuinely excellent vintage that remains modestly priced because the global wine press was absorbed by the drama of Burgundy and Bordeaux frost coverage in the same year. Gran Reserva releases, which come to market four or more years after the harvest, have received strong critical reception but have not generated the speculative interest that drives prices for equivalent Burgundy or Barolo. This pricing rationality is the vintage’s single greatest commercial advantage.
Buyers willing to invest in Gran Reservas and single-vineyard expressions now will find quality that comfortably rivals much more expensive European alternatives. The value differential between well-structured Rioja Gran Reserva and equivalent-quality Burgundy premier cru is among the largest in the fine wine world; in 2017, that differential is wider than average because the Rioja narrative has not yet absorbed the premium that its quality deserves. The window for buying at rational prices will narrow as the Gran Reservas continue their release cycle.
Rioja 2017 is the vintage that rewards buyers who look beyond the headline narrative. In a year dominated by frost drama further north, Rioja delivered a quietly excellent growing season and produced wines of exceptional structure, concentration, and aging potential. The Gran Reservas from Rioja Alta and single-vineyard expressions from Rioja Alavesa represent the pinnacle of a very good vintage, and they remain accessible at prices that reflect Rioja’s traditional undervaluation relative to comparable French and Italian wines. For buyers seeking long-term value with genuine quality, this is the 2017 vintage’s most compelling proposition.
Producers to Watch
- CVNE — The Imperial Gran Reserva 2017 is among the finest in a century of production; a benchmark traditional Rioja expression
- La Rioja Alta — The Gran Reserva 904 remains one of Spain’s most revered wines; the 2017 adds structural precision to the estate’s characteristic elegance
- Muga — Consistently excellent across all tiers; the Selección Especial offers the vintage’s best quality-to-price ratio in the estate’s lineup
- Artadi — Rioja Alavesa’s finest producer; the El Pisón single-vineyard and Viñas de Gain offer different windows into 2017’s elegant character
- Roda — The estate’s Cirsion and Roda I demonstrate that modern, single-vineyard Rioja can age as gracefully as the traditional Gran Reservas
- López de Heredia — The most traditional bodega in all of Rioja, releasing wines a decade after harvest; when Viña Tondonia 2017 eventually appears, it will be extraordinary
- Palacios Remondo — Álvaro Palacios’s family estate in Rioja Oriental produces the appellation’s finest Garnacha; the La Montesa is a value discovery
- Bodegas Lan — The D-12 single-vineyard is one of the vintage’s best-kept secrets; exceptional quality at a price accessible to everyday wine drinkers
