WINE EDITORIAL
Monday, June 1, 2026

The Yield · Vintage Report

2015

The Heat That History Made

TERROIR’s vintage reports go past the number. Each report traces the season that shaped the wine, assesses where value hides in the market, and tells you what’s worth buying right now.

6
Featured Regions
Rioja
Best Value Region
Rising ↑
Avg. Price Trend
Exceptional
Year Rating
+3.2°F / +1.8°C
Avg. Temp vs. Norm

Few vintages announce themselves with such unambiguous confidence. From the first weeks of spring, when vines across Bordeaux and Barolo broke dormancy nearly two weeks ahead of schedule, 2015 read like a year that wanted to make history. What followed—an extraordinary summer of sustained heat, minimal disease pressure, and near-perfect harvest conditions spanning Europe, California, and the Pacific Northwest—did precisely that.

The 2015 season was defined by warmth, but not the reckless kind that incinerates structure. A mild, dry spring gave way to a long, even summer, with temperatures consistently three to five degrees above historical averages from the Loire to the Langhe. Grapes accumulated sugar steadily and early, but the critical variable—phenolic maturity—arrived simultaneously, without the usual lag that plagues hot years. The result, in region after region, was fruit at full ripeness with tannins supple rather than cooked, and acidity retained at levels sufficient to promise decades of development.

For buyers, 2015 presents a rare convergence of quality and window. Bordeaux and Barolo are the headline acts—structured, age-worthy, and priced accordingly—but the smarter plays may lie in the supporting cast. Rioja gran reservas from this vintage offer extraordinary concentration at a fraction of the Bordeaux equivalent. Mosel Spätlese and Auslese from top Einzellagen delivered a once-in-a-decade balance of richness and electric acidity. Those willing to reach across price tiers will find 2015 is one of the most rewarding years to explore since the 2010 constellation.

“A warm year without trauma—concentrated, structured, and built for decades.”

Below, TERROIR covers each featured region’s performance, with the climate data, market intelligence, and buying recommendations that help you act on what you read.

2015 Season Timeline

A Season in Seven Moments

The critical events that shaped the 2015 vintage across the globe

Jan – Feb
Dry Winter Sets the Stage — Below-average rainfall across Bordeaux, Tuscany, and Spain concentrates vine stress heading into spring.
April
Bud Break 10–14 Days Early — Unseasonably warm temperatures accelerate vine development across the Northern Hemisphere.
June
Flowering Under Heat — Record June temperatures across Burgundy and Barolo; near-perfect flowering in Bordeaux yields even berry sets.
Jul – Aug
Heat Dome Over Europe — Bordeaux records hottest summer since 2003. Deep-rooted old vines manage brilliantly.
Late Aug
Timely Rains in Europe — Targeted showers relieve heat stress in Burgundy and Barolo without dilution.
Sept
Harvest Begins Early — Bordeaux picks 2–3 weeks ahead of average. Barolo harvests in September for the first time in memory.
Oct – Nov
Cellar Euphoria — Winemakers report phenolic ripeness with retained acidity in unison. Early “vintage of the century” calls confirmed.
Region Reports

Bordeaux chateau and vineyard landscape
Exceptional
BordeauxFrance
Vintage Report

The Vintage That Redeemed the Decade

A long, dry growing season followed by pristine harvest conditions produced wines on both banks that rival the legendary 2010. Left Bank Cabernets show monumental tannic structure and cassis depth; Right Bank Merlots achieved voluptuous ripeness without sacrificing the iron-mineral edge that defines great Pomerol and Saint-Émilion.

88°F peak Jul–Aug
Avg. Summer High
310mm
Annual Rainfall
Sep 8
Harvest Start
Drinking Window2022 – 2050+
Price TrendStable – Firm
↓ Be Selective — Right Bank offers better QPR; Left Bank for the cellar

Read full report


Barolo Langhe hills vineyard landscape


Burgundy vineyard at sunset


Rioja castle and vineyard landscape


Napa Valley California grapes on vine


Mosel river valley with vineyards Germany

More 2015 Reports
RegionRatingSummary
Rhône Valley
France
ExceptionalGrenache hit a generational peak; Châteauneuf-du-Pape produced wines of extraordinary concentration and freshness. Seek out Vieux Télégraphe and Rayas for benchmark examples.
Tuscany
Italy
ExceptionalBrunello di Montalcino and Chianti Classico Gran Selezione both excelled; a vintage to lay down deeply and revisit in 2030. Pricing remains accessible relative to Bordeaux peers.
Alsace
France
ExceptionalGrand Cru Riesling and Pinot Gris reached full phenolic maturity with retained acidity, producing some of the most age-worthy bottles the region has released in twenty years.
Champagne
France
Very GoodA small harvest of exceptional quality; blanc de blancs from the Côte des Blancs show remarkable precision and verve. A non-vintage complement, not a prestige cuvée vintage.
Douro Valley
Portugal
Very GoodPowerful, structured reds from Touriga Nacional and Touriga Franca. Vintage Port declarations from Symington and Niepoort offer benchmark quality at a fraction of Bordeaux pricing.
Priorat
Spain
Very GoodThe warm year suited old-vine Garnacha on llicorella slate, producing concentrated but mineral-driven wines. Alvaro Palacios and Clos Mogador are the benchmarks.
Willamette Valley
United States
Very GoodEarly harvest captured brightness; Pinot Noir from Chehalem Mountains and Dundee Hills showed the most structural definition. A friendly vintage to drink sooner than typical Oregon reds.
Barossa Valley
Australia
GoodExtreme summer heat proved excessive in some subzones; old-vine single-vineyard Shiraz from Eden Valley fared best. Avoid commercial-tier offerings; quality gap between producers is wide.

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