Natural Wine Best Sellers

In this collection you can find our best selling natural wine from all around the world, it's a great place to start you natural wine journey! At Primal Wine we have one of the largest selections of natural wine available online. Filter by type, price, and country to fine-tune your wine search. Biodynamic, organic, and natural wine has never been so convenient, and if you have any questions, please contact us at hello@primalwine.com.

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Bottle shot of Peggy Sue, produced by De Levende, buy classic and natural wine online on Primal Wine, the best wine shop in the United States – primalwine.com
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Bottle shot of Kindeli Blanco, produced by Kindeli, buy classic and natural wine online on Primal Wine, the best wine shop in the United States – primalwine.com
Kindeli Blanco 2023
Kindeli
Regular price $30.00
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What Is Natural Wine? A 101 Deep Dive

Natural wine (sometimes nicknamed “natty wine”) is not just a trendy adjective — it’s a philosophy of winemaking rooted in minimal intervention, ecological respect, and pure expression of terroir. If you’ve ever wondered, “What makes a wine truly natural?” or “Why are so many wine lovers obsessed with natural wine?” — this guide aims to answer that fully.


The Essence of “Natural Wine”

At its core, natural wine means wine made with as little interference as possible — from vineyard to bottle. Because there is no legally codified definition, its boundaries blur, and different winemakers have different interpretations. But the broad consensus typically includes:

  • Grapes grown using organic, biodynamic, or regenerative practices (i.e. no synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or chemical fertilizers).
  • Hand harvesting (rather than mechanical) to protect fruit integrity.
  • Fermentation using native (wild) yeasts rather than commercial strains.
  • Minimal (or no) additions — few to no additives such as yeast nutrients, acid adjustments, or flavorings.
  • Little to no added sulfur dioxide (SO₂) — certainly much less than conventional wines.
  • No or minimal fining, filtering, or clarification, so wines may appear slightly hazy, with sediment, or have a more “raw” texture.

Because "natural wine" is more of a philosophical umbrella than a strict legal standard, evaluating a wine’s “naturality” means trusting the producer’s transparency, tasting with discernment, and sometimes reading between the lines.


Natural vs. Organic vs. Biodynamic: Clarifying the Jargon

These terms are often interchanged, but they carry distinct meanings:

  • Organic wine: Focuses on vineyard practices (no synthetic chemicals). The grapes are recognized under certifying bodies (USDA, EU, etc.), and winemaking must adhere to certain limits on additives.
  • Biodynamic wine: Goes a step beyond organic, incorporating holistic, ecological, and even esoteric practices (e.g., planting/harvesting according to lunar cycles, specific compost preparations, treating the vineyard as an integrated organism).
  • Natural wine: Embraces the minimal-intervention ethos across farming, fermentation, and bottling. Organic or biodynamic grapes are nearly always the starting point, but what happens post-harvest (in the cellar) also matters.

Thus, a wine can be organic or biodynamic but not natural (if it’s heavily manipulated in the cellar). Conversely, a wine might claim “natural wine” even without formal certification, if the producer adheres to minimal-intervention practices.


How to Identify Natural Wines (or “Natty” Bottles)

Given natural wine’s loosely defined nature, how do you pick one? Here are clues to look for:

  • Label claims / buzzwords: Terms such as minimal intervention, no added sulfites, unfiltered/unfined, native yeast, organic or biodynamic may hint at natty wine philosophy (though they’re not guarantees).
  • Certification logos: Look for Demeter (for biodynamic), USDA Organic, or other regional certifications. These don’t ensure a wine is fully natural, but they offer evidence of restraint in farming.
  • Producer’s reputation / backstory: Research the winemaker — their philosophy, interviews, or website often reveal whether they align with natural wine practices.
  • Visual cues: Slight haze, sediment, or cloudy appearance can suggest minimal filtration or fining.
  • Unusual labeling / packaging: Natural wines often come with quirky, artsy labels, alternative closures (corks vs. screwcaps vs. crown caps), or small pressings.

Ultimately, the best way to confirm is to taste and see whether the wine feels alive, expressive, and “of place” — not constrained by additives.


What Makes Natural Wine Worth Exploring

Why do so many wine lovers ride the “natty wine” wave? Here’s what draws people in:


Purity & Fewer Additives

Natural wines generally contain fewer additives — especially minimal sulfur dioxide — letting the grape and soil speak. For some drinkers, that means fewer harsh chemicals, more nuance, and added authenticity.


Environmental & Ethical Appeal

Many producers of natural wine embrace regenerative or low-impact practices, prioritizing soil health, biodiversity, and ecological stewardship. Drinking natural wine becomes a small way to align with sustainable agriculture.


Unique Flavors

Because there’s less manipulation, natural wines often surprise the drinker — funky notes, wild aromatics, expressive fruit, earthy tones, and a tactile texture rarely found in sterile, heavily processed wines. The variation between bottles/vintages becomes part of the appeal.


Supporting Small & Independent Winemakers

Natural wine is often the domain of small-scale, passionate producers. By choosing natural wine, consumers support boutique operations over industrial mega-brands, helping to preserve diversity in the wine world.

Frequently asked question

Natural wine is generally made from organically or biodynamically farmed grapes, fermented with native (wild) yeasts, and produced with minimal intervention—no additives beyond little or no sulfur, and often unfined and unfiltered. There’s no single legal definition, but transparency, low sulfites, and hands-off winemaking are core principles.

There’s no scientific proof that natural wine is “healthier.” It still contains alcohol. However, many natural wines use organically or biodynamically farmed grapes, fewer additives, and lower sulfites, which some people prefer or tolerate better. Bottom line: choose transparently made bottles you enjoy—and drink in moderation.

It aligns with what drinkers want: transparency, sustainability, and distinctive flavor. Made from organically or biodynamically farmed grapes and fermented with native yeasts, natural wine is low-intervention, often lower in sulfites, and showcases terroir and small producers—delivering character, ethics, and authenticity.

No. Natural wine still contains alcohol—the primary cause of hangovers. Lower sulfites and fewer additives don’t guarantee a headache-free experience. How you feel depends on alcohol content, hydration, quantity consumed, and personal sensitivities (histamines, tannins, sugar). Choose well-made natural wines, pace yourself, eat with your wine, and drink water.

No. Natural wine revives long-standing methods—organic/biodynamic farming, native-yeast fermentation, minimal additives—and meets enduring demand for transparency, sustainability, and terroir-driven flavor. Its growth across regions, retailers, and restaurants signals a lasting category, not a passing fad.