Château Léoville Poyferré, 2025 - Half-bottle
Château Léoville Poyferré, 2025 - Half-bottle
- 37.5cl
- 13.5%
- Red Still
- Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Petit Verdot
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Est. delivery in 2028
Château Léoville Poyferré sits in the heart of Saint-Julien, one of Bordeaux's most elegant communes. This second growth estate crafts wines that marry power with finesse, built on a classic Left Bank blend dominated by Cabernet Sauvignon from gravelly soils that drain beautifully and concentrate flavour.
What the critics say:
"Deep dark ruby garnet, opaque core, violet reflections, delicate rim brightening. Fine precious wood, cherries, a hint of cassis and black berries, inviting bouquet. Juicy, elegant and well-balanced, fresh heart notes, ripe, melting tannins, sweet extract and long-lasting, sure development potential."
"Luscious, fabulous construction and grip, a true slow unroll, with waves of orange peel minerality, cocoa bean and espresso, silky texture, great quality, squid ink, yield extremely low at around 20hl/ha but manages to retain an opulent drinkability once you give it time in the glass. An easy one to recommend, and this has so many hidden depths. Harvest September 8 to 23. 3.73 pH. 20.38 hl/ha. 80% new oak. 3.71 pH. Harvest September 8 to 23. Old vines at Poyferre naturally low yields, and with the dry summer, this was the first year since 2011 to do no saignee at all during fermentation because already such natural concentration."
"Beautiful on the nose. Stylish and concentrated, medium- to full-bodied, with freshness and a savory note in the finish. Cohesive and precise, with fine-grained, focused tannins. Very structured at the end. A solid and bracing Medoc."
The vineyard sits on the famous Günzian gravel terraces that make the Médoc so special, with deep beds of large stones over clay-limestone subsoil. This drainage allows the vines to dig deep whilst the stones reflect heat back up to the grapes, concentrating flavours and ensuring perfect ripeness even in cooler years. The proximity to the Gironde estuary moderates temperatures, preventing excessive heat stress whilst extending the growing season. These soils favour Cabernet Sauvignon, which forms the backbone of the blend, whilst pockets of clay provide perfect conditions for Merlot to add suppleness and charm.
Saint-Julien produces some of Bordeaux's most elegant wines, sitting between the power of Pauillac to the north and the finesse of Margaux to the south. The appellation covers just 910 hectares but contains five classed growths, including the three Léoville estates that were once a single property. Saint-Julien's wines are known for their perfect balance of structure and grace, with less of the austere tannins found in Pauillac but more backbone than Margaux. The regulations demand the same grape varieties as other Médoc appellations, but the unique terroir consistently produces wines of remarkable consistency and aging potential.
The 2025 Bordeaux vintage emerged from one of the most demanding growing seasons in recent memory — the earliest budbreak since 1989, June temperatures second only to 2003 since records began, and an unusually early harvest beginning in August for the whites. Conditions that should have produced heavy, overripe wines. They didn't. Decanter's Georgie Hindle, who tasted close to 200 wines ahead of the formal campaign, describes "exceptional concentration, aromatic purity and a freshness that contradicts the record-breaking heat.
The early critical consensus places 2025 stylistically between the precision of 2020 and the structure of 2016, with the brightness of 2023 — a combination that suggests a very serious vintage indeed. Yields are dramatically low, the smallest crop since 1991, with production across the Gironde running around 15% below the five-year average. The quality is here. There simply isn't very much of it.

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Château Leoville Poyferre