Wine merchant

Everything you need to know about wine merchants and retailers

What is a wine merchant?

A wine merchant is a specialist retailer of wines, champagnes, spirits and alcoholic beverages. They operate in an independent wine shop, a fine food store or a tasting space, and differ from supermarkets through their expertise, careful selection and personalised advice. The wine merchant is often a genuine wine enthusiast who has turned their passion into their profession, and whose relationship of trust with their clients is at the heart of their activity.

The wine merchant plays an essential cultural and educational role in the industry: it is often they who introduce consumers to confidential producers, little-known appellations and artisanal spirits not found in supermarkets. They are the final link in the chain between the winegrower and the end consumer, and as such bear an important responsibility in transmitting the culture of wine and spirits.

History

The wine merchant profession is one of the oldest in food retail. From Antiquity, specialist merchants sold wine in Mediterranean cities. In the Middle Ages, tavern keepers and wine merchants structured a dynamic retail trade in all European cities. In France, the corporation of wine merchants is one of the oldest and most powerful, regulated by royal ordinances since the 13th century.

In the 20th century, the rise of large-scale retail threatened independent wine trade. The creation of Nicolas in 1822, the first French wine shop chain, then the development of supermarkets in the 1960s-1970s radically transformed the retail distribution landscape. But since the 1990s, a spectacular revival of the independent wine merchant has been observed, driven by growing demand for advice, authenticity and discovery.

Today, France has over 3,000 independent wine merchants, to which are added specialist chains. This sector is undergoing transformation, between digitalisation of sales, development of click & collect and the rise of natural and organic wines.

The profession day to day

The wine merchant dedicates a large part of their time to selection and purchasing. They visit professional trade fairs, meet producers, taste hundreds of wines each year to build and renew their cellar. This selection is the expression of their taste, identity and vision of wine.

Customer advice is at the heart of the profession. The wine merchant receives clients, listens to their needs (food and wine pairing, budget, occasion), proposes suitable bottles and shares their passion. This human and personalised relationship is what fundamentally distinguishes the wine merchant from the supermarket.

Cellar management requires constant attention: stock organisation, storage conditions, reference rotation, temperature management. A good wine merchant knows every bottle in their cellar and can talk about it with precision and enthusiasm.

Wine merchants in figures

According to data from the Federation of Professional Wine Merchants and FranceAgriMer:

Over 3,000 independent wine merchants in France — Federation of Professional Wine Merchants, 2022

The wine merchant circuit represents approximately 10% of wine sales in France, growing strongly — FranceAgriMer

The average basket in a wine merchant is 3 to 4 times higher than in supermarkets — Nielsen, 2022

Over 8,000 independent wine merchants recorded in the United Kingdom — WSTA

The American market has over 10,000 specialised wine shops and liquor stores — NABCA

The different types of wine merchants and retailers

Independent wine merchant — family shop, personalised selection, expert advice, close relationship with producers

Wine merchant chain — network of shops with a shared buying office, Nicolas, La Maison des Millesimes

Wine bar with retail — tasting on the premises and take-away sales, hybrid concept in strong development

Fine food shop with cellar — wine selection combined with gastronomic products, premium clientele

Natural wine specialist — exclusive selection of natural, organic and biodynamic wines, strong trend

British wine merchant — English tradition of fine wine, often centuries-old cellars, collector clientele

American liquor store — alcohol retail in the USA, specific regulation by state

E-commerce wine merchant — pure player online or click & collect, home delivery, extended catalogue

Contemporary challenges

The independent wine merchant faces intense competition from large-scale retail which has considerably improved its wine selection, and from e-commerce which offers competitive prices and unlimited availability. To survive and thrive, the wine merchant must accentuate their strengths: personalised advice, exclusive producers, tastings and events that create a community around the shop.

The rise of natural and organic wines is a major opportunity for independent wine merchants. This segment, which represents a growing share of their sales, attracts a young, committed clientele willing to pay the right price for authentic and traceable wines. Wine merchants specialising in natural wines are often very influential opinion leaders in their neighbourhood or city.

Finally, click & collect and online sales are becoming indispensable. Wine merchants who have developed a strong digital presence, with an e-commerce site, an engaging newsletter and active social networks, proved more resilient through the COVID crisis and won new clients who did not previously know them.

Some wine merchants and retailers around the world

Nicolas — Paris, France

Lavinia — Paris, France

Caves Legrand Filles & Fils — Paris, France

La Maison des Millesimes — Paris, France

Cave des Papilles — Paris, France

Berry Bros. & Rudd — London, UK

Hedonism Wines — London, UK

Justerini & Brooks — London, UK

The Wine Society — Stevenage, UK

Sherry-Lehmann — New York, USA

K&L Wine Merchants — San Francisco, USA

Wine Access — New York, USA

Rudi Roesser Weinhandlung — Munich, Germany

Vinothek Bremer — Stuttgart, Germany

Enoteca Pinchiorri — Florence, Italy

La Cava — Melbourne, Australia

Vino Circle — Hong Kong

Le Grand Cru — Amsterdam, Netherlands

Fine Wine Store — Tel Aviv, Israel

Cave du Bouchon — Bordeaux, France

Vins et Volailles — Nantes, France

Le Grand Cellerier — Paris, France

Cave Natacha — Nice, France

Cave du Vingtieme — Paris, France

Wine Emporium — Sydney, Australia

Vino y Vida — Madrid, Spain

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