The Loire's diversity can feel overwhelming, but it makes more sense when you organize it by grape. Three white grapes and one red dominate the region.
Sauvignon Blanc — Crisp & Mineral
The star of the eastern Loire (Central Vineyards). Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé produce the benchmark for this grape — dry, high-acid, with green apple, citrus, and wet stone minerality. Some people describe a flinty, smoky quality in Pouilly-Fumé. These are leaner and more mineral than New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc — less tropical fruit, more precision. Menetou-Salon offers a similar style at a lower price.
Sauvignon Blanc also appears in Touraine as a simpler, fruitier, more affordable version — often a great everyday white.
What to try: If you love New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc, try a Sancerre — it's the same grape but a completely different personality. Leaner, drier, more mineral. For value, try a Menetou-Salon or Sauvignon de Touraine.
Chenin Blanc — The Shape-Shifter
Chenin Blanc is the most versatile grape in the Loire — possibly in all of France. Depending on where it's grown and how ripe the grapes get, it can make bone-dry still wine, off-dry wine, lusciously sweet dessert wine, or sparkling wine. All styles share Chenin's signature high acidity, which keeps even the sweetest versions feeling fresh and balanced.
Vouvray (near Tours) is the most famous Chenin Blanc appellation, producing still wines from dry to sweet plus excellent sparkling. Savennières in Anjou makes powerful, dry Chenin Blanc that can age for decades. Coteaux du Layon produces some of the world's greatest sweet wines from botrytis-affected grapes.
What to try: A dry Vouvray — light, fresh, floral, and usually under $15. Then try a demi-sec (off-dry) Vouvray with spicy food. Same grape, same place, totally different experience.
Melon de Bourgogne — Muscadet
At the western, Atlantic end of the Loire, the Melon de Bourgogne grape makes Muscadet — a dry, light-bodied, high-acid white with subtle green fruit and a saline, almost oceanic quality. It's designed for one thing: washing down seafood. The best versions are labelled "Muscadet Sèvre et Maine Sur Lie," meaning the wine aged on its lees (spent yeast) over winter, giving it a richer texture and a slight creamy quality.
What to try: A Muscadet Sèvre et Maine Sur Lie with oysters or mussels. At $10–14, it's one of the best wine-and-food pairings per dollar in the world.
Cabernet Franc — Light & Aromatic Reds
The Loire is Cabernet Franc's spiritual home — and the reds here taste nothing like Bordeaux. In the Touraine appellations of Chinon, Bourgueil, and Saint-Nicolas-de-Bourgueil, Cabernet Franc produces light to medium-bodied reds with fresh raspberry and red currant fruit, a distinctive herbal, sometimes violet-scented lift, and refreshingly low tannins. The lighter versions can even be served slightly chilled.
Saumur-Champigny in Anjou-Saumur makes a similar style — juicy, berry-driven, and food-friendly. Some producers make fuller, oak-aged versions, but the classic Loire Cabernet Franc is all about freshness and drinkability.
What to try: A Chinon — it's the most widely available Loire red. Light enough for summer, interesting enough for any season. Usually $14–20.
Rosé & Sparkling
The Loire produces excellent rosé, particularly in Anjou. Rosé d'Anjou is a classic — slightly sweet, easy-drinking. Rosé de Loire is always dry and a bit more serious. Sancerre rosé, made from Pinot Noir, is pale and delicate. For sparkling, Crémant de Loire (made in the traditional Champagne method) and sparkling Saumur and Vouvray are all outstanding values — crisp, elegant bubbles at a fraction of Champagne prices.
What to try: A Crémant de Loire for everyday sparkling wine at $12–16. It's made the same way as Champagne — just without the Champagne price tag.