Wine Region · Italy

Southern Italy & Islands

Sun-drenched vineyards, volcanic slopes, ancient grape varieties, and some of the best values in Italian wine — the south is where Italy's next great chapter is being written.

Red & White Wine
Warm to Hot
Exceptional Value
At a Glance

The Quick Picture

Southern Italy — everything from Campania near Naples down through Puglia (the heel of the boot), Basilicata, Calabria, and the islands of Sicily and Sardinia — is Italy's warmest, sunniest wine country. For a long time, this meant bulk production: huge volumes of ripe, high-alcohol wine shipped north or exported cheaply. The grapes were good, but the ambition wasn't there.

That's changed dramatically. Modern winemaking techniques, lower yields, and a renewed pride in ancient indigenous grape varieties have transformed the south into one of Italy's most exciting wine frontiers. Aglianico from Campania produces some of Italy's most powerful, age-worthy reds. Nero d'Avola from Sicily is increasingly well-made and versatile. Primitivo from Puglia (genetically identical to California's Zinfandel) produces rich, ripe, crowd-pleasing reds at extraordinary prices. And Mount Etna's volcanic vineyards are making some of the most talked-about wines in all of Italy.

Key Grapes: Aglianico Nero d'Avola Primitivo Negroamaro Fiano Greco
Background

Why the South Is Italy's Best-Kept Secret

Southern Italy was making wine before Rome was an empire. The Greeks called this part of Italy "Oenotria" — "the land of wine." But for much of modern history, the south was Italy's wine engine room: millions of liters of anonymous bulk wine, shipped in tanker trucks to be blended into cheap bottles with no identity and no ambition.

The revolution came from two directions. First, a handful of quality-focused producers — particularly in Campania and Sicily — began treating their indigenous grapes with the respect they deserved, reducing yields, investing in modern cellars, and making wines that could compete with anything from the north. Second, Mount Etna happened. The active volcano's high-altitude vineyards, planted with ancient varieties on mineral-rich volcanic soil, started producing elegant, complex wines that wine critics couldn't stop talking about. Etna became Italy's trendiest wine region almost overnight.

The result is a region in transition — still producing plenty of inexpensive, sun-drenched everyday wine, but increasingly capable of genuine greatness. And because the south hasn't yet developed the prestige pricing of Tuscany or Piedmont, the value proposition is extraordinary.

Tim's Take: Southern Italy is where I shop when I want to spend $10–15 and get something genuinely interesting. A Primitivo from Puglia, a Nero d'Avola from Sicily, an Aglianico from Campania — these are wines with personality and character at prices that Tuscany and Piedmont can't touch. And if you want to see where Italian wine is headed, look at what's happening on Mount Etna. It's the most exciting volcanic wine region in the world right now.
What You'll Taste

The Wines of Southern Italy

The south is red-dominated, but the white wines — particularly from Campania — are increasingly impressive and worth seeking out.

Aglianico (Campania & Basilicata)

Often called the "Barolo of the South" — a deeply colored, full-bodied, high-tannin red that can age for decades. Flavors of dark plum, black cherry, leather, tar, and dried herbs, with firm acidity and powerful structure. The best come from Taurasi DOCG in Campania and Aglianico del Vulture DOC in Basilicata (from volcanic soils around the extinct Monte Vulture). Young Aglianico can be intensely tannic — it rewards patience or hearty food.

What to try: A Taurasi for the full Aglianico experience, or a simpler Aglianico del Vulture for a more approachable (and affordable) introduction.
Primitivo & Negroamaro (Puglia)

Puglia — the heel of Italy's boot — is the source of vast quantities of wine, much of it simple and everyday. But the best Primitivo (genetically identical to Zinfandel) produces full-bodied, ripe, fruit-driven reds with berry fruit, warmth, and smooth tannins. Negroamaro is the other major Puglian grape — darker, earthier, with baked red and black fruit and medium tannins. Both grapes make wines that are easy to enjoy and remarkably cheap.

What to try: A Primitivo di Manduria for rich, ripe Puglia red — usually $10–14 and remarkably generous for the price.
Nero d'Avola & Etna Rosso (Sicily)

Sicily's workhorse red is Nero d'Avola — medium to full-bodied, with plum, dark cherry, and sometimes chocolate flavors. Made in a fruity, early-drinking style at the basic level; more concentrated and complex from the best producers. But the real excitement is on Mount Etna, where the indigenous Nerello Mascalese and Nerello Cappuccino grapes produce fragrant, high-acid, elegant reds from high-altitude volcanic soils — wines that have more in common with Burgundy than with the rest of Sicily. Etna's whites (from Carricante) are equally distinctive — mineral, citrusy, and stony.

What to try: An Etna Rosso for the volcanic elegance that's made this region a global sensation — usually $18–28.
Fiano & Greco (Campania Whites)

Campania produces arguably the best white wines in Southern Italy. Fiano di Avellino DOCG is medium to full-bodied, with stone fruit, melon, and hazelnut flavors that develop honeyed, waxy complexity with age. Greco di Tufo DOCG is leaner and more acidic, with green apple, stone fruit, and passion fruit. Both are made primarily in stainless steel to preserve freshness, though some producers use oak for additional texture. These are serious white wines from ancient grape varieties.

What to try: A Fiano di Avellino for one of Italy's most underappreciated whites — usually $14–20.

Mount Etna — Wine from a Volcano

Mount Etna is Europe's most active volcano — and its slopes are home to some of Italy's most exciting vineyards. The volcanic soil (rich in minerals, well-drained, and unlike anything else in Italian winemaking) combined with high altitude (vineyards climb to 1,000+ meters) produces wines with remarkable freshness and complexity despite Sicily's warm climate.

The reds, made primarily from Nerello Mascalese, are often compared to Pinot Noir or Nebbiolo — pale in color, high in acidity, fragrant, and capable of expressing site differences with Burgundy-like precision. The whites, from Carricante, have a steely, mineral quality that's genuinely unique. Etna has gone from obscurity to being one of the most talked-about wine regions in the world in barely a decade — and the wines justify the hype.

Finding Your Way Around

The Key Regions

Southern Italy is vast, but the regions that matter most for quality wine are concentrated in a few key areas.

Ancient & Noble
Campania

The region around Naples — home to more DOCGs than any other part of Southern Italy. Taurasi (Aglianico) is the prestige red; Fiano di Avellino and Greco di Tufo are the prestigious whites. The volcanic soils from Vesuvius and the varied terrain (mountains, valleys, coast) create diverse microclimates. Campania is the south's answer to the quality ambitions of the north.

What to try: A Fiano di Avellino or a young Taurasi — Campania's range from elegant whites to powerful reds is impressive.
Volume & Value
Puglia

The flat, hot heel of Italy — one of the country's largest wine-producing regions. Primitivo and Negroamaro dominate. At high yields, these grapes make simple, fruity everyday wine. With controlled yields, old bush vines, and careful winemaking, they produce rich, concentrated wines with real personality. Primitivo di Manduria DOC and Salice Salentino DOC are the quality benchmarks. Prices are remarkably low for the quality.

What to try: A Primitivo di Manduria — Italy's answer to Zinfandel, at a fraction of the price.
The Volcano
Sicily (Etna & Beyond)

Italy's largest island and one of its most diverse wine regions. Nero d'Avola from the interior produces medium to full-bodied reds for everyday drinking. But the star is Etna DOC — volcanic-soil wines from Nerello Mascalese (red) and Carricante (white) grown at high altitude on the slopes of the active volcano. International varieties like Syrah and Chardonnay also do well. Sicily also produces excellent Marsala (fortified wine) and sweet wines from Pantelleria island.

What to try: An Etna Rosso for volcanic elegance, or a Nero d'Avola Sicilia DOC for a reliable, affordable everyday red.
Mountain Reds
Basilicata

A small, mountainous region between Campania and Puglia. The principal wine is Aglianico del Vulture DOC, made from Aglianico grown on the slopes of the extinct Monte Vulture volcano at elevations up to 900 meters. The altitude and volcanic soils produce wines with deep color, high tannins, and concentrated black fruit — powerful wines that age well and offer good value.

What to try: An Aglianico del Vulture for serious Southern Italian red at a price that won't break the bank.
Buying Guide

Decoding a Southern Italian Label

At the Table

Food Pairing

Southern Italian wine was born alongside Southern Italian cooking — one of the world's great cuisines. These wines are built for bold, flavorful food: tomato-based sauces, grilled meats, seafood, eggplant, peppers, and the kind of rustic, generous cooking that defines the Mediterranean south.

🍝Pasta alla Norma
🍕Neapolitan Pizza
🥩Grilled Lamb
🍆Eggplant Parmesan
🦑Grilled Seafood
🫒Antipasti

Nero d'Avola with pasta alla Norma (eggplant, tomato, ricotta salata) is a Sicilian classic. Primitivo with grilled sausages or a hearty meat sauce. Fiano with grilled seafood or a simple caprese salad. And Aglianico with slow-braised lamb shanks — the wine's tannins need the rich, fatty meat to soften, and both taste better for it.

Tim's Take: If you want to eat like an Italian on a Tuesday night — pasta, olive oil, tomatoes, maybe some cheese — Southern Italian wine is your best friend. A $10 Nero d'Avola or Primitivo with a simple pasta dish is the kind of dinner that takes fifteen minutes, costs almost nothing, and makes you feel like you're sitting on a terrace in Sicily. That's the whole point of wine, if you ask me.
Keep Exploring

More Italian Wine

Northern Italy Central Italy All Wine Regions