Buying options
Tasting notes
A serious, powerful Petrus, the 2023 Château Petrus sports a deep ruby hue as well as classic aromatics of black cherries, roasted herbs, cassis, graphite, and smoky tobacco. Brought up 16 months in 50% new French oak, it's medium to full-bodied, with rock-solid concentration, ripe, integrated, yet classic Petrus tannins, and a great finish. It's a beautifully balanced, layered, seamless 2023 that reminds me slightly of a more dense version of the 2019. Hide bottles for 5-7 years and enjoy over the following two to three decades. Drink 2030-2063.
Critic scores
Average Score
James Suckling
Yohan Castaing, Wine Advocate
More reviews and scores
The 2023 Petrus turned out even better than I expected. Silky and elegant, the 2023 is a Petrus of delicacy and understatement more than power. Blackberry, lavender, mocha, dried herbs and crushed flowers all grace the palate. Refined tannins frame the captivating mid-palate and finish. Sublime.
The 2023 Pétrus was bottled last May. This has a delightful nose, not powerful, not intense, but it is beautifully defined with blackberry, raspberry, subtle floral scents of violet and iris, hints of black truffle in the background. It gains a little intensity with time in the glass. The palate is medium-bodied with grainy tannins. Quite deep for the vintage. You would think there was some Cabernet Franc in the blend (you have to wait for 2025 for that). Quite linear in style, beautifully defined. Silky smooth on the finish that has the symmetry of a great Pomerol and an exquisite Pétrus.
This is absolute perfection on the nose, with violets, lavender, lilacs, graphite, raspberries, orange blossoms and crushed stones. Immaculate purity. Medium- to full-bodied with totally integrated tannins. The sweet fruit caresses every millimeter of your palate and takes you for a long ride at the end. A lesson in purity. Best after 2028, but an incredible experience to drink now.
About the producer

Ask any wine-lover to name the world’s greatest fine wines, and the answer will invariably include Pétrus.