So, I got this weird itch the other day, you know? Just sitting there, and bam, the question hits me: what’s the absolute most expensive white wine someone can actually buy? Or at least, what’s considered the top dog in that pricey world? It wasn’t for any particular reason, just one of those thoughts that burrows into your brain.

My Little Investigation Kicks Off
First thing I did, naturally, was just type it into a search engine. Easy peasy, right? Wrong. The results were all over the shop. Some articles listed a few pricey bottles, sure, but they didn’t all agree. It was like everyone had their own idea of “most expensive.” Some were talking auction prices, others retail, and some just seemed to be pulling names out of a hat.
I quickly realized this wasn’t going to be a five-minute job. It’s not like there’s a global leaderboard for this stuff that gets updated daily. Prices for these kinds of things, especially the super rare ones, can swing wildly. And then you’ve got to figure out if we’re talking about a bottle that sold once at a crazy auction, or something that’s consistently top-tier expensive if you could even find it.
Digging In Deeper
So, I decided to spend a bit more time on it. I started trying to sift through the hype. I wasn’t looking for some one-off historical sale that was more of a publicity stunt. I wanted to know about wines that, if you had an obscene amount of money, you might actually have a shot at finding, even if it’s through some super exclusive dealer or auction.
I poked around quite a bit. Looked at what wine critics were saying, what auction houses were reporting (without getting bogged down in specific sale numbers, just general trends). It was a bit of a rabbit hole, to be honest. You read about one, it leads to another, then another. My browser tabs were multiplying!
A few names started to surface more regularly than others.

- You’d see these German Rieslings, especially the Trockenbeerenauslese (TBA) ones from producers like Egon Müller. These are dessert wines, incredibly sweet, made from grapes that are practically raisins, and they make tiny amounts. So, super rare, super expensive.
- Then there’s Domaine de la Romanée-Conti. Most folks know them for their eye-wateringly expensive red Burgundies. But they also make a white wine, a Montrachet. And yeah, that one also costs a king’s ransom.
- Château d’Yquem, a Sauternes from Bordeaux (another sweet white), often gets a mention, especially for older vintages. I saw one particular historical sale of an 1811 vintage mentioned a lot, which went for a fortune.
So, What Did I Land On?
After all that digging, it seems the title of “most expensive white wine” is a bit of a slippery fish. If we’re talking about a single bottle ever sold, that 1811 Château d’Yquem that went to a private collector for a huge sum years back often takes the cake. That was over a hundred thousand dollars, from what I remember reading.
But for wines that are more “regularly” (and I use that term very loosely) at the peak of the price mountain, consistently fetching top dollar at auctions or from high-end merchants? It feels like a toss-up. Domaine de la Romanée-Conti Montrachet is definitely up there, a benchmark for white Burgundy and priced accordingly. And those Egon Müller Scharzhofberger Riesling Trockenbeerenauslese bottles are legendary for their prices, especially for older vintages or large formats, sometimes hitting absolutely astronomical figures per bottle, even surpassing the DRC Montrachet depending on the vintage and auction.
So, there isn’t one simple, definitive answer that’s always true. It changes with auctions, with rarity, with hype. But these names? They are consistently in the conversation. It’s fascinating, really. Less about the drink itself at that point, and more about the rarity, the story, the status. My little quest definitely made my usual bottle of white feel very, very humble!