$350 off 98pt 2015 Latour
2015 Chateau Latour Pauillac
<PRE-ARRIVAL, ARRIVING MID-SUMMER 2026> Chateau Latour is the epitome of a Bordeaux icon—and the 2015 is one of the finest bottles from an outstanding vintage. “A seamless, totally captivating wine,” is how Vinous expert Antonio Galloni described this monumental First Growth in his 98+ point review, while Jeb Dunnuck hailed it as “heavenly.” Comprising 97% Cabernet Sauvignon with a touch of Merlot, it’s dark, dense, and silky, showing off the aromatics and power that makes Latour one of …
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Tasting notes
Aroma
Crème de cassis and crushed violet over graphite, pencil shavings, cigar-box cedar, and plenty of of wet Pauillac stone.
Palate
Full-bodied yet coiled, with ultrafine tannins, vivid acidity, and a black-fruit core that hammers on for nearly a minute.
Red Wine Body Profile
In Detail
The lowest price in America on 2015 Latour
<PRE-ARRIVAL, ARRIVING MID-SUMMER 2026>
Chateau Latour is the epitome of a Bordeaux icon—and the 2015 is one of the finest bottles from an outstanding vintage.
“A seamless, totally captivating wine,” is how Vinous expert Antonio Galloni described this monumental First Growth in his 98+ point review, while Jeb Dunnuck hailed it as “heavenly.” Comprising 97% Cabernet Sauvignon with a touch of Merlot, it’s dark, dense, and silky, showing off the aromatics and power that makes Latour one of a kind.
Average price on this bottle is nearly $900, with opportunistic (and well-known) sites asking nearly $1000! We bought smart and bought big, which is why we can offer it for hundreds less. And before you ask: Yes, our bottles come château-direct from Bordeaux, with perfect provenance.
This is a cellar must-have. Don’t get caught wishing you’d grabbed it at our price.
Known for top-quality wine for centuries, praised by no less a personage than Thomas Jefferson, Chateau Latour has always been a standout. After the 2011 vintage, they bucked the Bordeaux system by opting out of the region’s En Primeur tradition, instead holding their wines back in bottle and releasing them on the wine’s schedule.
The 2015 came out in 2023, after nearly 8 years in the cellar, and it’s showing BEAUTIFULLY right now—Wine Advocate’s William Kelley was so impressed with how it performed on release that he said it “wouldn't be a crime” to enjoy it young.
That said, this, like most Latours, is built to last—40 years in Dunnuck’s estimation. In other words, it’s a can’t-miss bottle that will thrill you in the short or long term. You’d be wise to cellar it at the nation’s best price.