Pinot Meunier
The third major Champagne grape. Earlier-ripening than Pinot Noir; contributes accessible aromatics and early-developing character to non-vintage blends.
About Pinot
Pinot Meunier is the third major Champagne grape variety — historically the most planted Champagne grape (about 32% of total plantings) and yet the least editorially celebrated. The grape was long thought to be a simple mutation of Pinot Noir, though modern genetic analysis suggests the relationship is more complex; some classifications now treat Meunier as a separate variety. Meunier’s defining characteristic is its early ripening and climatic resilience in the marginal Champagne climate — the grape ripens reliably in years when Pinot Noir struggles, providing critical insurance for blend continuity. In Champagne blends, Meunier contributes accessible aromatics, early-developing character (NV Champagnes ready for release sooner), and brioche/biscuit complexity after lees aging. Most prestige Champagnes use less Meunier (or none), but Krug Grande Cuvée and other multi-vintage prestige blends include meaningful Meunier percentages. Single-varietal Meunier Champagnes are a recent editorial development; growers like Egly-Ouriet and Christophe Mignon have demonstrated the variety’s solo capability.
Variety profile
Also known as
Editorial notes
Pinot Meunier is the third Champagne grape and historically the most planted, but most prestige Champagnes use less of it than Chardonnay or Pinot Noir. Single-varietal Meunier Champagnes are an emerging editorial category.