Wine regions of South Africa


The wine regions of South Africa were defined under the "Wine of Origin" act of 1973. Mirroring the French Appellation d'origine contrôlée system, all South African wines listing a "Wine of Origin" must be composed entirely of grapes from its region. The "Wine of Origins" program mandates how wine regions of South Africa are defined and can appear on wine labels. While some aspects of the WO are taken from the AOC, the WO is primarily concerned with accuracy in labeling. As a result, the WO does not place adjunct regulations on wine regions such as delineating permitted varieties, trellising methods, irrigation techniques, and crop yields.
The WO system divides growing regions into four categories. The largest and most generic are Geographical Units which subsume the smaller, but still broad spanning Regions. Under these are clustered districts and within them are wards. Although these are geographic units, regions and districts are largely traced by political boundaries.

Summary table

Geographical units

Northern Cape
Eastern Cape
Western Cape:
Other wards in the Olifants River Region - Bamboes Bay, Spruitdrift, Vredendal, Cederberg, Ceres, Lamberts Bay, Prince Albert Valley and Swartberg
Northern Cape:
Eastern Cape: