Saint-Émilion: Premier Grand Cru Classé A of Bordeaux

par Didier frayssou
 

Saint-Émilion Premier Grand Cru Classé A: The excellence of Bordeaux wine

In the world of wine, few designations inspire as much wonder as that of Premier Grand Cru Classé A of Saint-Émilion. This title embodies the absolute pinnacle of the wine hierarchy on the right bank of Bordeaux. But which châteaux hold this distinction today? How does this unique classification work? And which vintages should you seek out? This complete guide gives you all the answers.

Key takeaways: 

  • Only 2 châteaux today hold the distinction of Premier Grand Cru Classé A (2022 classification): Château Pavie and Château Figeac

  • Ausone, Cheval Blanc, Angélus: former "A" properties, voluntarily left the classification in 2022, criticising its marketing drift

  • Classification revised every 10 years (unique in Bordeaux), valid for the 2022 to 2031 harvests; criteria: 50% tasting, 35% reputation, 10% terroir, 5% viticulture/oenology

  • Pavie (37 ha, Merlot 65%): powerful and opulent style, needs 8–10 years — Figeac (41 ha, CS 35% + CF 30%): mineral "Médoc-like" elegance, more approachable

  • Indicative prices: Pavie 150–400 € · Figeac 200–500 € depending on vintage

  • Best vintages: 2010, 2015, 2016, 2019, 2020, 2022, ageing potential of 15 to 30 years

  • 12 Premiers Grands Crus Classés B complete the upper tier, including notably Canon, Troplong-Mondot, Valandraud, Belair-Monange, Larcis Ducasse

 

The classification of Saint-Émilion wines: history and how it works

Established in 1955, revised every decade

In 1955, at the request of the Syndicat de défense de l'appellation Saint-Émilion Grand Cru, the Institut National de l'Origine et de la Qualité (INAO) classified the growths of this appellation. From its very creation, this classification demonstrated great modernity and an innovative character by providing for revision every ten years.

The first classification was carried out in 1955, and since its creation, this decennial classification has been revised six times: in 1959, 1969, 1986, 1996, 2006 and 2012. In September 2022, a new classification was made public. 

This revisability constitutes the fundamental difference with the 1855 classification of the Médoc, frozen since 1855, with the notable exception of the promotion of Mouton Rothschild to Premier Cru in 1973. Unlike the 1855 classification, immutable in the Médoc and Sauternes, the Saint-Émilion classification is revised approximately every ten years, enabling an objective assessment of estates according to demanding criteria: wine quality across several vintages, work in the vineyard, reputation, hospitality facilities and international renown.

 

The evaluation criteria for the 2022 classification

For the 2022 classification, points were awarded according to the following criteria: 50% for tasting, 35% for reputation, publicity and value, 10% for terroir and uniform soil quality, and 5% for viticulture and oenology methods. 

Tasting played a central role in the classification process: it involved around forty experts from outside the Bordeaux wine region. The evaluation framework is a living one and evolves with the times: today, for example, it incorporates environmental commitments as well as wine tourism.

To qualify for the rank of Premier Grand Cru Classé A, estates were required to provide samples from the 20 preceding vintages demonstrating consistent quality over two decades.

Controversies: the 2006 classification annulled

The Saint-Émilion classification has not been without controversy. The fifth classification, announced in 2006, was challenged by producers unhappy at having been demoted, leading to several legal developments in 2007 and 2008. The dispute centred on the fact that several members of the jury had interests in certain châteaux being evaluated. The 2006 classification was ultimately annulled, resulting in a return to the 1996 classification while a new, more transparent process was put in place for 2012.

The 2022 classification: the major revision and its surprises

85 châteaux recognised, 2 Premiers Grands Crus Classés A

In 2022, 114 applications were submitted, 43 expert tasters were mobilised, for 85 châteaux recognised: 71 Grands Crus Classés and 14 Premiers Grands Crus Classés, including 2 classified "A". 

 

The 2 Premiers Grands Crus Classés A of the 2022 classification:

  • Château Pavie (classified A since 2012, confirmed in 2022)

  • Château Figeac (promoted to A for the first time in 2022)

 

The withdrawal of the historic great names

The 2022 edition was marked by an unprecedented event. The celebrated Château Cheval Blanc and Château Ausone, which had always featured at the top of the classification since its creation as Premiers Grands Crus Classés A, had announced in January 2022 that they did not wish to submit their applications. They were followed a few months later by Château Angélus and Château La Gaffelière

Cheval Blanc cited "a marketing drift such as the importance of product placement, the frequency of media appearances including press relations and social media, as well as wine tourism infrastructure" among the reasons for its withdrawal. 

These withdrawals do not call into question the quality of these châteaux: Ausone, Cheval Blanc and Angélus remain among the most sought-after wines in Bordeaux, but they highlight the tensions between commercial prestige and institutional recognition.

The 2 current Premiers Grands Crus Classés A: Pavie and Figeac

Château Pavie: The power of the hillside

Château Pavie stands out as one of the most emblematic estates on the Bordeaux right bank. Located in Saint-Émilion and classified as a Premier Grand Cru Classé A, it embodies viticultural excellence through its history, its terroir and the vision of its owner, Gérard Perse. The vineyard extends over 37 hectares ideally exposed due south, benefiting from optimal sunshine that promotes perfect ripeness of the grapes.

In 1998, the château was acquired by Gérard Perse, with the ambition of elevating it to the very top. Gradually, its cuvées climbed the ranks, reaching the highest tier in 2012: Premier Grand Cru Classé A.

Château Pavie technical sheet:

Criterion

Detail

Area

37 hectares

Grape varieties

Merlot 65%, Cabernet Franc 25%, Cabernet Sauvignon 10%

Soils

Clay-limestone (Merlot), clay-limestone (CF), sandy-clay (CS)

Ageing

18 to 32 months in new oak barrels

Ageing potential

20 to 30 years

Indicative price

150 - 400 € depending on vintage

Second wine

Aromas of Pavie

 

On tasting, Château Pavie impresses with its deep, brilliant purple colour. The nose is of remarkable intensity, blending aromas of jammy dark fruits, liquorice, cedar, dark chocolate and soft spices. The ageing potential is immense: depending on the vintage, Château Pavie can evolve admirably in the cellar for 20 to 30 years, or even longer, revealing over time notes of leather, truffle and undergrowth.

Best vintages of Château Pavie: 2000, 2005, 2009, 2010, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2022.

Château Figeac: The Médoc-like elegance of Saint-Émilion

The history of the estate is forever linked to that of another great growth: in the 1830s, Figeac had separated off a 30-hectare plot which, 20 years later, gave birth to Cheval Blanc.

Unlike most other classified growths in the appellation, located on clay-limestone soils, Château Figeac benefits from gravelly soil with flint and quartz over a subsoil of blue clays — an atypical geological condition from which Figeac draws an uncommon elegance.

 

Château Figeac technical sheet:

Criterion

Detail

Area

41 hectares of vines (within a single 54 ha block)

Grape varieties

Cabernet Sauvignon 35%, Cabernet Franc 30%, Merlot 35%

Soils

Gravel, flint, quartz, subsoil of blue clays

Ageing

15 to 20 months in new oak barrels (100%)

Ageing potential

20 years and more

Indicative price

200 - 400 € depending on vintage

Status

Promoted to Premier Grand Cru Classé A in 2022

The blend of Château Figeac is a masterful combination of Bordeaux grape varieties. Cabernet Sauvignon brings structure and minerality, Cabernet Franc lends elegance and finesse, while Merlot seduces with its roundness and fruit. On tasting, this wine shows tannic yet seductive character from its earliest youth, evolving towards a concentrated, rich, fine and silky whole, with delicate aromas of cedar, dark fruits and mint, and above all a note of graphite that adds depth. 

Following its promotion in 2022, the average market price of Château Figeac subsequently increased considerably.

Best vintages of Château Figeac: 2005, 2008, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2022.

Pavie vs Figeac comparison: two visions of excellence

Château Pavie

Château Figeac

Style

Powerful, opulent, rich

Elegant, taut, "Médoc-like"

Dominant grape variety

Merlot (65%)

Cabernet Sauvignon (35%) + CF (30%)

Terroir

Clay-limestone, south-facing hillside

Gravel, flint, blue clays

Accessibility when young

After 8–10 years

After 6–8 years

Maximum ageing potential

30 years+

25 years+

Average price

200 – 300 €

250 – 400 €

Owner

Gérard et Chantal Perse

Manoncourt Family / Castel Group

 

The complete hierarchy of the 2022 classification

The 2 Premiers Grands Crus Classés A

  • Château Figeac (promoted 2022)

  • Château Pavie (since 2012)

Please note: Château Ausone, Château Cheval Blanc and Château Angélus, historically classified A, voluntarily left the classification in 2022. Their quality remains uncontested on the world market.

 

The 12 Premiers Grands Crus Classés B (2022 classification)

The 12 Premiers Grands Crus Classés B are: Château Beauséjour Duffau, Château Beau-Séjour Bécot, Château Belair-Monange, Château Canon, Château Canon-La-Gaffelière, Clos Fourtet, Château Larcis-Ducasse, Château La Mondotte, Château Pavie-Macquin, Château Troplong-Mondot, Château Trottevieille and Château Valandraud.

The 4 levels of the hierarchy

Category

Number of châteaux (2022)

Prestige level

Premier Grand Cru Classé A

2

The absolute pinnacle of Saint-Émilion

Premier Grand Cru Classé B

12

Elite, rivals the 1st Crus of the Médoc

Grand Cru Classé

71

Recognized quality, great consistency

Grand Cru

200+

Appellation mention, not officially classified

Important: The "A" and "B" tiers are not systematically found on bottle labels. Always check the exact mention on the label and the vintage in question, as the classification is valid only for harvests from 2022 to 2031.

The terroir of Saint-Émilion: diversity of soils and grape varieties

The Saint-Émilion Grand Cru appellation sits on many types of highly qualitative soils, predominantly limestone in composition, notably on a large plateau bordering the medieval town, where alluvial gravel and sand as well as clays in the subsoil are also found. The limestone soils allow active water supply to the vines through capillary action.

The vineyard is divided into two main zones:

  • The limestone plateau and hillsides: clay-limestone, dominant Merlot, silky tannins, mineral depth, the zone of the finest terroirs of Pavie, Canon, Troplong-Mondot

  • The hillside foothills and gravels: sandy and gravelly, more suited to Cabernet Franc, the historic area of Figeac, Cheval Blanc, La Conseillante

 

The best vintages for the Premiers Grands Crus Classés A

 

Vintage

Overall quality

Style

Ageing potential

2022

★★★★★ Exceptional

Ideal maturity, perfect balance

20–30 years

2020

★★★★★ Exceptional

Concentration, purity, freshness

20–25 years

2019

★★★★★ Exceptional

Elegance, tension, great classic

20–25 years

2018

★★★★☆ Very great

Generosity, volume, controlled warmth

15–20 years

2016

★★★★☆ Very great

Freshness, length, beautiful acidity

15–20 years

2015

★★★★★ Legendary

Richness, balance, exceptional ageing potential

20–30 years

2010

★★★★★ Legendary

Power, structure, absolute longevity

25–35 years

2009

★★★★★ Legendary

Opulence, candied fruit, approachable

20–30 years

2005

★★★★★ Legendary

Classicism, balance, extreme ageing potential

30 years+

2000

★★★★☆ Very great

Maturity, dark fruit, beautiful finesse

20–25 years

 

Tasting and storage: how to get the best from a Premier Grand Cru Classé A

Aromatic profile

On tasting, these exceptional wines stand out by:

  • Colour: deep purple with garnet highlights, dense and brilliant

  • Nose: ripe dark fruits (blackcurrant, blackberry, blueberry), liquorice, cedar, cocoa, soft spices; after ageing: truffle, leather, undergrowth, tobacco

  • Palate: velvety yet structured tannins, ample texture, persistent finish of 30 to 60 seconds on the greatest vintages

  • Distinctive note: a mineral freshness and a graphite note unique to Figeac; a concentrated richness and cedar aromas for Pavie

Serving and storage recommendations

  • Serving temperature: 17°C, with a slight warm-up in the glass

  • Decanting: recommended for vintages less than 10 years old (1 to 2 hours)

  • Glass: wide and open, Burgundy-style, to release the complex bouquet

  • Storage: dark cellar at 12–14°C, humidity 70–80%, bottles stored on their side, away from vibrations

  • Ageing potential: 15 to 30 years depending on the vintage and the château

Food pairings

Wine style

Recommended pairing

Young, fruity (5–10 years)

Aged prime rib, herb-crusted lamb, duck breast

Maturity (10–20 years)

Game birds (woodcock, pheasant), black truffle, beef Wellington

Old age (20 years+)

Jugged hare, aged cheeses (old Comté, Saint-Nectaire)

 

Frequently asked questions about the Premiers Grands Crus Classés A of Saint-Émilion

What characteristics define the tasting of a Premier Grand Cru Classé A from Saint-Émilion?

  • Deep colour, often dark.

  • Intense bouquet: dark fruits, spices, floral notes.

  • Balanced palate: fine tannins, ample structure, long finish.

These wines present a rich aromatic palette, evolving over time towards tertiary aromas such as undergrowth and leather. They are also distinguished by a remarkable persistence on the palate.

Can a Premier Grand Cru Classé A be kept in the cellar for a long time?

Yes, these wines are designed for ageing. Depending on the vintage and the estate, they develop their full potential after 15 to 30 years, or even longer. Proper storage preserves their balance, freshness and aromatic intensity.

  • Dark, humid, temperature-controlled cellar (12–14°C recommended).

  • Bottles stored on their side to prevent the cork from drying out.

 

What is the difference between Premier Grand Cru Classé A, B and Grand Cru Classé?

 

Category

2022 number

Requirements

Average price

Premier Grand Cru Classé A

2

20 vintages evaluated, 50% tasting, exceptional terroir

150 - 400 €+

Premier Grand Cru Classé B

12

15 vintages evaluated, strict criteria

50 – 200 €

Grand Cru Classé

71

Complete application, consistent quality

25 – 80 €

Grand Cru

200+

Basic appellation criteria

15 – 40 €

 

 

 

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