How many wine glasses are in a bottle of wine?
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From a standard 750 ml bottle of wine, you pour five 150 ml glasses. This is the most common serving size for a wine glass. However, in practice, the amount per glass often varies. If you pour a little more generously, you'll get four glasses per bottle. If you stick to 125 ml per glass, you'll get six. It depends on how you pour and for what occasion.
How many glasses per bottle for different serving sizes?
The serving size determines how many glasses you get from a bottle. The table below provides an overview for a standard 750 ml bottle.
| Serving Size | Glasses per Bottle (750 ml) | Use |
|---|---|---|
| 100 ml | 7-8 glasses | Wine tasting, small portions |
| 125 ml | 6 glasses | Hospitality, formal dinner |
| 150 ml | 5 glasses | Standard at home |
| 175 ml | 4 glasses | Generous pouring |
| 250 ml | 3 glasses | Large glass, casual |
How many glasses from larger bottle sizes?
Wine comes in more formats than just the standard 750 ml bottle. For festive occasions or larger gatherings, magnum or jeroboam bottles are popular. The table below provides an overview of the most common bottle formats and the number of glasses for a 150 ml serving size.
| Bottle Format | Volume | Glasses (at 150 ml) |
|---|---|---|
| Half bottle (demi) | 375 ml | ± 2-3 glasses |
| Standard bottle | 750 ml | ± 5 glasses |
| Magnum | 1500 ml | ± 10 glasses |
| Jeroboam | 3000 ml | ± 20 glasses |
| Mathusalem | 6000 ml | ± 40 glasses |
How many bottles do you need for a dinner?
A useful rule of thumb for a dinner: count on half a bottle per person. For four people and a two to three-hour dinner, that amounts to two bottles. If you also serve an aperitif and a dessert wine, an extra bottle is advisable. For a party or a longer evening where wine flows all evening, one bottle per person is more realistic.
If you want to serve wine from a carafe, it's useful to know how many glasses a carafe holds. Read more in how many glasses are in a carafe of wine.
Which glass do you use for which wine?
The type of glass influences how much you pour and how the wine tastes. Red wine glasses are larger than white wine glasses but are not filled fuller. The extra space in the glass is precisely for the aromas. An ideal large red wine glass is filled to a third, leaving room for swirling. For a smaller white wine glass, half is a common measure.
Champagne flutes have an average capacity of 150 to 200 ml but are usually filled up to two-thirds, so the bubbles remain clearly visible. From a 750 ml bottle of champagne, you will get five to six glasses. View Mémoire's wine glass collection for an overview of red wine glasses, white wine glasses, and champagne flutes.
Why the glass matters
A good wine glass does more than just hold wine. The shape of the bowl directs the aromas to your nose and determines how the wine hits your tongue. A glass that is too small leaves little room for the nose and mutes the aromas. A glass that is too large for a light wine can give the impression that the wine lacks body. The right combination of glass and wine makes a noticeable difference in the experience.
Want to know more about which glass best suits which wine? Then read which wine glasses go with which wine.
How many glasses from a bottle at a wine tasting?
At a home wine tasting, you pour smaller portions than at a normal dinner. A tasting glass of 75 to 100 ml is common. From a 750 ml bottle, you will get seven to ten tasting glasses. This makes a single bottle per wine more than enough for a group of six to eight people. Read more about organizing a wine tasting at home via Mémoire's home wine tasting collection.