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I visited Europe’s cheapest wine destination – with glasses of plonk for £2 and help-yourself fridges on hiking trails

Published on April 21, 2025 at 10:23 AM

IT sounds almost too good to be true but in this river valley strung like a harp with vineyards, you can eat, and drink, for under £10.

Winemakers in these stunning villages with pastel-painted houses even place help-yourself honesty fridges on footpaths.

Aerial view of Durnstein, Austria, showing the Danube River, vineyards, and the town.
This stunning river valley is a 22-mile stretch of the Austrian Danube called the Wachau, about 70 miles upriver from Vienna
Man smiling at a table outdoors overlooking a river valley.
Make sure to hike to the Thousand Bucket Mountain, located right by the riverside and featuring benches and a little stone hut on the top
Cheese and blood sausage platter.
Try a platter ofBlunz’n, local blood sausage served with grated horseradish, in Spitz
Man at vineyard honesty minibar.
Winemakers in the Wachau place help-yourself honesty fridges on footpaths
Cobblestone street in Wachau village with person on bicycle passing a shop.
Villages in the valley feature pastel-painted houses

Moreover, in season those winemakers run their own improvised taverns in barns and courtyards serving traditional farmworkers’ grub washed down with fruity whites priced as little as £2 a glass.

This earthly paradise is a spectacular 22-mile stretch of the AustrianDanube , about 70 miles upriver from .

There’s nothing secret about this -registered valley, but most of its visitors are on Danube cruises intent on Vienna or , so they get barely more than a glimpse as they come gliding through.

The Wachau, and its lip-smackingly fruity Grüner Veltliner , deserves a lot more than this.

Last year I too was one of those transients. It was during a brief layover by the Wachau’s prettiest village, Dürnstein, that I wandered down the riverbank, heard the sounds of clinking glassware, and found myself on a bench in an orchard, drinking a chilled white that seemed impossibly cheap and delicious.

I’d just been seduced by my firstheuriger, a word which means ‘new wine’, often drawn straight from the barrel.

This one was run by the Leonhartsberger family, quite a coincidence given that crusader Richard the Lionheart had been in Dürnstein, too.

Within a couple of months I was back, intent on the Wachau’s villages, its hiking trails, and sampling some more bargain wines.

There are, apparently, some 250 craftsman winemakers in the valley, their output too small for wider distribution, so they sell instead from their own cellar doors, alongside a variety of local , hams, sausages and pickles.

According to the calendar, key villages like Weissenkirchen had 18heurigerto choose from, and Spitz had 27, and although they take it in turns to open, I wasn’t going to go thirsty.

Over the next handful of days, travelling by a mix of rental , local bus and train, I managed to visit half a dozen.

In Weissenkirchen, for example, I tried a sheep’s cheese salad at Trautsamwieser (£5.50,trautsamwieser.at) which has a spectacular little terrace just above the village rooftops, and was full of jolly locals getting pie-eyed on that cost £1.80 a glass.

Map of Austria's Wachau region, highlighting its location in Europe and noting inexpensive wine.

Wachau Valley vineyard and village view.
Stunning views after a day spent hiking the Panoramaweg
Man standing by an outdoor honesty fridge stocked with drinks and wine.
The help-yourself honesty fridges mean you can enjoy a nice glass of wine whilst looking over the Danube

In Spitz I triedheurigerÖzelt (weingut-oezelt.at) where a grumpy waiter brought me a platter ofBlunz’n, local blood sausage (£6.50) served with grated horseradish, and the wine came in quarter litres (£3.80).

And in heuriger Hamböck (heuriger-krems.at) in the outskirts of Krems, the main gateway to the Wachau, I ordered thegrammelschmalzbrot, bread slathered in pork lard and topped with onions and paprika.

Thanks to the trusting locals, I was able to watch the sun go down over the Danube, and raise a nicely chilled glass to the departing day

It was a lot better than it sounds: the onions gave it crunch, the lard gave it body, the paprika gave it spice, but – as often in these things – the location had extra magic, with a view across the rooftops to where the abbey of Gottweig straddled the hilltop like a baroque fortress.

Plus the Grüner Veltliner here cost just £1.80 a glass.

But perhaps the best moment was after a day spent hiking the Panoramaweg, up through beautifully tended vineyard terraces into a little side valley by Spitz.

I ended up in the evening on a modest hill grandiosely called Thousand Bucket Mountain, so slathered in vineyards that it surely produced far more buckets than a measly thou.

Thousand Bucket is spectacularly located right by the riverside, with a couple of benches and a little stone hut on the top.

The view was magnificent, but it had another surprise up its sleeve, because inside the stone hut was a fridge filled with bottles of wine, payment for which (by card) was completely honesty-based.

Back home, a help-yourself minibar on a hilltop would be ransacked before you could say blood sausage – but not here.

Thanks to the trusting locals, I was able to watch the sun go down over , and raise a nicely chilled glass to the departing day.

Vineyards and village of Weissenkirchen in the Wachau Valley.
The valley's villages boast incredible vineyards, such as the one in Weissenkirchen
View of vineyards and houses in a valley.
The view over the Panoramaweg was magnificent
People dining at an outdoor restaurant at sunset, overlooking a valley.
In Weissenkirchen, Trautsamwieser had a spectacular little terrace just above the village rooftops, and was full of jolly locals
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