Germany 3D Wine Map

All 13 Anbaugebiete from the Mosel to Sachsen, including the Rheingau, Pfalz, Nahe, and Franken in full 3D terrain.

Germany’s wine regions are shaped by rivers. The Mosel, Rhine, Nahe, Main, and their tributaries carved the steep valleys and south-facing slopes where Riesling and other varieties ripen at the northern edge of viability. What makes 3D essential here is the extreme terrain: vineyards in the Mosel and Ahr, for example, sit on slopes so steep that mechanized farming is impossible, and sun exposure changes dramatically from one bend in the river to the next. This map covers all 13 Anbaugebiete with detailed popup data. The bookmarks are the best way to navigate a country this spread out; use them to fly between major regions.

See It in 3D

Explore all 13 German Anbaugebiete in full 3D terrain with bookmarks to fly between regions, layer controls, elevation profiles, and detailed data for every mapped area.

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What You’ll Explore

This 3D Fast Map covers all 13 of Germany’s Anbaugebiete. Click any mapped region for detailed popup content covering grape varieties, classification details, and geographic specifics. Start with the bookmarks: Germany’s wine regions are spread across hundreds of kilometers, and the bookmarks will fly you directly to the Mosel, the Rheingau, the Pfalz, and the other key areas without manual scrolling. From there, use the layer controls to show outlines or shading and the elevation profile tool to measure the slopes that define German viticulture.

Performance Note: 3D maps use more device resources than standard 2D maps. On older devices or slower connections, allow a moment for the terrain to fully load. For the best experience, use Full Screen mode and close other browser tabs.
  • All 13 Anbaugebiete mapped with detailed popup data
  • Bookmarks to fly directly between major regions across the country
  • Elevation profile tool for measuring the steep vineyard slopes Germany is known for
  • Daylight and shadow animation to visualize sun exposure and aspect by region
  • Weather overlay to see how atmospheric conditions interact with river valley terrain
3D terrain view of Bernkastel and the steep Mosel vineyards in SommGeo's interactive Germany wine map
The steep slate slopes around Bernkastel in the Mosel in 3D. The tight river bends that create the prized south-facing vineyard exposures are clearly visible in the terrain.

Key Regions in Focus

Mosel

The Mosel is an epic wine region. The river carves a winding path through slate bedrock, and each bend creates a different vineyard exposure. The best sites face south or southwest on slopes that can exceed 65 degrees, making them among the steepest cultivated vineyards in the world. Bernkastel, Piesport, Ürzig, and Zeltingen sit along the Mittelmosel, where the concentration of top Riesling sites is highest. Use the bookmarks to fly between these areas and the daylight animation to see how the sun tracks across each bend differently. The Saar and Ruwer tributaries, cooler and higher in elevation, produce Rieslings with even sharper acidity and tension.

Rheingau

The Rheingau occupies a unique stretch where the Rhine turns west for roughly 30 kilometers (19 miles) before resuming its northward course. This means the hillside faces due south, a geographic advantage that concentrates heat and sunlight in ways that the north-south stretches of the Rhine cannot match. The Taunus mountains behind the vineyards shelter against cold northern winds. Riesling dominates at roughly 75-80% of plantings, and the best vineyards (Berg Schlossberg, Marcobrunn, Schloss Johannisberg) occupy the mid-slope between roughly 80 and 200 meters (260 and 655 feet). In 3D, the Rheingau reads as a single, coherent south-facing slope. Use the bookmarks to jump here from the Mosel and compare how different the terrain is.

Pfalz and Beyond

The Pfalz runs roughly 80 kilometers (50 miles) along the eastern flank of the Haardt mountains, a continuation of the Vosges in Alsace. The mountains block Atlantic moisture, making the Pfalz one of Germany’s warmest and driest regions. The northern Mittelhaardt around Deidesheim, Forst, and Wachenheim is the heart of premium Pfalz Riesling, with basalt and limestone soils producing wines of real weight and concentration. Further afield, Nahe (volcanic porphyry to slate), Franken (Silvaner on limestone, continental climate), and Baden (Germany’s warmest region, bordering Alsace) each occupy distinct geographic niches. The bookmarks make it easy to explore all of these across the full map without losing your place.

New to 3D Fast Maps? Learn how to navigate 3D terrain, use elevation profiles, animate sunlight, and get the most from your map.

3D Fast Maps Guide →

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Use of these maps for any commercial purpose, including websites, print publications, marketing materials, or any other commercial venture, is strictly prohibited without prior written permission.

To inquire about custom SommGeo platforms, maps, or commercial licensing, please contact greg@sommgeo.com.

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