Wine being poured from a bottle into a glass decanter against warm soft light
Wine Craft — How to Enjoy It

Decanting wine: when, how long, and why

Should you decant your Malbec? The honest guide — when it helps, when it hurts, and exactly how long different wines need.

Argentina Through Wine · 5 chapters · 7 min read total

In one lineDecanting does two completely different things — separate old wine from sediment OR let young wine breathe. Knowing which job you're doing changes everything.

Should you decant your Malbec? The honest guide — when it helps, when it hurts, and exactly how long different wines need.

Wine being poured from a bottle into a glass decanter, deep ruby liquid catching the light
Two minutes of theatre. Hours of better wine.
Start Reading — Step 1: The two reasons to ever decant →
Preguntas frecuentes

Respuestas rápidas

Should you decant Malbec?

Young Argentine Malbec (under 5 years) almost always benefits from 30–60 minutes of decanting. Big icon Malbecs benefit from 1–2 hours. Old Malbec (10+ years) should be decanted only briefly to separate sediment.

How long should you decant wine?

Young tannic reds: 30 minutes to 2 hours. Big young icons: 1–3 hours. Old reds (15+ years): 5 minutes or less, just to separate sediment. Old delicate reds like aged Pinot Noir: don't decant at all. General rule — the older the wine, the less time in the decanter.

What is the point of decanting wine?

Two completely different purposes. For young wines, decanting aerates them — oxygen softens tannins and releases aromas. For old wines, decanting separates the clear wine from sediment that forms over years. Two opposite techniques: aggressive pour for young, gentle pour for old.

Can you decant white wine?

Usually no. Whites and rosés are served young and fresh; decanting warms them and dulls aromatics. The only exception is when a white smells reductive (sulfur, struck match) on opening — 15–30 minutes can blow off the off-aromas. Sparkling should never be decanted.

How long does decanted wine last?

Most reds keep 12–18 hours after decanting; whites and lighter reds less. After that, oxidation flattens the flavor. Pour leftover back into a clean bottle and refrigerate.