IGT · since 1999
Nurra
Wine · PGI · 10 municipalities
Recognized in 1999, the Nurra PGI covers ten municipalities in northwestern Sardinia, including Alghero and Sassari, yet currently registers zero active producers. This designation distinguishes itself through a strict varietal restriction: eleven of Sardinia’s signature grapes—including Cannonau, Vermentino, and Carignano—are entirely banned from appearing as varietals on Nurra labels, reserving those names for local DOC/DOCG wines. Instead, monovarietal bottlings must feature other regional grapes at a minimum of 85 percent. For the dormant appellation, production rules dictate a maximum yield of 19.0 tons per hectare for red wines, which must also reach a minimum alcohol level of 11.0% by volume.
Cannonau %11% vol min190 q/ha maxsource ↗
Production zone
Producers0 verified
The facts
- Colour
- from pale ruby red to garnet red
- Taste
- from dry to sweet
The producers 0
Frequently asked questions
- Where is Nurra produced?
- Nurra is produced in 10 municipalities in Sardinia, Italy: Alghero, Ittiri, Olmedo, Ossi and more.
- What grape is Nurra made from?
- Nurra is made from Cannonau, Carignano, Girò, Malvasia, Monica, Moscato, Nasco, Nuragus, Semidano, Vermentino, Vernaccia.
- What is the minimum alcohol content of Nurra?
- The minimum alcohol content of Nurra is 11% vol.
- What does IGT mean?
- IGT (Indicazione Geografica Tipica) identifies wines typical of a broader geographic area, with more flexible rules than DOC/DOCG.