FOOD & DRINK · WINE · 2026
A city that drinks Malbec the way Paris drinks coffee, slowly, and always with a reason.
June 2026 · 6 spots · Buenos Aires

Argentina is the fifth-largest wine producer in the world, and Buenos Aires is where all of it eventually arrives. Bottles travel a thousand kilometers from the vineyards of Mendoza, the high desert of Salta, and the cool valleys of Patagonia, and they land in a city that knows exactly what to do with them. You do not need to fly west to taste the country. You only need to know which corners to look for.
This is a drinking map, not a wine course. Each stop below is a real place with a real door, scattered across a handful of neighborhoods. Some are working wine shops where you drink what you buy. Others are full bars built for a long evening. What they share is that none of them feel like a tourist stop.
A note on logistics, because Buenos Aires is larger than it looks on a map. These six spots sit in different barrios, and hopping between them by your own arrangement saves the evening. After your private city tour with Buenos Aires Transfers, your driver can drop you at the first glass instead of a hotel lobby, and the day keeps its rhythm. From there, you walk, you linger, you decide the rest at your own pace.

MONSERRAT
01 · Aldo's Vinoteca
A working wine shop where you drink what you buy
Aldo's is the simplest idea in this guide and one of the best. It is a wine shop first, lined floor to ceiling with Argentine labels, and a restaurant second. You can buy a bottle off the shelf at retail price and drink it at your table for a small corkage, which means the list is effectively the entire store. The staff know the catalogue by heart and will steer you toward a small-batch Malbec or a Bonarda you have never heard of.
Come early in the evening, before the dinner crowd, when the light is still good and the sommeliers have time to talk. It is a five-minute walk from the historic center, which makes it a natural first stop after an afternoon downtown.
→ MORENO 372, MONSERRAT

PALERMO
02 · Lo de JoaquĂn Alberdi
A neighborhood bottle shop with a tasting room in back
By day this looks like an ordinary Palermo wine shop, warm wood, a careful selection, a counter for advice. Walk to the back and there is a small tasting room where flights are poured for anyone who asks, and where Saturday afternoons turn into something closer to a salon. The focus is on Argentine boutique producers, the kind of names that never make it onto a hotel list.
This is the stop for travelers who want to understand what they are drinking, not just enjoy it. Ask for a vertical of Malbec from a single producer and let the owner explain why altitude changes everything.
→ JORGE LUIS BORGES 1772, PALERMO
PALERMO
03 · Pain et Vin
Natural wine and warm bread, in that order
Half bakery, half natural-wine bar, Pain et Vin built its reputation on low-intervention bottles and sourdough that comes out of the oven through the afternoon. The wine list leans toward small Argentine producers working organically and biodynamically, and the by-the-glass selection rotates often enough that regulars come back to see what is open.
Sit at the counter, order a glass of something cloudy and alive, and tear into a piece of bread still warm from the back. It is the most quietly joyful room on this list.
→ GORRITI 5132, PALERMO
If you are building an afternoon out of these stops, this is the moment to stop worrying about taxis. A private driver waiting between barrios turns a scattered wine map into a single, easy evening. Buenos Aires Transfers handles the routing so you handle the tasting.
PALERMO
04 · Vico Wine Bar
A self-serve wall of wine, by the glass
Vico solves a problem every wine lover knows: you want to taste widely without committing to full bottles. Here, a wall of dispensers pours dozens of labels by the glass, from an honest house pour to bottles you would never open on your own. You load a card, you wander the wall, you pour what you like in whatever measure you like.
It is playful without being a gimmick, and it is the best room in the city for comparing two Malbecs side by side, or for finding out whether you actually prefer a Patagonian Pinot Noir. Go with a group and turn it into a tasting game.
→ HONDURAS 5799, PALERMO

RECOLETA
05 · Gran Bar Danzón
The grown-up wine bar that started it all
Long before the natural-wine wave, DanzĂłn was teaching Buenos Aires how to sit at a bar and order wine by the glass with intention. Up a discreet staircase in Recoleta, the room is dark, low, and adult, with a list that runs deep into Argentine fine wine and a kitchen that takes the food as seriously as the pour. The cocktails are excellent too, if someone in your group has had enough Malbec for one night.
This is the place for the last serious glass of the evening, the one you order slowly because you are in no hurry to leave.
→ LIBERTAD 1161, RECOLETA
RETIRO
06 · FlorerĂa Atlántico
A wine cellar hidden behind a flower shop
You enter through a working flower shop, open a refrigerated door, and walk down into one of the most celebrated bars in South America. FlorerĂa Atlántico is famous for its cocktails, but the cellar underneath is a serious wine destination, with a list that crosses the Atlantic in both directions and a room that hums until very late. It is loud, beautiful, and entirely unlike the quiet shops earlier on this list.
Save it for last. Nothing follows FlorerĂa Atlántico except the walk home.
→ ARROYO 872, RETIRO
Drink the city at your own pace
Buenos Aires gives up its best glasses to people who are not in a rush, and the only thing that breaks the spell is worrying about how to get from one barrio to the next. Let us carry that part. Book a private driver, start with a city tour in the afternoon, and end it with a glass of Malbec exactly where you want to be.
Reserve your private city tour with Buenos Aires Transfers and let the evening take care of itself. →