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97 points

We are pleased to offer direct allocations of Dom Perignon 2017, the latest release of this Fine Wine investment stalwart from the world-famous Moët & Chandon estate. Scored an enormous 97 points by Antonio Galloni and released at the third cheapest available vintage of the last seventeen, Dom Perignon 2017 comes in well under Liv-Ex’s Fair Value line, making it a STRONG BUY asset option.
6x75cl - £750 in bond
Global volumes of the 2017 vintage are extremely low, due to a frosthit vintage, putting stock at one fifth of the rolling average.
Dom Perignon was the most-traded Champagne in 2025 on Liv-Ex, accounting for 20% of all Champagne trades, demonstrating that is perennially in demand, offering excellent liquidity. This demand coupled with genuinely small volumes for this highly rated vintage seems certain to exacerbate the inverse supply curve which drives Fine Wine investment.
Available cheaper than more poorly rated vintages at £750 per case of 6 bottles in bond, Dom Perignon 2017 ticks all key investment criteria at Clos Fine Wine, perfectly poised for investors to make the most of a market that is finally trending upwards after 30 months of turmoil.
The similarly rated 2012 vintage has appreciated by 5.6% in the first two months of 2026 alone, an excellent bellwether for the 2017.
In what has been a fairly dour investment landscape since 2023, Dom Perignon 2017 shines as a genuine STRONG BUY option in a market in the ascendancy; for those with Fine Wine portfolios and those diversifying their investments it comes highly recommended.



Each release of Dom Perignon is sought after, but the extremely competitive pricing of this wonderful 2017, its high critical scores (the joint-second highest score ever from Antonio Galloni at 97 points), and the tiny production levels in what was a frost-hit vintage, make this a supremely compelling investment offering.
To emphasise the point, Liv-Ex’s ‘fair value’ which is one of the key, agnostic tools in determining the investment value of a wine, plots Dom Perignon well below the regression line. A wine showing under the line indicates ‘fair value’ based on score and price.
Given what we know about the extremely reduced production levels of the 2017 it is fair to speculate that the 2017 would fall even further below the value line if scarcity were taken into consideration.


Month on month Year to date 1 Year

Above left: Dom Perignon 2017 fair value analysis, Above right: Champagne 50 index components performance Below: Recovery of the Champagne 50 index over last year

The 2017 iteration of Dom Perignon enters a market on the rise for the first time in nearly three years, with an ascendant Champagne 50 sub-index (see chart above). The 2012 vintage, scored the same 97 points by Antonio Galloni has appreciated by 5.6% since the start of 2016, whilst the 2008 vintage has recovered to post a gain of 5.42% since March last year. All in all, the key markers indicate that Dom Perignon is a genuinely impressive asset option.
Antonio Galloni scored the wine 97 points and wrote: “The 2017 Dom Pérignon is so impressive. A sort of mini-2002, the 2017 is a Champagne of textural richness and resonance above all else. Its creamy, voluptuous contours are so inviting. Production for the 2017 is tiny, about a three-month supply, so this wine will come and go pretty quickly. That represents a fairly dramatic shift in philosophy at Dom Pérignon. In the past, a wine like the 2017 would not have been commerically viable because of its small volume. Today, Chef de Caves Vincent Chaperon prefers to bottle Dom Pérignon in every vintage, if possible, as a document of the year, even if that means some releases will be very small. The 2017 is a wild, exotic Dom Pérignon. I loved it”.