Industrial & logistics · Reference
A standard 750 ml wine bottle is about 300 mm (11.8 in) tall and 75 mm (3.0 in) across. Bordeaux bottles are tall with high shoulders, Burgundy wider and sloped, and Champagne bottles taller and heavier for pressure.
A wine bottle is specified by overall Height × body Diameter; the punt is the concave indentation in the base.
| Bottle shape | Height | Body diameter |
|---|---|---|
| Bordeaux (high shoulder) | 290–305 mm (11.5–12.0 in) | 75 mm (3.0 in) |
| Burgundy (sloped shoulder) | 286–300 mm (11.25–11.8 in) | 80–85 mm (3.15–3.35 in) |
| Champagne / sparkling | 317–330 mm (12.5–13.0 in) | 85–90 mm (3.35–3.55 in) |
Source: LOM Glassworks — Wine Bottle Height & Dimensions Guide (2026)
| Format | Volume | Height | Diameter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Half / Demi | 375 ml | 241 mm (9.5 in) | 57 mm (2.25 in) |
| Standard | 750 ml | 292–300 mm (11.5–11.8 in) | 75 mm (3.0 in) |
| Magnum | 1.5 L | 343 mm (13.5 in) | 102 mm (4.0 in) |
Source: Vigilant — Wine Bottle Sizes & Dimensions (2026)
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Height | 290.6 mm (11.4 in) |
| Body diameter | 83.4 mm (3.28 in) |
| Empty weight (reinforced glass) | 560 g (1.23 lb) |
| Punt depth | 18 mm |
| Pressure rating | 15 bar carbonation |
| Finish | 29 mm crown / champagne cork |
Source: Vigo — 750 ml Clear Champagne Bottle Spec (2026)
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About 300 mm (11.8 in) tall and 75 mm (3.0 in) in diameter, though Bordeaux, Burgundy and Champagne shapes shift the height by 20–40 mm and the diameter by up to 15 mm.
A Champagne bottle is taller at ~317–330 mm (12.5–13 in) and wider at 85–90 mm, versus a Bordeaux bottle at ~290–305 mm (11.5–12 in) and ~75 mm.
A 1.5 L magnum is about 343 mm (13.5 in) tall and 102 mm (4 in) in diameter — double the volume of a standard 750 ml bottle.
A standard 750 ml still-wine bottle weighs ~400–600 g empty; heavy sparkling / Champagne bottles start around 560 g and premium bottles can exceed 900 g.
The global standard is 12 × 750 ml bottles per case (a "case of wine"); half-cases of 6 bottles are also common in trade.
Every figure on this page is traced to a named source, linked under each table. Standard sizes come from published standards and established industry references; where a size is a typical range or varies by manufacturer, we say so. Sizes vary by region, model and revision — treat these as the standard reference, and confirm the exact spec of the item you are selling.
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