Most collectors think about acquisition obsessively and exit rarely — and then sell in a panic, at a deadline, or after a bottle has slipped past its prime. Selling well is a skill, and it begins with separating two very different peaks: the drinking peak and the price peak. They are not the same, and they rarely coincide.
The drinking peak
Every ageable wine has a window where it's at its best, after which it begins the slow descent into tiredness. Holding a wine past that window to chase a higher price is a quiet tragedy — you end up with a less enjoyable bottle that may also be worth less, since the market eventually discounts wines drifting out of their window. Knowing each bottle's window precisely (the work of a good cellar) is the first input to any sell decision.
The price peak
Prices are driven by scarcity and attention: critic re-scores, anniversary vintages, a producer's rising reputation, or a category catching a bid — as Champagne and parts of Italy have in the current cycle (see our 2026 outlook). The collector's edge is recognizing when a wine you hold is having its moment while still drinking beautifully — the rare overlap where selling some and keeping some is the obvious move.
Sell from strength
Two practical truths. First, partial sells are underrated — release a few bottles of a deep holding at a strong price and keep the rest to drink; you bank gains without losing the pleasure. Second, you can only sell easily what you can prove: bottles with documented provenance and professional storage move faster and for more, which is why a members' resale marketplace built on a clean chain of custody turns a collection into a genuinely liquid asset. The best time to sell is when you choose to — not when a flooded closet or a lost record forces your hand.
Built into Best Cellar Club. Bin-level tracking, sommelier drinking windows, provenance records, and one-click appraisals — the stewardship this article describes, handled automatically. See plans →