Cellared
iPhone collectors deciding what to open tonight
Best when your cellar is already real and the hard question is drink, hold, or pair.
Wine app guide
The best wine cellar app depends on what you need it to do. Use Cellared for owned-bottle decisions, CellarTracker for community notes, Vivino for buying context, InVintory for cellar mapping, and Sommo for broader wine learning.
Cellared
Best when your cellar is already real and the hard question is drink, hold, or pair.
CellarTracker
Best when shared tasting history and a deep wine database matter most.
Vivino
Best when you are shopping, comparing crowd opinion, or exploring unfamiliar bottles.
InVintory
Best when knowing exactly where each bottle sits is the main operational problem.
Sommo
Best when you want a broader wine companion, not only a cellar operating system.
Start with the job, not the logo. A collector with 80 bottles and dinner decisions has a different problem from a collector with a large mapped cellar, a buyer checking crowd ratings, or someone who wants a wine-learning companion.
Cellared fits the cellar-first, drink-better problem: what do I own, what is ready, what should I hold, and what bottle makes sense tonight?
Public positioning changes, so treat this as a use-case guide rather than a permanent feature audit.
| App | Best for | Strengths | Fair concession |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cellared | Collectors who want cellar inventory, drinking-window intelligence, and fast owned-bottle decisions. | Bottle-level readiness, Quick Pick, food pairing from your own cellar, CellarTracker CSV import, and a free tier with unlimited bottles. | Not the best fit if you need Android, a public tasting-note community, marketplace buying, or a 3D rack map today. |
| CellarTracker | Collectors who value community tasting notes, long history, market context, and mature cellar workflows. | Huge wine database, deep public notes, personal tasting history, valuation context, and serious collector trust. | It can feel more like a power database than a modern, decision-first mobile app for choosing tonight's bottle. |
| Vivino | People discovering wines, checking crowd ratings, identifying bottles, and shopping. | Broad consumer reach, fast wine lookup, ratings, reviews, retail discovery, and a familiar buying flow. | Its center of gravity is discovery and shopping. It is not primarily built around managing a serious home cellar over years. |
| InVintory | Premium collectors who want visual cellar organization and exact physical bottle placement. | Cellar visualization, location management, valuation-oriented workflows, imports, and polished collection presentation. | The setup can be heavier than necessary if your main need is deciding what is ready to drink. |
| Sommo | Wine drinkers who want a broader app for learning, journaling, pairing, and guided wine questions. | Educational guides, wine journal features, pairing help, comparison content, and a more general wine-companion feel. | It is less clearly a dedicated inventory system for large, location-sensitive cellars. |
I want to know what to open tonight.
It puts drinking windows, ready bottles, pairing, and cellar-based recommendations at the center of the product.
I need the largest shared note database.
Its community tasting-note history is still the hardest asset in the category to replace.
I am mostly choosing what to buy.
Its strengths are crowd ratings, discovery, wine lookup, and retail context.
I lose bottles in a large physical cellar.
Its visual cellar and location tools are built for finding bottles, not just listing them.
I want a wine learning companion.
It leans into education, journaling, pairings, and guided wine exploration.
I am moving from CellarTracker to a faster iPhone workflow.
Cellared imports CellarTracker CSV files, then reframes the cellar around timing and bottle choice.
Cellared is for the moment after the wine is already yours. It is designed to turn cellar inventory into practical choices: bottles that are ready, bottles that should wait, bottles at peak, and bottles that make sense with the meal in front of you.
That makes it different from a marketplace, different from a ratings app, and different from a pure cellar map. It is a wine cellar app for drinking the right bottle at the right time.
There is no single best app for every collector. Cellared is best for iPhone collectors who want cellar inventory, drinking windows, and help choosing what to open tonight. CellarTracker is best for community notes. Vivino is best for discovery and buying. InVintory is best for visual cellar mapping.
Cellared is built around drinking-window intelligence as a main surface. It shows whether bottles are too young, ready, at peak, or declining, then uses that timing to help choose a bottle from your own cellar.
Yes. CellarTracker remains very strong if you depend on community tasting notes, long personal history, market context, and a mature collector database. Some collectors will use CellarTracker for records and Cellared for day-to-day bottle decisions.
Vivino can help track wines, but its main strength is discovery, crowd ratings, wine lookup, and shopping context. If your main problem is managing bottles you already own, a cellar-first app is usually a better fit.
A visual cellar map is useful when physical bottle location is the hard part, especially in a large or multi-zone cellar. If the harder problem is choosing what is ready to drink, drinking-window intelligence matters more.