You want better mobile ergonomics.
Choose a native, mobile-first app. This is where Cellared is strongest for iPhone users.
Wine app guide
CellarTracker built the online wine cellar category. The question is not whether it matters. The question is what kind of collector you are now, and whether you need community depth, mobile speed, bottle timing, visual mapping, or cellar-aware help choosing what to open.
Choose Cellared if you want an iPhone-first cellar app that tells you what to open, what to hold, and what pairs with dinner from bottles you already own.
Keep CellarTracker close if your buying decisions depend on the public tasting-note database. Replace or supplement it if your bigger pain is daily cellar friction.
| App | Best for | Why it fits | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cellared | iOS collectors who want a modern cellar app centered on drinking windows and owned-bottle recommendations. | Cellared imports CellarTracker CSV files, assigns bottle-level drinking windows, and helps decide what to open with dinner. | No Android, public community tasting-note database, marketplace, or 3D rack map at launch. |
| InVintory | Collectors who want premium cellar presentation and 3D cellar mapping. | Its clearest strength is visual cellar organization and high-touch cellar management. | It may be more setup than needed if your main question is what to open tonight. |
| Vivino | Wine discovery, bottle identification, crowd ratings, and buying wine. | Vivino is useful when you are deciding what to buy or identify, not just what to open from home. | It is not primarily built as a serious cellar operating system. |
| OENARI | Collectors who want cross-platform storage structure and precise cellar organization. | OENARI publicly emphasizes iOS, Android, storage modules, tasting notes, and drinking windows. | Slot-level structure is useful only if physical storage location is a real constraint. |
| Oeni | Collectors who want broad cellar management with valuation, food pairing, and visual cellar features. | Oeni positions itself as a full cellar manager rather than a narrow tasting-note tool. | The product is broader than a pure drinking-window decision assistant. |
| CellarWise | Collectors who want a simpler drink-or-hold oriented cellar app. | The positioning is close to the practical cellar question: which bottles should be opened soon. | It has less incumbent depth and third-party visibility than CellarTracker or Vivino. |
| WineIQ | Users who want sommelier-style questions based on their own cellar. | It competes more on cellar-aware advice than on legacy cellar database depth. | Public long-term cellar-management proof is still thinner than mature incumbents. |
| SommPair | People who want sommelier advice grounded in owned bottles. | Its positioning is advice-first: pairing, dinner, questions, and taste-profile learning. | It is more sommelier layer than full cellar operating system. |
You want better mobile ergonomics.
Choose a native, mobile-first app. This is where Cellared is strongest for iPhone users.
You want to know when each bottle peaks.
Choose an app that treats drinking windows as a first-class feature, not a side field.
You need public tasting notes.
Stay close to CellarTracker. That community database remains hard to replace.
You need a map of rack positions.
Look at 3D-cellar-first products such as InVintory or cellar-structure-heavy tools.
You mostly identify bottles before buying.
Vivino is still the natural fit for shopping, ratings, and discovery.
CellarTracker is excellent at preserving what the wine community knows. Cellared is focused on what an individual collector should do next: open, hold, pair, share, or prioritize before a bottle slides past peak.
That is why Cellared treats drinking windows as the center of the product instead of one field in a database. The goal is not just to catalog wine. The goal is to drink better from the cellar you already built.
For iOS collectors who want mobile-first cellar management, calculated drinking windows, and recommendations from their own bottles, Cellared is a strong CellarTracker alternative. For community tasting notes, CellarTracker remains the deepest option.
Yes. Cellared imports CellarTracker CSV exports so collectors can move a copy of their cellar into a mobile-first interface without deleting their CellarTracker account.
Not necessarily. Many collectors can run CellarTracker and a newer app in parallel while deciding which workflow is better. Keep CellarTracker if community tasting notes are central to how you buy and drink.
Vivino is an alternative only for some jobs. It is strongest for discovery, ratings, bottle identification, and buying wine. It is not a direct replacement for serious cellar management.
Use a cellar app built around drinking windows and bottle timing. Cellared is designed for that job: what is too young, what is ready, what is at peak, and what should be opened soon.