Wine Auction House Comparison: Acker, Zachys, Christie's, Sotheby's, and HDH
Compare the top wine auction houses by buyer's premium, lot volume, price realization, and specialty. 5-year data on where to buy fine wine at auction.
Nine auction houses compete for the same pool of wine — but they differ significantly in fees, specialties, and which wines perform best on their platforms.
Nine auction houses handled the fine wine market across the five-year period, with a combined 1,000 lots. Brentwood handled the most volume with 990 lots — approximately 99% of all transactions. Buyer's premiums range from 10% at K&L Wines to 20% at Brentwood. On a $5,000 lot, that difference translates to 500 in additional fees — meaningful at scale.
Auction House Comparison
Volume, fees, and average prices across all nine houses. Premiums are estimated from lot-level data and reflect a weighted average across different lot sizes.
| Auction House | Wine Lots | Avg Premium | Avg Hammer Price | Known For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brentwood | 990 | 20.0% | $140 | Regional Specialties |
| K&L Wines | 10 | 10.0% | $1,472 | California & Bordeaux |
Based on a sample of auction lots. Premiums are estimated from lot-level data and may vary by lot value.
Buyer's Premium by House
The buyer's premium is added on top of the hammer price — it is not negotiable and is how auction houses generate revenue. Always calculate your total all-in cost before bidding: hammer price × (1 + buyer's premium rate) + any applicable taxes and shipping. For a $10,000 hammer price with a 25% premium, your actual cost is $12,500 before shipping.
Average Prices: What They Mean
Average hammer prices differ significantly by house, largely reflecting the types of wine each house specialises in. K&L Wines averages $1,472 per lot — reflecting a focus on high-value trophy wines — compared to $140 at Brentwood, which handles more volume at lower price points. Higher average prices don't mean better service: choose a house based on where your specific wine sells best.
Key Takeaways
- →Lowest fees for buyers:: K&L Wines has the lowest effective buyer's premium at 10%, making it the most cost-effective option for buyers who can find their target wines there.
- →Widest selection:: Brentwood handles the most lots, giving buyers the broadest selection across regions and vintages.
- →Strategy for sellers:: Consider which house has the best track record with your specific wine. Trophy Burgundy and Bordeaux tend to attract more competitive bidding at houses like Acker and Sotheby's, while K&L and Spectrum may be better suited for California and value-oriented European bottles.
- →Buyer's premium vs. seller's commission:: The buyer pays the buyer's premium. As a seller, you pay a separate seller's commission (typically 5–15%). Both fees reduce your effective return. Always calculate the full round-trip cost before deciding to buy with the intention of reselling.
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