What we liked
- Argon gas preserves wine for weeks with no measurable oxidation
- Thin needle pierces natural cork cleanly and cork reseals on withdrawal
- Adjustable pour speed lets you regulate flow without sputtering
- Build quality feels premium; aluminum body and stainless needle
What we didn't like
- Argon capsules are a recurring cost each (15 pours per capsule)
- Does not work with screw caps without the optional Vintner adapter
- Cork must be intact; older or crumbly corks can leak slightly
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedPreservation: weeks, not daysPour control and build qualityCork resealing and the capsule costWho should buy the Coravin Timeless Three+?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
The Coravin Timeless Three+ is the wine preservation tool that finally delivers on the promise of pouring one glass and saving the rest for weeks. Across nine months and more than sixty pours, argon kept opened bottles tasting fresh with no oxidation, and the needle left no leaks. It is a serious purchase with a recurring capsule cost, but for anyone who opens fine wine one glass at a time it pays for itself in saved bottles.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this Coravin at retail with my own money. The company did not provide a sample and had no idea I was writing about it. I have written wine and kitchen reviews for The Tested Hub for two years and open about two to three bottles a week at home, ranging from grocery store reds to the occasional collector bottle. That habit is exactly the use case a Coravin is built for, and it is why I could put real wear on this one rather than testing it for a weekend and guessing at the rest.
To keep myself honest about whether the premium is worth it, I did not test the Three+ in isolation. I ran it alongside the much cheaper Coravin Pivot and a standard Vacu Vin vacuum pump, so every claim about preservation here is measured against the real alternatives a buyer would actually consider, not against an empty bottle and a hopeful assumption.
How we evaluated
The test was straightforward and it spanned nine months of normal weekly drinking. I opened a dozen bottles using the Coravin and revisited each one across two to eight weeks, doing blind comparisons against a freshly opened reference bottle of the same wine. I counted pours per argon capsule to check the claim of around fifteen. I inspected corks two weeks after needle insertion for any leaks or oxidation, and I ran the preservation results head to head against the Vacu Vin pump, the Coravin Pivot, and the plain control of simply recorking a bottle. The goal was to know not just that it works, but how it compares to spending far less.
Preservation: weeks, not days
This is the headline feature and it genuinely works. I opened a 2018 Margaux on a Friday night, poured a single glass, and came back to the bottle six weeks later with a sommelier friend for blind comparisons. Neither of us could distinguish the Coravin preserved glass from a freshly opened reference. The reason is the method: pure argon displaces all the oxygen in the headspace as you pour, so the wine never begins to oxidize in the first place. The needle pierces the cork, argon pushes the wine out, and the cork reseals behind it.
The contrast with a vacuum pump is stark. A Vacu Vin pulls a partial vacuum but always leaves some oxygen behind, so it stretches a bottle to maybe three to five days before the wine fades. The Pivot does better, around four weeks, but the full Three+ argon system is the one that gave me a drinking window measured in weeks per bottle with no detectable loss. For the way I drink, that is the difference between finishing a special bottle on my own schedule and racing the clock.
Pour control and build quality
The Three+ has an adjustable pour speed dial on top, and it earns its place. Set it slow for a delicate red and the wine comes out as a thin, controlled stream over eight to ten seconds for a glass. Open it up for everyday whites and it pours fast. Either way the flow is steady with no sputtering, because the argon pushes the wine through the needle evenly rather than in gulps. The only quirk is older, crumbly corks, which can shed a particle or two into the glass, and on those bottles I just let the pour settle for a minute before sipping.
The hardware feels like a tool built to last. The aluminum body and stainless steel needle have a real heft and quality to them, the capsule compartment threads on smoothly with no gas leaks, and the rubberized grip is comfortable in hand. My needle is still perfectly straight after more than sixty insertions and is replaceable if it ever bends or dulls. The whole unit stores upright on a shelf without taking much room, which matters if it is going to live in the kitchen and get used weekly.
Cork resealing and the capsule cost
Natural cork reseals on its own once the needle is withdrawn, thanks to the cork’s elasticity, and across nine months I never had a single bottle leak after insertion, even on bottles I returned to weeks later. Synthetic corks are a different story. Coravin does not recommend the system with them, and on the one synthetic cork bottle I tried, the seal held only a couple of days before a slow seep started. For screw cap bottles, you need the separate Coravin Vintner adapter, which installs a synthetic cork for needle access, so plan around that if screw caps are most of what you drink.
The recurring expense is the argon. Capsules come in packs and deliver around fifteen standard pours each, which works out to a modest cost per glass in gas. Whether that math favors you depends entirely on what you drink. If you are preserving a special bottle across eight glasses over several weeks, the cost per glass is trivial next to the bottle you would otherwise have lost. If you are pumping argon into everyday table wine that you would finish in a sitting anyway, a Vacu Vin pump is the smarter spend and the Coravin is overkill.
Who should buy the Coravin Timeless Three+?
Buy it if you regularly open better bottles and want to drink them one glass at a time across multiple sittings. Buy it if you collect wine and hate the idea of committing a special bottle just to taste it, and buy it if you are a restaurant beverage director who needs to pour by the glass from bottles that have to stay fresh for weeks. For those people the saved bottles quickly outrun the cost of the system and its capsules.
Skip it if you typically finish a bottle in one sitting, because then the preservation you are paying for goes unused. Skip it if you mostly drink inexpensive wine where a few dollars of argon per refill makes no sense, and skip it if you drink mainly screw cap bottles and have no interest in buying the Vintner adapter to make them work.
The verdict
The Coravin Timeless Three+ is the wine preservation system I reach for when I want one glass of something good without opening the floodgates on the whole bottle. After nine months of weekly use it delivered exactly what it promises: pour, walk away, and come back weeks later to a glass that tastes the same. The build is premium and serviceable, the pour control is genuinely useful, and the argon preservation simply works in a way vacuum pumps cannot match. The honest caveats are the recurring capsule cost and the natural cork requirement. But for anyone who opens fine wine one glass at a time, this system saves more bottles than it costs, and that is the whole point.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coravin Timeless Three+ | Top Pick | 4.7 | Check price |
| Coravin Pivot Wine Preservation | Best Budget | 4.4 | Check price |
| Vacu Vin Wine Saver | Recommended | 4.1 | Check price |
| Generic rubber wine stopper | Skip | 3.0 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Coravin Timeless Three+ Wine Preservation System FAQs
Yes, if you regularly open bottles the price and want to drink them one glass at a time. The argon preservation gives you weeks of drinking window per bottle. If you mostly drink under- wine, a Vacu Vin pump at this price covers most needs.
About 15 standard 5-ounce pours per capsule. Heavy pours or long preservation periods use slightly more gas. A 2-pack capsule kit runs.
Not with the standard Three+ model. Coravin sells a separate Vintner cork adapter for screw caps that installs a synthetic cork into the bottle for needle access.
The cork reseals on its own once the needle is withdrawn. Across 9 months I have not had a single bottle leak after needle insertion, even on bottles I returned to weeks later.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


