INTERVITIS MAGARACH is a mid-late table grape variety characterized by vigorous growth and large oval black berries. The berries have a simple taste, with sugar content reaching 16% and acidity at 7 g/L. The vine ripens well, contributing to the variety's high frost resistance down to -20°C. Bunches form an average of 1.3 per shoot, and optimal pruning allows for 5-7 buds. The variety has medium resistance to fungal diseases, making it quite reliable for cultivation in various climatic conditions. The INTERVITIS MAGARACH variety is the result of breeding work based on interspecific hybridization of European and American grape species. This technique allows combining in one genotype the high yield quality of European varieties with the disease and pest resistance characteristic of American species. Within the immunoselection program 'Analog', implemented at the NVIV 'Magarach', varieties with group resistance to fungal diseases, frost, and phylloxera were created, possessing high ecological plasticity and stability of economically valuable traits. INTERVITIS MAGARACH is among such complex European-American hybrids intended for modern socio-economic conditions. External variety features include a dark green crown of a young shoot with wine-red edges and cobwebby pubescence. Young leaves have a green color with a bronze tint and weak pubescence on both sides. One-year-old shoots are light brown with dark brown nodes. Leaves are large, heart-shaped, five-lobed, deeply cut and funnel-shaped, often with a bubbly surface. Upper leaf cutouts are open, of medium depth and lyre-shaped, which is a characteristic morphological feature of the variety.