Pour Trail

United States · Wine Travel

California Wine Festivals & Events

204 listings · 104 festivals · 100 events · Peak April–July

California hosts more wine festivals than any other US state, and Pour Trail's database reflects that scale: 204 listings statewide, split between 115 large-scale festivals and 89 smaller events including wine walks, winery dinners, and intimate tastings. General admission prices run from free up to $200, with an average of $63 — a range that reflects everything from neighborhood pours in Costa Mesa to prestige affairs in Napa Valley. The calendar clusters heavily in spring: April alone accounts for 56 events, making it the single busiest month in our entire national database. May adds another 29. If you're planning a dedicated wine trip, April through June is when California earns its reputation.

The geography matters here more than in almost any other state. California's wine country isn't one place — it's a loose constellation of distinct regions separated by hours of driving. Napa Valley, anchored by the city of Napa and the town of Yountville, leads our listings with nine events and tends toward the higher end of the price spectrum. The 12th Annual Crush Challenge in Yountville runs $150 for general admission, and the Discover Coombsville Grand Tasting in Napa matches that price point. Coombsville, for those unfamiliar, is a cooler sub-AVA on Napa's eastern edge, and events there tend to draw a more serious collector crowd than the broader valley tastings.

Paso Robles, the sprawling Central Coast AVA roughly halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco, shows up with three listings and represents a different kind of California wine travel. Prices are lower, the vibe is less formal, and the variety is broader — Rhône-style blends, Zinfandel, and increasingly ambitious Cabernet Sauvignon all find footing here. It's a reasonable drive from either major city, which makes it a practical add-on rather than a standalone destination for most visitors.

Southern California punches above its weight on this list. Costa Mesa leads all cities with eight listings, largely driven by the Orange County Wine Fest, which runs across two days in April with general admission at $70. Laguna Beach hosts the OC Food & Wine Celebration at $125, and Los Angeles accounts for six events including the San Fernando Valley Food & Wine Festival at $99. These aren't wine country events in the traditional sense — they're urban festivals that bring producers to the audience rather than the other way around. For visitors already in LA or Orange County, they're efficient ways to taste widely without renting a car and driving north.

The premium end of the calendar is worth flagging. The 2026 MOHI Food & Wine event in Morgan Hill, in Santa Clara County's southern reaches, tops our list at $200 general admission. Malibu Food & Wine comes in at $199, set against the Pacific in September. The Casa Pacifica Angels Wine, Food & Brew Festival in Camarillo has been running for 33 years and sits at $175 — it benefits a children's mental health nonprofit, which explains the price and the loyalty of its attendees. These events sell out early and are not casual drop-ins.

For logistics: San Francisco International (SFO) or Oakland (OAK) serve the North Coast wine regions best. Burbank (BUR) or LAX work for Southern California events. Paso Robles is most practical with a rental car from SFO or LAX, roughly a three-hour drive from each. The shoulder months — September and October — offer only seven combined listings but often better weather in Napa and fewer crowds. If your priority is selection over solitude, April is the month to book. If your priority is a relaxed tasting room experience between festival events, consider arriving a few days early in late March or staying through early May when the calendar thins out but the vineyards are still green.

This season in California

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Also happening: wine walks, dinners & tastings

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Frequently asked questions

When is the best month to attend wine festivals in California?
April is the peak month by a wide margin, with 56 events in our database — more than any other month in any state we track. May adds another 29. If you can only visit once, an April trip gives you the broadest selection of events across Napa, the Central Coast, and Southern California simultaneously.
How much should I budget for general admission to California wine festivals?
The average general admission price across our 204 California listings is $63, but the range is wide: free events exist alongside $200 ticketed affairs. Napa Valley and prestige coastal events like Malibu Food & Wine tend to run $125–$200, while urban festivals in Costa Mesa and Los Angeles more commonly land in the $70–$99 range.
Do I need to be based in wine country, or are there good events in cities like LA and San Francisco?
You don't need to leave the city. Los Angeles and San Francisco each have six listings in our database, and Costa Mesa leads all California cities with eight events. These urban festivals bring producers to attendees rather than requiring a drive to wine country, and several are priced accessibly enough to attend on a weekend without a hotel stay.
What's the difference between the Napa festivals and the Paso Robles events in terms of what to expect?
Napa events tend to be more formal, more expensive, and more focused on Cabernet Sauvignon and Bordeaux-style wines. Paso Robles events are generally more casual, lower-priced, and broader in variety — Rhône blends, Zinfandel, and Cabernet all appear. Paso is also a more practical drive from both LA and San Francisco than Napa is from LA.
Which California festivals sell out earliest and require the most advance planning?
Events at the top of the price range — the MOHI Food & Wine in Morgan Hill at $200, Malibu Food & Wine at $199, and the 33-year-old Casa Pacifica Angels festival in Camarillo at $175 — typically sell out well before the event date. The Discover Coombsville Grand Tasting in Napa at $150 also draws a focused collector audience and moves quickly. Book these as soon as tickets go on sale.

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