United States · Wine Travel
Georgia Wine Festivals & Events
28 listings · 20 festivals · 8 events · Peak April–May
Georgia lists 28 wine festivals and events in our directory, split between 20 large-scale festivals and 8 smaller gatherings such as wine walks and winery dinners. General admission runs $30 to $125, with an average ticket around $55. The season is tightly concentrated: April alone accounts for 8 of those events, May adds 2 more, and the bulk of festival activity is done before summer heat sets in. The geographic spread is wider than you might expect, touching Atlanta, Alpharetta, Smyrna, Chattahoochee Hills, Augusta, Savannah, Columbus, Decatur, and the Blue Ridge foothills — a mix of urban food-and-wine productions and more casual regional tastings.
Georgia is not a major wine-producing state in the way that California, Oregon, or Virginia are. You will not find a dense corridor of estate wineries anchoring these festivals. What you will find instead is a festival culture built around curation — events that bring in wines from across the country and pair them with the state's genuinely strong food scene. The Atlanta Food & Wine Festival is the clearest example of this model: it draws national attention not because of local viticulture but because of the quality of its culinary programming and the Southern food traditions it celebrates alongside the pours.
The Chattahoochee Hills area, which hosts two listings in our database, is worth noting as the closest thing Georgia has to a wine country day trip from Atlanta. The region sits about 30 miles southwest of the city and has a small but growing cluster of farm wineries operating in and around the Aska Road corridor and the broader Piedmont landscape. Events there tend to be more relaxed and production-focused than the urban festivals.
If you are traveling specifically for the wine festival experience rather than wine tourism in the traditional sense, Atlanta is the logical base. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport is one of the busiest hubs in the country, which means competitive airfares from virtually anywhere in the US. From there, Alpharetta is a 30-minute drive north, Smyrna is 20 minutes northwest, and Decatur is essentially adjacent. The Decatur Wine Festival and the Atlanta Spring Wine Festival both draw strong local crowds and tend to sell out general admission well before event day, so booking early is practical advice rather than a sales pitch.
Savannah adds a genuinely different texture to the Georgia festival map. The Flute Wine Festival, held in May 2026, carries the highest ticket price in our database at $125 — a signal that it is positioning itself as a premium experience rather than a broad public tasting. Savannah's walkable downtown and historic squares make it an appealing destination to pair with a festival visit, and the city's hospitality infrastructure handles wine-event crowds well. Flying into Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport is straightforward if Savannah is your primary destination.
Augusta enters the picture with UNCORKED: A Soulful S.I.P Experience, scheduled for April 2026 at $65 a ticket. The event's framing around soul and culture gives it a distinct identity compared to the more generic food-and-wine format that dominates the calendar. Augusta is a three-hour drive from Atlanta and two hours from Savannah, so it works best as a standalone trip or a road-trip stop rather than a day excursion.
The Blue Ridge Wine and Jazz Festival and the Frogtown South Food and Wine Festival represent the mountain-adjacent end of the spectrum — events that lean into the North Georgia highlands setting and tend to attract visitors looking for a weekend escape rather than a single-day outing. Blue Ridge, the town, is about 90 minutes north of Atlanta and has built a small tourism economy around its scenery and proximity to the Appalachian foothills.
Practically speaking, April is the month to plan around if you want the most options. The weather in Georgia in April is genuinely pleasant — warm but not yet oppressive — and outdoor festival formats hold up well. By late May the heat begins to assert itself, and the festival calendar reflects that reality by tapering off sharply. If you are sensitive to heat or are bringing children, earlier in April is the safer bet.
This season in Georgia
View all 20 festivals →Also happening: wine walks, dinners & tastings
View all 8 events →Frequently asked questions
Does Georgia have its own wine country, or are these festivals mostly showcasing wines from other states?
What is the most expensive festival in Georgia, and is it worth the price?
Which airport should I fly into for Georgia wine festivals?
When exactly should I visit Georgia to catch the most festivals?
Are Georgia wine festivals family-friendly, or do they skew toward adult-only events?
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