United States · Wine Travel
Vermont Wine Festivals & Events
8 listings · 8 festivals · Peak May–July
Vermont has no commercial wine AVA of its own and no significant grape-growing heritage to speak of, but it hosts 8 wine festivals spread across May, June, and July, with general admission tickets running from $75 to $215 and averaging $128. The events cluster around three resort towns — Manchester, Killington, and Burlington — and lean heavily on the format of curated grand tastings where producers from outside the state pour alongside local food vendors. These are destination festivals built around Vermont's scenery and hospitality infrastructure, not around a local wine industry. That distinction matters when you're planning a trip.
The most expensive event in our database is Killington Uncorked: A Festival of Wines, Spirits, and Art!, scheduled for July 17, 2026, at $215 for general admission. Killington is a ski resort town that draws well in summer, and this festival leans into that resort-crowd energy — expect a polished, well-organized event with a mix of wine, spirits, and visual art programming. At that price point, the pour list tends to be serious, and the setting in the Green Mountains is genuinely pleasant in mid-July. Burlington Wine & Food, now in its 15th year, runs June 27, 2026, at $95 — a more accessible price for what is Vermont's largest city and its most walkable, food-forward urban environment. Burlington sits on Lake Champlain, and the festival takes advantage of that waterfront geography. The Manchester Vermont Food & Wine Festival on May 22, 2026, opens the season at the most approachable price point, $75, and Manchester's proximity to the Hildene estate and Equinox resort gives the town a certain well-heeled character that fits a food-and-wine format naturally.
The other festivals in our listings — the Burlington Wine & Food Festival, Killington Wine Festival, Stowe Wine & Food Classic, Vermont Wine & Harvest Festival, and Winter Winefest — round out a calendar that touches multiple seasons and multiple corners of the state. Stowe, which doesn't appear in the city-specific clusters, is worth noting as a destination in its own right; it sits about 45 minutes from Burlington and has the lodging infrastructure to support a festival weekend without much stress. The Vermont Wine & Harvest Festival and Winter Winefest suggest the calendar extends beyond the May–July peak, which is useful if you're planning around foliage season or a ski trip.
For logistics: Burlington International Airport (BTV) is the practical entry point for the northern half of the state, including Burlington and Stowe. Albany International Airport (ALB) in New York is a reasonable alternative for Manchester and Killington, both of which sit in southern Vermont and are roughly 90 minutes from Albany. Vermont is a small state, but the mountains make driving times longer than the map suggests — budget extra time between venues. There is no meaningful public transit between towns, so a car is essential.
Peak season for Vermont wine festivals runs May through July, which aligns with the state's most reliably pleasant weather. July in particular can be warm and dry in the valleys, though the mountains moderate temperatures noticeably. If you're coming from a major East Coast city — Boston, New York, or Montreal — a Vermont festival weekend pairs naturally with a broader Green Mountains itinerary: hiking, farmers markets, and the state's well-developed craft beverage scene, which includes cideries and breweries that are, frankly, more rooted in Vermont agriculture than the wine events are.
The honest framing for Vermont wine festivals is this: you're not coming to explore a local wine culture. You're coming for the setting, the food, and a well-curated pour list assembled from producers elsewhere. That's a perfectly valid reason to make the trip, and Vermont's event organizers are generally skilled at creating a cohesive weekend experience. Just don't expect the wine to taste like Vermont — because it mostly won't.
This season in Vermont
View all 8 festivals →Killington Uncorked: A Festival of Wines, Spirits, and Art!
Frequently asked questions
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Are there any Vermont wine festivals outside the May–July peak season?
What's the typical format of a Vermont wine festival — is it a single afternoon or a multi-day event?
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